151 Mo. 362 | Mo. | 1899
This is a proceeding by mandamus begun in this court on the information of a private citizen to compel the presiding officer of the Senate and its secretary, and the speaker of the House of Representatives and its chief clerk, of the Fortieth General Assembly to perform an official
The alternative writ was issued on the twentieth day of May, 1899, and is as follows: “Whereas, it has been represented to our honorable Supreme Court by petition of S. P. Davisson, that on the 8th day of November, 1898, he was over the age of thirty years, a citizen of Missouri for more than a year prior to said election and was elected to the Senate of the State of Missouri from the Fourth Senatorial District of said State, to which he was eligible, and received his certificate of election from the Secretary of State, and on the 4th day of January, 1899, was duly sworn in as a member of said Senate and at once entered upon the discharge of his duties as such Senator under the Laws and Constitution of the State; that said body, to wit, the State Senate, is authorized and empowered by the laws and Constitution of the State to enact such laws for the government of the people in connection with the other branch of the legislature, as they may deem right and proper in the discharge of their duties for the protection of the property and person and government of the people of said State; that in the discharge of his said duties as such senator and in connection with the other senators, said Senate did pass and enact into a law a bill entitled, “An act to prohibit the sale by dramshop keepers of spirituous, vinous- and malt liquors in places other than the dramshop. To prohibit wine rooms, lunch counters, and to amend chapter fifty-six of the Revised Statutes relating to dramshops by the addition of a new section thereto,” said bill being numbered 88. That after said bill had been passed into a law by the Senate as far as could be done by that body, it was sent to the House of Representatives, where it was duly concurred in by said body, after being amended by said House of Representatives, and was duly returned from said House to the Senate aforesaid for the concurrence of that body in said amendment; that said amendments were duly considered by the Senate aforesaid,
“Now, therefore, we being willing that full and speedy justice be done in tbe premises, do command you and each of you tbe said A. H. Bolte, tbe said W. S. McClinticlc and tbe said Cornelius Eoacb and tbe said W. J. Ward, and tbe said H. A. Newman, that each of you proceed at once to do your duty in tbe premises and that you tbe said W. S. McClintick as presiding officer of the. Senate of tbe State of Missouri, cause said bill No. 88, as aforesaid, to be read in open session of tbe Senate and that after it is so read, you affix your signature to said bill at once and that you then cause said bill to be transmitted to the. House of Eepresentatives so that said speaker, W. J. Ward, may affix bis signature thereto and you tbe said Ward, as speaker as aforesaid, are hereby required to cause said bill to be read in open session of tbe House of Eepresentatives, and after which that 'you affix your signature thereto immediately and at once return it to the Senate aforesaid .and that you, tbe said Cornelius Eoacb, secretary as aforesaid, deliver into tbe bands of tbe Governor at once said
Respondents, Bolte, McClintick and Roach made return to said writ as follows:
“Now comes A. H. Bolte, President of the Senate, et ah, aforesaid, and for his return to the said Writ of Mandamus, says that he is President of the Senate of the State of Missouri as eharged. That W. S. McClintick is president pro tempore and C. Roach is secretary of said Senate as charged. That the relator, S. P. Davisson, is one of the members of tbe said Senate of the Fortieth General Assembly as charged.
“The said Senate passed senate bill No. 88 sent through to the House of Representatives, where it was amended by said House and passed as amended, and sent back to said Senate and said House amendment was by the said Senate rejected and said House refused to recede from said amendment, and thereupon a conference committee was appointed by the two houses which conference committee duly considered said amendment and made their report to each of said houses, which report was by said Senate adopted as charged.
“That said bill as amended by said report was thereupon by said Senate put upon its final passage and received but seventeen votes out of thirty-four Senators elect, or one vote less than a constitutional majority, and was by the president pro tempore then presiding, declared lost, and so recorded and entered on the journal of said Senate on the-day of May, 1899, which said ruling of said president pro tempore was not appealed from, and remains in full force and effect.
*373 “That said bill can not be signed for the reason that under the rules of the Senate as authorized by the Constitution, all bills passed must be enrolled by the enrolling clerk of the Senate and the same examined by the committee on enrolled bills and returned to the Secretary of the Senate with the words “Truly Enrolled” indorsed thereon.
“That at the time of the alleged passage of said bill there were under the rules of said Senate duly adopted and enforced an appointed and acting enrolling clerk of the Senate, to wit: One BE. H. Eussell, and also a duly appointed standing committee of the Senate known as the Committee on Enrolled Bills.
“That said bill has not been enrolled nor passed upon nor compared by said enrolling committee and therefore can not be signed by the president and secretary of the Senate for the reason that the same must lie duly enrolled and reported upon as aforesaid before it can be signed by the presiding officer of both houses of the General Assembly in open session after having been fully read at length as required by the Constitution, and the Fortieth General Assembly having, pursuant to a joint resolution duly adopted by both houses on the 22d day of May, 1899, adjourned sine die.
“That under the Constitution of this State this court has no jurisdiction of these defendants, nor of the subject-matter contained in plaintiff’s petition.”
The speaker of the House, W. J. Ward, and its chief clerk, H. A. Newman, made return to said writ in which it is averred that no such bill as the one therein mentioned has ever been presented to them for their signatures, but that if such a bill had been presented to them duly enrolled, and properly certified, as required by the Constitution and laws of Missouri during the Fortieth General Assembly they would have signed the same, etc. That while the General Assembly
To the returns relator filed demurrers which in their nature are general.
The question which lies at the foundation of this proceeding is as to whether or not mandamus will lie by one branch of our State Government against another co-ordinate branch, of which the Legislature is one.
There are three departments of government, the legislative, judicial and executive. The legislative department enacts the laws, the judicial department construes them, and the executive department enforces them. “They are entirely independent of each other, and each is supreme in its own domain. It then becomes important to determine to what extent the judiciary department could interfere in the operations of the other departments by the use of the writ of mandamus. While on the one hand it is claimed that the judiciary must be supreme in the determination of all questions which come before it in the course of legal proceedings, yet on the other hand it is asserted that the other departments, being supreme in their spheres of action, can not be controlled by the judiciary, nor can the judiciary direct them or supervise them in the performance of their duties.” Merrill on Mandamus, sec. 91.
Where the action of the Legislature is within its legislative power it can not be controlled by the judiciary by mandamus, or in any other way, for to do so would be the usurpation of a power which does not belong to the latter.
Ex parte Echols, 39 Ala. 698, was a proceeding by man- ' damus to compel the speaker of the House to send to the Senate a bill which was alleged to have passed the House, and which he refused to send to the Senate, because of an alleged erroneous construction placed by him, and by the House on appeal from his decision, on a constitutional provision requiring a vote of two-thirds in each house to pass the bill, and
Again in United States v. Guthrie, 17 How. loc. cit. 304, the court says: “Thus it has been ruled, that the only acts to which the power of the courts, by mandamus, extends, are such as are purely ministerial, and with regard to which nothing like judgment or discretion, in the performance of his duties, is left to the officer; but that, whenever the right of judgment or decision exists in him, it is he, and not the courts, who can regulate its exercise.”
It is true that in Ex part,e Pickett, 24 Ala. 91, the Supreme Court of Alabama awarded mandamus against the speaker of the House of Representatives of that State, to compel him to certify to the comptroller of p-ublic accounts the amount to which the petitioner was entitled, as a member of said House for mileage or per diem compensation; and that in State ex rel. v. Moffitt, 5 Ohio, 358, under a law which required that the election or appointment of all officers, elected or appointed by the Legislature, should be certified by the speakers of both Houses thereof, mandamus was awarded to compel them to do so. But in both of these cases the acts which the officers were compelled to perform by mandamus were purely ministerial and not within their legislative functions.
The case of State ex rel. v. Mead, 71 Mo. 266, was a quo warranto proceeding, and has no application we think to the case at bar. Nor has the case of the State ex rel. v. Meier, 143 Mo. 439, for the reason that it was a proceeding by mandamus against the president of a subordinate tribunal and not, as in this case, against a co-ordinate branch of the State government. Moreover, it was to compel the performance of an act purely ministerial.
While it is the duty of the Supreme Court to- construe laws enacted by the General Assembly, and, while it has the power to declare them valid or invalid as the case may be, it
Our conclusion is that the demurrer to the return should be overruled, and peremptory writ denied, and it is so ordered.