16 Mich. 269 | Mich. | 1868
Thé constitution of this state — Art. 14, § 9 — provides that “ The state shall not be a party to or interested in any work of internal improvement, nor engaged in carrying on any such work, except in the expenditure of grants to the state of land or other property.” The legislature of 1857
Under this act a contract was let to John A. Brooks for constructing the contemplated work, for the sum of $50,000; and it was actually constructed by William Beard, his assignee, and duly accepted. The Auditor General, however, refused to draw his warrant for the amount, for the alleged reason that the internal improvement fund was exhausted; and the legislature of 1867 passed an act “to provide for the preservation of the Muskegon River improvement, and for other purposes;” a principal purpose of which appears to be, the levying and collecting of tolls on the commerce of Muskegon River, sufficient to pay the $50,000 and interest thereon, within five years. The question before us is, whether this act is constitutional.
If the state, when it entered into the contract with Brooks had stipulated that the contract price should be paid from tolls levied on commerce, or from any species of taxation, the unconstitutionality of the contract would have been too plain to admit of argument. The case would
It is said, however, on the part of the defendant, that the internal improvement fund in fact was not exhausted; and the argument is, that the refusal of the state to apply the fund according to the terms of the original act, amounts to a misappropriation, and the state in consequence became equitably bound to satisfy Beard’s claim in some other manner, and that it has passed the law in question as a means of discharging this just state obligation.
But surely the refusal of the state officers to apply a fund to the purpose to which, it is devoted by law, constitutes no misappropriation of the fund. There is nothing before us from which we are warranted in inferring that any portion of this fund has been transferred to any other fund, or misapplied in any way. The defendant says, and the complainants admit, that the fund is not exhausted; and if this is so — of which we have no knowledge except from these pleadings' — then it is clear that no legal foundation exists for providing payment from any other source. The power of the state, and the duty of its officers in the premises, is limited by the constitution to the expenditure of that fund; and they can not make an obligation which rests upon that fund exclusively, a lawful debt against the state, or against any particular portion of the state.
"What we have said upon this subject we confine exclusively to the case before us, where the state is seeking to
When so fatal an objection to the subject matter of an act appears upon its face, it seems almost superfluous to mention objections of form; but there is also a formal objection here which is equally fatal. The constitution provides— Art. 4 §20 — that no law shall embrace more than one object, which shall be expressed in its title. We have heretofore had occasion to consider this section, and have said of it that it ought to be construed reasonably, and not in so narrow and technical a sense as unnecessarily to embarrass legislation.^— People v. Mahaney, 13 Mich. 494. But the only object mentioned in the title to this act is the preservation of the Muskegon River Improvement; for which purpose the act authorizes tolls to be levied and expended. The payment of Beard’s claim is in no way connected with this object; and the title to the act would apprise neither the Legislature nor the public, that, it covered provisions under which a large sum was to be collected and disbursed to pay for the original construction of the. work. The words, “other purposes,” in the title can have no force whatever under the constitutional provision which has been quoted. — Fishkill v. Fishkill and Beekman Plank Road Company, 22 Barb. 642.
Several cases were cited on the part of the defense which it was supposed would be precedents for sustaining this law. In the case of The Sun Mutual Insurance Co. v. The Mayor etc., of New York, 8 N. Y. 241, it was held, substantially as we held in The People v. Mahaney, that if the title covered the object of the act, the degree of particularity with
It is'very likely that the title to this act might have been made sufficiently comprehensive to embrace all the purposes of the act; the objection is that it was not made so. In Mewherter v. Price, 11 Ind. 201, an act entitled “ An Act concerning promissory notes and bills of exchange,” it was held could not be made constitutionally to provide that other contracts, as well as notes and bills, should be negotiable. In Gillespie v. State, 9 Ind. 383, it was held that an act entitled “ An Act to limit the number of grand