225 P. 1007 | Mont. | 1924
OPINION:
The Seventeenth Legislative Assembly proposed an amendment to Article XYI of the Constitution of Montana by adding thereto the following:
At the general election held in November, 1922, the people voted in favor of the proposed amendment and by proclamation it was declared to be a part of the Constitution.
Acting in pursuance of the amendment, the Eighteenth Legislative Assembly enacted a law designed to authorize the consolidation of the corporate existence and government of the county of Silver Bow and all cities and towns within that county into a municipality to be known as “City and County of Butte.” This Act (Chap. 160 of the Session Laws of 1923, p. 480) was approved March 14, 1923.
On January 22, 1924, a petition signed by at least 2,500 electors of Silver Bow county was filed with the county clerk requesting that the adoption of the Act be submitted to the electors of Silver Bow county. The county clerk having found that the petition was signed by the required number of electors, on February 4 certified the fact to the board of county commissioners which on February 11 fixed May 12, 1924, as the
Counsel for relator and intervener have attacked the validity of the constitutional amendment itself and of the Act upon numerous grounds. A minor attack is based upon an alleged insufficiency of the petition submitting the Act to the people.
I. As preliminary we heed the voice of sections 1 and 2 of Article III, being the first two sections of the Declaration of Bights: “All political power is vested in and derived from the people; all government of right originates with the people; is founded upon their will only, and is instituted solely for the good of the whole.” “The people of the state have the sole and exclusive right of governing themselves, as a free, sovereign, and independent state, and to alter and abolish their Constitution and form of government, whenever they may deem it necessary to their safety and happiness, provided such change be not repugnant to the Constitution of the United States. ’ ’
That the forms prescribed for the submission of the amend- ment to the people have been followed is not questioned, and here as always we enter upon a consideration of the validity of a constitutional amendment after its adoption by
(a) The first objection, vigorously asserted, is that section 7 of Article XVI is not an amendment to the Constitution, but an attempted revision. Revision, it is said, can be done only by a constitutional convention under the provisions of section 8 of Article XIX of the Constitution, which provides: “The legislative assembly may at any time, by a vote of two-thirds of the members elected to each house, submit to the electors of the state the question whether there shall be a convention to revise, alter, or amend this Constitution,” etc., while section 9, upon which the amendment is based, relates to amendments only.
The objection is not tenable. The legislature in proposing section 7 to Article XVI did not intend to “revise” the Constitution, either in whole or in part. Revision as contemplated in section 8 implies a re-examination and restatement of the Constitution, or some part of it, in a corrected or improved form. The revision may be with or without material change; but clearly, as the word is used in the section, it implies the probability of extensive and comprehensive action by the convention. (See Sutherland on Statutory Construction (Lewis’ ed.), sec. 269; Pratt Institute v. City of New York, 183 N. Y. 151, 5 Ann. Cas. 198, 75 N. E. 1119.)
In legislative parlance “amendment” is an alteration or change of something proposed in a bill or established as law. (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary.) A statute which adds a provision to a section or an existing statute is an amendment. (Henderson v. City of Galveston, 102 Tex. 163, 114 S. W. 108.) Generally speaking, an amendment repeals or changes some
The word “amendment” is clearly susceptible to a construction which would make it cover several propositions, all tending to effect and carry out one general object or purpose, and all connected with one subject, as well as to the construction that every proposition which effects a change in the Constitution or adds to or takes from it, is an amendment. (Words and Phrases, “Amendment”; State ex rel. Hudd v. Timme, 54 Wis. 318, 11 N. W. 785; People ex rel. Elder v. Sours, 31 Colo. 369, 102 Am. St. Rep. 34, 74 Pac. 167.)
That the Act was simply intended as amendatory of the Constitution is indicated by its purpose.
When the convention which framed our Constitution was in session a committee, variously known as that on “County, City and Town Government” and as “City, County and Town Organizations,” proposed Article XYI under the head of “Municipal Corporations and Officers.” This is the only Article which has to do with municipal corporations and officers as such. It embraces the general subject of counties, county officers, and section 6 thereof says: “The legislative assembly may provide for the election or appointment of such other county, township, precinct and municipal officers as public convenience may require and their terms of office shall be as prescribed by law, not in any case to exceed two years, except as in this Constitution otherwise provided. ’ ’
The term “municipal officers” means city or town officers. (State ex rel. Quintin v. Edwards, 38 Mont. 250, 99 Pac. 940.) That the framers of the section used the phrase advisedly to distinguish city and town officers from county and township officers is beyond question. They were endeavoring to comprehend in this section officers of counties, townships, precincts, cities and towns. That they “did not intend municipal corporations to include counties is clear, for the two terms are used, as in this
It cannot be doubted that the purpose of the amendment was in the first instance to furnish to the people an avenue of escape from the evils which have grown out of what is generally termed the aldermanic system of municipal government, as well as from the disadvantages arising from duplication in government in counties where large cities exist. The evils coeval with aldermanic government in cities are known to everybody. Indeed, one conspicuous failure of the American people in government — a subject of adverse comment by statesmen everywhere — has been that which has grown out of the aldermanic system.
The framers drew the amendment with a broad view of the aspirations of a progressive society looking forward to a betterment of its local governmental conditions. It was perceived that more modern plans or forms of government might be desired by counties, cities and towns, either separately or jointly; that consolidation of county and city governments, or mergers of city or town governments, might be favored. By the proposed amendment these objects were to- be made possible, dependent always upon the popular will determined at the polls. Whether the objects sought to be attained may be
It is manifest that when the legislature proposed and the people adopted section 7 it was the intention to repose in the people residing in the respective municipalities, or quasi municipalities, named, the privilege of changing radically, if they so desire, their former system of local government.
(b) But it is insisted that section 7 undertook to and did present to the electors of the state more than one amendment, violating section 9 of Article XIX in two particulars: (1) Section 9 provides that “should more amendments than one be submitted at the same election, they shall be so prepared and distinguished by numbers or otherwise that each can be voted upon separately,” which was not done; (2) more than three amendments were submitted which section 9 prohibits. As illustrative, it is said section 7 attempts to authorize the legislative assembly: To pass local or special laws in violation of the provisions of section 26 of Article V; to authorize the repeal of section 19 of Article VIII as to such portions of the state of Montana as may adopt the same; 'and likewise- as to sections 20 and 26 of Article VIII, and section 5 of Article XVI. Others are suggested which will be mentioned in subsequent portions of this opinion.
The objection that the amendment, although in the form of but one, in reality consists of more than three, is not tenable. Constitutional provisions necessarily are couched in -broad language for they are designed to have a comprehensive scope and operation. When we examine the section under consideration critically we see that it has but one purpose, one design: To permit the legislature by general or special law to provide a legal method, within the limitations mentioned in the amendment, whereby counties, or counties and cities and towns, or cities and towns, may adopt what may be termed a municipal form of government. It easily stands -the test stated by this
By the enactment of the amendment it was a necessary corollary that parts of the ozúginal Constitution (adopted in contemplation of forcns of county and municipal government then familiar to the original framers) would be modified, impinged upon or superseded. This is the inevitable result of provisions amendatory of a pre-existing law. “If later amendments destroy, impinge upon, modify, or wipe out old provisions, the newer provisions must stand, because they are the last utterance of the people, who reserve to themselves the right to change the organic law, in the way provided by the organic law itself.” (Falstaff Corporation v. Allen (D. C.), 278 Fed. 643.)
If the amendment seeks to do anything at all, it seeks to repose in the people the right to change their local form of government from the old system to a newer .one. And incidentally it looks ahead to a time beyond the present era; under this amendment it was intended that the people should be enabled to change their plan, kind, manner or form of municipal or gziasi-municipal government from time to time as the development of their economic or social status might require. (State ex rel. Fenner v. Keating, 53 Mont. 371, 163 Pac. 1156.) To achieve this end, manifestly it was imperative that provisions in the Constitution prior to the amendment should yield to the new expression of the people’s will. Hezice the phrase in the amendment “any limitation in this Constitution notwithstanding.”
If the new plan, kind, manner or form of municipal government which the amendment seeks to make possible — a plan, kind, manner or form to be prescribed by the legislature and adopted by a vote of the people — is to be effective, it must be
II. Section 7 of Article XYI is now a part of the Constitution of the state, and is in force equally with any other part of the Constitution. “It is not only a part of the Constitution, but it is there to stay until the authority which voted it in shall vote it out.” (People v. Cassiday, 50 Colo. 503, 117 Pac. 357.)
Upon what has just been said we might rest from further consideration of this branch of the case. But we shall note briefly a few of the objections urged by counsel for petitioner and for intervener.
(a) Numerous objections are based upon the theory that the amendment violates section 26 of Article V, which prohibits the legislature from passing a local or special Act in particulars mentioned in that section; for instance, regulating county affairs, creating offices or prescribing the powers and duties of officers in counties and cities. And likewise our attention is called to section 31 of Article Y which provides: “Except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, no law shall extend the term of any public officer, or increase or diminish his salary or emolument after his election or appointment. * * * ”
These objections might be answered conclusively by saying that the Constitution now provides that the legislature may designate the name of the municipality and “fix and prescribe the number, designation, terms, qualifications, method of appointment, election or removal of the officers thereof,” and define their duties, subject to the approval of the electors in the territory affected.
As to interference with the terms of the officers of the county, it is of course dear that even a constitutional office may be abolished by a new Constitution or by an amendment to an existing one. (Eckerson v. Des Moines, 137 Iowa, 452, 115 N. W. 177; Reals v. Smith, 8 Wyo. 159, 56 Pac. 690; State
(b) The argument that the amendment is invalid because it is operative only in the future, only on a portion of the state, and only at the will of a part of the people is fallacious. The amendment is now in full force. To be sure, its action is permissive; counties, cities and towns may or may not avail themselves of its provisions at their pleasure. But in this respect the amendment is like the local option laws considered by this court in the case of In re O’Brien, 29 Mont. 530, 1 Ann. Cas. 373, 75 Pac. 196. (And see Chicago Terminal Transfer Ry. Co. v. Greer, 223 Ill. 104, 114 Am. St. Rep. 313, and note, 79 N. E. 46; People v. Cassiday, supra; State v. Storey, 51 Wash. 630, 99 Pac. 878; City Council v. Commrs., 33 Colo. 1, 77 Pac. 861; Kansas City v. Marsh Oil Co., 140 Mo. 458, 41 S. W. 943.)
III. (a) Many other objections are somewhat blended together. They are based upon the operation, or alleged lack of operation, of the amendment, as well as upon the alleged invalidity of the Act. In considering these it is well to bear in mind the fundamental proposition that in respect of legislation the people may do anything which is not prohibited by the state Constitution or the federal compact. (The Veto Case, 69 Mont. 325, 222 Pac. 428; State ex rel. Evans v. Stewart,, 53 Mont. 18, 161 Pac. 309; In re Pomeroy, 51 Mont. 119, 151 Pac. 333.) “All political power is vested in and derived from the people.” By the Constitution the people simply have placed limitations upon their power to legislate. By section 7 they have removed certain limitations which by the original Constitution they had placed upon themselves respecting municipal or quasi-mmúcipal government.
Counsel for the intervener repeatedly fall into error by assuming that the amendment confers power upon the legislature.
The objection that the amendment attempts to authorize the legislature to amend the Constitution is not warranted by the terms of the amendment nor by any legitimate inference from its language. That the amendment permits the legislature to pass Acts which prior thereto it could not pass was the very end designed by the measure.
(b) Many objections are answered by an inspection of the amendment and the terms of the Act. For instance, it is urged that the amendment and the Act are in contravention of section 5 of Article VI respecting senatorial districts and section 6 of the same Article respecting representatives in the legislative assembly to which the county of Silver Bow is entitled, but by the other terms of the Act (section 1) it is provided: “As a political subdivision of the state the city and county of Butte shall have the status of a county and for the purpose of representation in the state legislature, as provided by the Constitution and laws of Montana, and for all other purposes, it shall replace and be the successor of Silver Bow county.” It is also said that section 13 of Article VIII respecting judicial districts is violated, but we find that it is provided in section 1 of the Act: “Until otherwise provided by law the city and county of Butte shall constitute the second judicial district of the state.”
(c) It is strenuously urged by counsel for intervener that the operation of the Act under the amendment serves to de prive the people of the county of Silver Bow and of the city of Butte of the power of local self-government, which is theirs inherently under our system of government, and counsel rely on State ex rel. Gerry v. Edwards, 42 Mont. 135, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 1063, 32 L. R. A. (n. s.) 1078, 111 Pac. 734, to sustain their contention. We think the principle recognized in that case is not impinged upon at all by the form of government proposed; we think the plan proposed does not in anywise
(d) It is also urged that the Act denies to the intervener the equal protection of the laws which is guaranteed to him under the fourteenth amendment to the federal Constitution. That this objection is baseless will be seen by reference to the following authorities: State v. Brett, 16 Mont. 360, 40 Pac. 873, following Missouri v. Lewis, 101 U. S. 22, 25 L. Ed. 989; 12 C. J. 1150, and cases cited.
(e) It is also urged by counsel for intervener that the Act is violative of section 7 itself by reason of the fact that it does not in express terms provide how the government
(f) It is urged also that, because persons who do not reside within the limits of the city of Butte are empowered to pass upon the adoption of the Act, thereby they are given the power to dissolve or disincorporate the city and to vote away its property, and, conversely, that the people who are residents of the city of Butte may vote away property of the county which lies outside of the city of Butte. Similar questions were raised in People ex rel. Elder v. Sours, supra, upon which the supreme court of Colorado said: “Under the first objection it is said that some of the adjoining towns have by this amendment lost their public property; that, as the people of these towns had erected town buildings, these town buildings will be taken away from them, because the towns themselves are consolidated with Denver; that the people of other towns, excluded from the city and county of Denver, have contributed to the erection of public buildings in Arapahoe county, and that they will lose their share or interest in such public buildings and be required to contribute to the erection of public buildings in a new county. These are incidental and unavoidable conditions, which exist whenever the boundaries of counties are changed or municipalities are consolidated. These municipalities exist for the public convenience. Their property is the property of the public, and is held, not as private property, but subject to the changing conditions and requirements of local government.”
IV. (a) The intervener is a creditor of both the city of Butte and the county of Silver Bow, holding a claim against the former for $5.15 evidenced by a city warrant, and against the latter for $12 evidenced by a county warrant, and he contends that the Act in question, and particularly sections 127 and 128 thereof, operate to deprive him of his security for the payment of his claim and thereby impair the obligation of these contracts. Sections 127 and 128 provide that if the Act is adopted by a vote of the people, and becomes operative by the election and qualification of the commission, the separate corporate existence and government of the county and each city and town located therein shall be deemed merged into the municipality of the city and county of Butte, which municipality shall thereupon succeed to, possess, and own all of the property and assets of such cities and towns and the county and become responsible for 'all the obligations and liabilities of the county, cities and towns so consolidated and that the property, funds, and money of said several governments shall be transferred to the new municipality.
To care for the indebtedness previously incurred by the separate units embraced within the territory of the new government, section 58 of the Act provides that the territory com
Thus, so far as the claims against the city of Butte are concerned, all the property embraced in the corporate limits as they exist when the consolidation or merger takes place would be embraced within a special district and subject to the payment of all prior claims. By this provision all the property of the city is specifically impounded in such special district for the purpose of taxation to meet such claims. That is the only security which the intervener or other creditors of the city now possess to insure the payment of their claims. The only change is that under the new plan the taxes to meet such claims must be levied and collected by officers designated by a different title. The same condition would exist as to the indebtedness of the county as a whole.
The provisions of section 127 and 128 create more than a moral obligation on the part of the merged municipality in reference to the payment of such claims. Section 128 gives the commission power to make all regulations necessary for the transition from the former plan of government to the new one. If it should appear that a creditor had a claim against the city or county before the merger and that the commission should refuse or neglect to make provision for its payment in the manner pointed out in section 58, can it be doubted that a court would hesitate in an appropriate action to compel it to do so? The suggestion of the question carries with it a negative answer. Thus, a creditor of the eity or county has his claim fully rec
(b) It is claimed by counsel for the intervener that the wording of the amendment limits the authority of the legislature to the adoption of either a general or a special law, that, the legislature having passed a general law applicable to the whole state prior to the adoption of the Act in question, it was thereby precluded from passing a special law designed for Butte and Silver Bow county only.
The wording of the amendment would indicate to an ordinary person voting thereon that it was contemplated that by its adoption all constitutional inhibitions theretofore existing were removed so that the legislature might thereafter provide a form and plan of government for counties, or for cities and counties, in such form or plan as it might see fit to prescribe, either by a special law applicable to a particular district or by a general law applicable to the state at large. The only thing which might indicate a contrary intention is the use of the word “or” between the words “general” and “special.”
It should be borne in mind, as heretofore pointed out, that “all political power is vested in and derived from the people”; that the legislature as the representative of the sovereign people has every power which is not specifically denied by the Constitution; that the Constitution is not a grant of power but a limitation thereof. (See authorities above.) So the inquiry here is whether the amendment in fact limited the right of the legislature to pass but a single Act under its provisions.
In construing the Constitution the same rules apply as in the construction of statutes. (Martien v. Porter, 68 Mont. 450, 219 Pac. 817.) And such a construction must, if
In order to ascertain and carry out the real intent of a provision such as this it not infrequently happens that it is necessary to read the conjunctions “or” and “and” one for the other. “Indeed these words are said to be convertible into each other as the sense of the enactment and the necessity of harmonizing its provisions may require.” (Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, see. 303.) Referring to this subject in 2 Lewis’ Sutherland on Statutory Construction, section 397, it is said: “To carry out the intention of the legislature it is occasionally found necessary to read the conjunctions ‘or’ and ‘and’ one for the other.”
The case of North Springs Water Co. v. Tacoma, 21 Wash. 517, 47 L. R. A. 214, 8 Pac. 773, is a good illustration of the application of the rule laid down in these authorities in the construction of a statute. In that ease the city had been granted power in the Act of its creation to construct waterworks for itself or to authorize the construction of the same by others. It was there held that the power granted was not in the alternative; that the word “or” as used in the statute granting authority to the city was equivalent to the word “and,” and that although the city had previously granted to others the right to construct such works it still had authority to construct similar works for itself.
The same reasoning is applicable to this case. Although the framers of the amendment used the word “or,” it is apparent that it was not within their contemplation to impose a limitation upon the legislature against adopting both a general and special law to carry out its provisions. For this reason and
(c) The intervener also urges that the petitions filed with the county clerk asking for the submission of the question of the adoption of Chapter 160 to the electors of the county did not comply with the requirements of section 129 of the Act and were not sufficient to confer authority upon the board of county commissioners to order or hold an election, for the reason that they did not have a copy of Chapter 160 attached to or incorporated in them.
Section 129 provides the method of submitting to the electors the question of the adoption of the Act. The proceeding is initiated by filing with the county clerk a petition signed by at least 2,500 electors. The part of the section referred to in support of counsel’s contention reads: “Any such petition shall be signed and filed, and shall be verified by the clerk, in the manner prescribed in this Act for the signing, filing and verification of a referendum petition.” These provisions refer only to the manner in which the petition .therefor shall be signed and filed except that it shall be “signed by electors qualified in number to at least ten per centum (10 per cent) of those who voted at the last preceding general election, ’ ’ and shall be “filed with the clerk.” Section 22 provides: “If a referendum petition * * * be found sufficient by the clerk he shall certify that fact to the commission. * * * ” This is the verification contemplated by section 129.
As to the substance of a referendum petition, section 21 requires that it “shall contain the text of the ordinance, or part thereof, the repeal of which is sought.” But this has no connection with the method or form of signing, filing or verification of the petition but relates to the substantial requirements of the contents of the petition itself.
There is a reason why a referendum petition should contain the text of the ordinance to be submitted which does not apply to a petition for the submission of the Act under consideration.
(d) In the original petition and the complaint in intervention objections are taken to some provisions of Chapter 160 in addition to those above considered, but they have not been discussed by counsel in their briefs. They have received our attention. While they do not seem to be open to the objections made, it is not considered necessary to express any opinion upon them, since they do not affect the validity of the Act as a whole, but go only to minor details. Should the questions presented by these objections be raised in the future, they can be more satisfactorily decided after the court has had the benefit of full discussion by briefs and argument of counsel, and for this reason an opinion upon them is expressly reserved.
The motion to quash the citation and the demurrers interposed to the petition and to the complaint in intervention are sustained and the proceeding is dismissed.
Dismissed.