138 P. 158 | Okla. | 1914
In the consideration of the questions presented in this record, we are not unmindful of their importance and the gravity of the consequences to follow whatever conclusion is reached.
The powers of the initiative and the referendum reserved to the people occupy a prominent place in the Constitution and laws of this state, and their act, when invoking such powers, should be guarded by the courts, to the end that whatever is their due is kept inviolate. In the exercise of such powers, it is necessary that the provisions of the Constitution should be adhered to.
This is an appeal from the decision of the Secretary of State, in which he denied the protest of the appellant against the referendum petition referred to in the statement. Appellant presents various grounds in his protest, but we deem it only necessary to consider such as are strictly germane to the issue deemed important by us in the disposition of this case. His twenty-second ground of protest is that:
"Said referendum petition was not filed with the Secretary of State of the state of Oklahoma within ninety (90) days after the final adjournment of the special session of the Fourth Legislature of the state of Oklahoma, which passed said bill sought to be referred by said referendum petition."
Whether or not the petition was filed in time depends upon a decision as to when the Legislature, in fact, finally adjourned. *329
The Constitution of the state of Oklahoma (section 3, art. 5, Williams Ann. Const. Okla. p. 29) is as follows:
"Referendum petitions shall be filed with the Secretary of State not more than ninety days after the final adjournment of the session of the Legislature which passed the bill on which the referendum is demanded. * * *"
We quote only the portion of the section referring to the matter under consideration.
When is a legislative body in session? When did the session of the Legislature which passed the bill sought to be referred finally adjourn? It is conceded that the referendum petition was filed with the Secretary of State on the 2d day of October, 1913, and it is not questioned but that the referendum petition, to be filed in time, must be filed within 90 days after the final adjournment of the session of the Legislature which passed the bill on which the referendum is demanded. If the Legislature adjourned, say, on July 1, 1913, then the constitutional requirement of the time of filing the referendum petition has not been complied with; but if the final adjournment is considered to have taken place on July 5th, then, in such case, the petition was filed within 90 days.
How is this matter to be determined? How are we to ascertain by the rules of law, aided by the procedure governing legislative bodies, when a final adjournment occurs? In our opinion, it is proper to inquire into what the Legislature did or attempted to do to bring about adjournment, and in this inquiry we shall not resort to parol evidence, as this would be in violation of the rules of law, but will limit the inquiry to what is shown by the journals of the two houses, for "each house is required by the Constitution to keep a journal of its proceedings, and, from time to time, publish the same."
It is of primary moment that we refer to what has been mentioned as House Concurrent Resolution No. 29, adopted by the House on June 28th and by the Senate on June 30th, and approved July 10th, as shown in Session Laws 1913, p. 732. This resolution is set forth in the statement. The substance of its provisions are that each house delegated to each presiding *330 officer thereof the power to immediately adjourn their respective houses on the 5th day of July, 1913, at 12 o'clock m., if, upon the call of the roll of each house, a quorum should not have appeared, and such adjournment to be without day; the meaning and intent being that, upon the happening of a contingency of no quorum, the presiding officers should adjourn their respective houses without day.
Apropos of this, we call attention to the following provision of the Constitution:
"* * * And a majority of each house shall constitute a quorum to do business, but a smaller number may adjourn from day to day, and may be authorized to compel the attendance of absent members in such manner and under such penalty as each house may provide."
The resolution, while lodging the power with the presiding officers of the respective bodies to adjourn without day, deprives those members who would appear on July 5th, if less than a quorum, of their constitutional prerogative to adjourn from day to day, and to this extent it seems that the delegation of authority to a presiding officer to do an act and denying to a smaller number than a quorum the power of adjourning from day to day is in conflict with the spirit and intent of the Constitution. While we are not aware of any action of the two houses giving authority to a number less than a quorum to compel the attendance of absent members, yet the right of a smaller number than a quorum to adjourn from day to day is unequivocally stated in the Constitution.
It cannot be determined from the resolution whether the contingency provided for ever occurred; that is, whether on July 5th a quorum was or was not present, and, it being silent in this regard, does it not become essential to ascertain from the journals of the two houses the proceedings, if any, germane to and involving an explanation thereof? To do this, it is not necessary to resort to parol evidence as to what the proceedings were, or, as suggested by counsel for appellees, "to inquire of boot-blacks and chat in hotel corridors as to when the adjournment took place," but is it not necessary and proper to look to the *331 proceedings as recorded by the requirements of the Constitution, to inquire as to what was done and how it was done, in the attempt to conform to the delegated powers in the concurrent resolution?
Under the record submitted, it is shown that on June 30, 1913 (House Journal, p. 1433), a motion was made that the Speaker be instructed to adjourn the House until July 5th, under the terms of the concurrent resolution. In Senate Journal, p. 1710, it is shown that on July 1, 1913, on motion, the Senate recessed in accordance with House Concurrent Resolution No. 29, until Saturday, July 5th, at 12 o'clock m. We have carefully examined the journals, and we do not find a record of any declaration or announcement by the presiding officers adjourning the bodies in response to the suggestions contained in said motions, or that the motions were acted upon. From such conditions, it cannot be determined that the houses, in fact, adjourned until July 5th; in other words, that an adjournment took place, carrying them over to July 5th, or such action that would authorize their meeting on July 5th, even though the power to do so was properly delegated by the resolution. To say the least of it, it is a confused condition, and, as heretofore stated, there is nothing in the resolution tending to show that the contingency provided therein ever occurred, and also the absence of anything in the journals showing that the two houses were declared adjourned on June 30th and July 1st, respectively, to July 5th leaves us to conjecture whether the assembling on July 5th was with any semblance of authority; but, without determining the effect of the omissions referred to, we will treat this matter as if there was an attempted adjournment under the terms of the concurrent resolution to July 5th.
Waiving for the moment a further discussion of the questions involved, we will state briefly the action of the two houses on July 5th, and, in reviewing this matter, we do not deem it necessary to consider the action, or the effect thereof, of the presiding officers in settling with and discharging the employees, or that practically all the members of both houses left the legislative halls on June 30th and July 1st, respectively, and did not *332 return to perform any of the duties devolving upon them as members thereof, as this latter feature does not enter into our conclusions. The journals of either house do not show any proceedings in the intervening days from, say, July 1st to July 5th, and there is no pretense of a legislative session of either house during those intervening days. As is stated, the Constitution requires that each house shall keep a journal of its proceedings and publish them.
"The proceedings, then, constitute the journals; one can have no existence without the other, and, in the absence of both, there can be no houses. The journals must show proceedings to establish a legislative session." (People v. Hatch, 33 Ill. loc. cit. 156.)
By House Journal, p. 1396, it is shown that on July 5, 1913, at 12 o'clock m., the Speaker presiding, the roll was called and a total of eight members, including the Speaker, answered, and immediately such information was communicated to the President pro tem. of the Senate, certifying to him that a quorum of the House had not appeared.
By Senate Journal, p. 1711, it is shown that on July 5, 1913, at 12 o'clock m., the President pro tem. presiding, the roll of the Senate was called and a total of six members, including the President pro tem., answered, and immediately such information was communicated to the Speaker of the House, that a quorum of the Senate had not appeared.
We are further advised by the House and Senate Journals that the presiding officers of each body, having had the roll of their respective houses called, and ascertaining that a quorum did not appear and were not present, did declare the respective houses adjourned without day.
The objections of appellees are: First. That the court cannot go behind the concurrent resolution for the purpose of inquiring whether the Legislature actually dispersed at a date prior to July 5, 1913, the date named in said resolution. Second. That the court cannot consider evidence tending to impeach such concurrent resolution, or tending to impeach the journals of the House and Senate, nor inquire into the motives of the *333 Legislature in passing such resolution, or making such journal entries. These two propositions present the gravamen of the complaint by appellees in the matter treated.
We answer that the concurrent resolution was adopted by the House on the 28th day of June, and by the Senate on the 30th day of June, and we are not looking to what occurred prior to the adoption of the resolution; therefore, in the language of counsel for appellees, we are going "behind" the resolution, but are inspecting the proceedings, as shown by the journals of the two houses, subsequent to the adoption of the resolution, in order to understand therefrom what was, or was not, done, or whether the action of the two houses was such, evidenced by the proceedings, as would enable an understanding of the resolution. Hence we say we are not in conflict with the rule stated in Marshall Field v. Clark,
The resolution is not self-executing or self-explanatory, hence there exists a legal compulsion that its terms, providing for the contingency mentioned, be understood. By its terms, if on July 5th a quorum is not present, the presiding officers shall immediately adjourn their respective houses without day. Without invoking the aid of the journals, how is it possible to determine this matter, they being a part and parcel of whatever is intended by the concurrent resolution?
We have already stated the action of the Houses on June 30th and July 1st, respectively. This is shown by the journals, and not by any attempt at parol or other like evidence. If there was no session of the Legislature in legal contemplation subsequent to July 1st, then it follows that there was a final adjournment on that day.
There is no effort to impeach the concurrent resolution, only to question the powers sought to be delegated by it; nor is there any effort tending to impeach the journals of the two houses, nor to inquire into the motives of the Legislature in making *334 such resolution. As stated, we simply go to the journals — the proceedings of the two houses — in an effort to ascertain what was, or was not, done. If by the journals it can be determined whether there was a session or no session, as is contemplated and required by the law, then, in our judgment, we have reached a finality of the question at issue.
The two propositions of appellees suggest principles or rules of law which may or may not be applicable under a given case stated, but we do not think they apply to the condition of affairs disclosed by this record, and we mean by the record the proceedings of the two houses. Parol or other such extrinsic evidence is not appealed to or allowed to impeach the journals or acts of the Legislature. Nor is there any attempt made to use the journals to impeach an act of the Legislature.
The Constitution, sec. 3, art. 5 (supra), requires the petition to be filed not more than 90 days after the final adjournment of the session. It therefore becomes necessary to determine the meaning ascribed by the law-writers and lexicographers to the word "session."
"Session," as defined in Abbott's Law Dictionary, is:
"A sitting; sometimes used for the time during which any body of persons or tribunal is organized, competent for transaction of its business; in other connections, the time during which it is convened and actually engaged in business. * * *"
We conclude that it must be such a sitting or session, according to this authority, as is competent for the transaction of business. Under the Constitution of Oklahoma, it requires a majority of each house to do business, and as a necessary corollary, it cannot be termed a session in the absence of a sufficient number to do business. In other words, a minority of either house cannot transact business, and this view is in keeping with the provision of the Constitution permitting a smaller number than a quorum to adjourn from day to day merely.
Black's Law Dictionary gives this definition of a "session": "The sitting of a court, legislature, council, commission, etc., for the transaction of its proper business. * * *"
Mr. Bouvier, in defining "session," says: *335
"The time during which a legislative body, a court, or other assembly, sits for the transaction of business; as a session of Congress, etc., etc." (People ex rel. v. Aud. Pub. Acc'ts,
The Ency. of Plead. Prac. vol. 21, pp. 559, 560, says: "A session of court is the time during a term in which the court sits for the transaction of business."
The Century Dictionary includes the following among the word's (session) meaning:
"The sitting together of a body of individuals for the transaction of business; the sitting of a court, academic body, council, legislature, etc., or the actual assembly of the members of these, or any smaller body, for the transaction of business; as, the court is now in session (that is, the members are assembled for business); the time, space or term during which a court, council, legislature or the like, meets daily for business, or transacts business regularly, without breaking up. * * *"
The word "session" as used in the Constitution of Minnesota, art. 4, sec. 11, providing that "Within three days after the adjournment of the Legislature, the Governor may approve, sign and file in the office of the Secretary of State any act passed during the last three days of the session," means the actual assemblage of the Legislature for business. Farwell Co. v.Matheis (C. C.) 48 Fed. 363, 364. It is held in that case, in speaking of the word "session," that:
"The prime definition of this word, when applied to a legislative body, is the actual sitting of the members of such body for the transaction of business."
It is held in People v. Fancher, 50 N.Y. loc. cit. 294, that:
"The session of the Senate, like the sessions of the Legislature or of Congress, or the term of a court, continues, notwithstanding repeated recesses or adjournments, until the final close or end in some way provided by law. It is true that should the Senate not come together pursuant to the adjournment, and so the session fail (and that that will not be the case cannot now certainly be known), the question will arise whether the session did not, in fact, terminate on the 10th day of September, the day of the last adjournment."
If it is not a Senate or a legislative body without the presence of a quorum, does not the question arise in this case whether *336 the session did not, in fact, terminate on the 1st day of July, the day of the last adjournment, as there was no coming together afterwards? It seems to us to be the inevitable conclusion reached by all the authorities at our command, and the reasoning given by them induces a similar conclusion on our part, that a legislative body is in session only when it is prepared to transact business. The criterion is, not that there is business to be done, but it is, Is there a constitutional quorum, competent to, transact business? In support of this, we can invoke the rule that applies to and defines sessions of a court. How can there be such a thing as a constructive session of a court, or a constructive session of the Legislature? What is required to have a session of the Legislature, if not a quorum of its bodies? What is required to have a session of the court, if not the presence of the judge?
In the case of Delafield et al. v. Louis Mercer Const. Co. etal.,
In the case of Wight v. Wallbaum et al.,
"After the 23d, for the want of a judge, no legal business could have been transacted, and for that reason the court stood adjourned. The judge who opened the court might, no doubt, have adjourned to a specified day, had the business of the court required it, and business might have been regularly resumed at that time. The judge had no power to authorize the ministerial officers of the court to exercise judicial powers, even in opening *337 and adjourning the court. They not having such authority, and the court not having been opened on the 24th by a judge authorized to exercise the jurisdiction of the court, it stood adjourned after the 23d, and that must be regarded as the last day of the term."
In that case, the judge, being on the bench on August 23d, adjourned the court until the next day, and he not returning during the remainder of the term, it was held that the session ended on the 23d, and for two reasons — it required the presence of the judge to transact business, and there could not be delegated to the ministerial officers of the court the power to adjourn it from day to day.
Under the statutes of Oklahoma, the sheriff is authorized, in the absence of the judge on the first and second days of the beginning of the term, to adjourn the court until the third day thereof, at which time, a judge not appearing, the term lapses.
After the 1st day of July, 1913, there was no reassembling of the Legislature. Like the judge, it did not return. There was no session without its presence. It is true that a small number of each house, being a small per cent. thereof, met, and we are authorized to infer that those who did meet met with the pre-existing knowledge that a quorum would not be present, and, since the concurrent resolution undertook to delegate to the presiding officer of each house the power to meet and adjourn on the 5th day of July, we do not understand the necessity existing for seven others of the lower house and five others of the Senate to appear. The thing that was to be done was confided alone to the presiding officers, without any right or power upon the part of any others who might be present, less than a quorum, to even object or to urge a going over from day to day. Under our Constitution, the presiding officer of each house is a member of such body. He is simply one personage; and yet it is insisted that these two persons can be vested with legislative power, with the transaction of business, with the adjournment sine die. which, in itself, is a transaction of most important business, because from that date hinges much that is important in the perfecting of legislation or carrying into effect acts of the Legislature and duties devolving upon the Governor. *338
If a minority, acting under the concurrent resolution (and the Speaker is certainly a minority), can adjourn the Housesine die, why cannot any other minority, in order to block legislation and disrupt a session, meet before a quorum can assemble and adjourn the body sine die? If the concurrent resolution could delegate to the presiding officers the authority to meet on a certain day, call the roll, and, no quorum answering, to adjourn the body sine die, why cannot he be delegated to transact other business, and thus save the expense and inconvenience of an organized assembly? In the language of Mr. Justice Breese, we ask:
"Can it be that, by a legal fiction, the Legislature will be deemed in session, when, in fact, there is no such organized or assembled body?"
How can a body be in session when it is not in session? Is the matter of session a fiction of the law and a semblance of duty done or discharged when there is no one present to do the duty, or even present to perfect or suggest what should or should not be done?
When the two houses closed their sessions on June 30th and July 1st, respectively, it was clearly the intention not to return for any further session. We think the concurrent resolution definitely states the purpose of both houses not to reassemble on the 5th day of July, and there being no appearance of any members for any purpose in the intervening days and their failure to appear on the 5th leads inevitably to the conclusion that the Legislature meant by such resolution to do exactly what it did, adjourn on July 1st, at latest. The purpose not to return is made manifest by the fact that they did not return, and it likewise supports the conclusion that they did not intend to return, but, as a matter of fact, regarded the session of June 30th and July 1st as a termination of the extraordinary session of the Legislature. The resolution shows the purpose to disperse; the journals evidence the fact there was no other meetings (as what is called a meeting on July 5th cannot be regarded as a session or meeting of the Legislature), and there being a dispersal of the two bodies, as heretofore stated, such act, under this record, constituted a final adjournment, and by *339 such act all claim as a legislative body was relinquished, and, being relinquished, constituted an end to the session, for "a legislative body has adjourned when it has dispersed."
At the risk of being tedious or of repeating, and as aresume of what has been said, in conclusion, we are impressed with the correctness of the proposition that when a Legislature is in session its acts speak through its journals. If its journals are silent, there is no session, and there can be no such session as is contemplated by the law and common sense, unless there be a sufficient number to transact business. A dispersal of a body ends its life, and it cannot be kept alive by any such delegation of authority. The same principle controls this reasoning as applied to a court. If the judge of a court, during a term thereof, vacates the bench and his district and his duties, he cannot keep alive the term. The last day of his sitting and transacting business is the end. He, in person, must adjourn that court to a given day of that term, and he cannot delegate the authority to some one else to keep alive the term of the court. It must be an act of the court that preserves the life of the term, and not a delegated act. It must be an act of the Legislature, acting through a quorum of each house, to adjourn for a longer term than three days. It must be an adjournment that, upon its reassembling, there is a continuity in the purpose and in the act which, in itself, shows a continued existence of session. There was a dispersal; there was no re-assembling; there is no continuity in the purpose to discharge duties; and, such being the case, the session terminated by the dispersal.
The minority on the 5th day of July, 1913, undertook, by an unwarranted act, to give life and validity to the effect of a body that was functus officio. We are forced to the conclusion that the 30th day of June was the end of the session of the House, and that the 1st day of July was the end of the session of the Senate, and, at best, there was no session of the Legislature of Oklahoma after the 1st day of July. We therefore hold that there was a final adjournment of the special session of the Fourth Legislature of the state of Oklahoma, which passed the bill sought to be referred by said Referendum Petition No. 28, State Question *340 No. 65, at latest, on July 1, 1913; that said referendum petition, filed on October 2, 1913, with the Secretary of State, was not filed within 90 days after the final adjournment of the session of the Legislature, as required by the Constitution; and we further hold that the protest of appellant that said referendum petition was not filed with the Secretary of State in the time required by the Constitution of Oklahoma was well taken, and that no election can be held upon said referendum petition, and that said House Bill No. 72 remains in force and effect.
The conclusion we have reached upon the point discussed eliminates all other questions presented in the record and renders a reference to them unnecessary.
The judgment of the court therefore is that the petition for referring said act is void, for the reason that the same was not filed with the Secretary of State within the time required by the Constitution, and that the protest filed against said petition be and the same is hereby sustained.
HAYES, C. J., and TURNER and LOOFBOURROW, JJ., and ROBERTSON, Special Justice, concur.