107 Wash. 667 | Wash. | 1919
These two causes, being so nearly alike, may be properly considered in one opinion.
“It shall be the duty of the industrial code commission to investigate the evils existing in industrial life and the means and methods of remedying the same, and to prepare and present to the legislature of the state of Washington at its next regular session a proposed act, or acts, upon all such subjects, including an act for the prevention of strikes, lockouts and boycotts, and the orderly settlement of industrial disputes.”
Further, the act empowers each of the commissioners to administer oaths and to issue subpoenas for the attendance of witnesses and the production of books and papers in any inquiry, and provides that witnesses shall be entitled to fees and mileage; and an appropriation of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) out of the general fund of the state is made for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of the act. In making up the industrial code commission, pursuant to the terms of the law, the governor appointed Honorable E. L. French, a member of the legislature of 1919, relator in cause No. 15417, as one of its members. Upon the organization of the commission, he attended one of its meetings, and necessarily expended, in the way of personal expenses, the sum of six dollars and fifty-four cents ($6.54); and, although proper vouchers
Concerning the other cause, No. 15418, after the commission was organized, it purchased and received from Pliny L. Allen, relator, one filing cabinet of the agreed value of eighty-five dollars ($85), for the use of the commission in the performance of its duties; and, although a proper voucher for the sum was presented to respondent, as state auditor, and demand made for the issuance and delivery of a warrant therefor, respondent refused to issue the same. Application is made for a peremptory writ of mandamus commanding respondent to issue and deliver such warrant. To the petition in each case, respondent has filed a general demurrer, which presents the question of the validity of the act creating the commission, and particularly of that part of it relating to the appointment of members of the legislature of 1919, as coming in conflict with § 13, art. 2, of the state constitution, as follows:
“No member of the legislature during the term for which he is elected shall be appointed or elected to any civil office in the state which shall have been created, or the emoluments of which shall have been increased, during the term for which he was elected. ’ ’
On the contrary, relators contend the act does no violence to any provision of the constitution. They say it does not contravene the particular section of the constitution relied on by respondent, because appointment to membership upon the industrial code commission is not appointment to a civil office; and relator Allen further contends that, conceding the provision relating to
It is not claimed tbe act does not create a civil office, as contradistinguished from a military or other kind of office, but that tbe act does not create an office at all in tbe sense in which tbe word is used in the particular provision of tbe constitution. Tbe difficulty of formulating a definition of tbe word “office,” at once precise, comprehensive and exclusive, must be considered as well-nigh insuperable. Tbe definitions of tbe word, as given by tbe text writers and courts, are not in entire harmony. Sucb situation, however, proceeds not so much from any conflict of opinion as it does from diversified points of view. Concerning a difficulty somewhat similar, while writing of tbe Federal constitution as bearing upon tbe validity of a legislative act, tbe chief justice in tbe famous case of McCulloch v. Maryland, 4 Wheat. (17 U. S.) 316, 414, said:
£ £ Sucb is tbe character of human language, that no word conveys to tbe mind, in all situations, one single definite idea; . . . Almost all compositions contain words which, taken in their rigorous sense, would convey a meaning different from that which is obviously intended.”
Counsel for relators calls attention to a number of general definitions of tbe word ££office,” as given by tbe authorities, in tbe light of which be contends tbe position as a member of tbe commission is not an
For our present purpose, we find no help in the Colorado case, for the reason that, in the opinion, the court, after stating the contentions of the state auditor to the effect, first, if the committee be regarded as a joint legislative committee, the act was void, being in conflict with the article of the constitution upon the subject of the distribution of powers, in that the duties and powers attempted to be conferred by the act were executive and not legislative; and second, if regarded as creating not a legislative committee but an executive commission, the act violated the provisions of the constitution precluding a member of the legislature from holding any other civil office in the state during the time for which he had been elected, immediately and specifically stated: “In considering these propositions it is therefore only necessary to determine, and all we do determine, is whether the duties imposed and powers conferred upon the committee by the act are executive.”
“ ‘A constitution,’ says Mr. Endlich in his Interpretations of Statutes, § 526, ‘is intended for the. benefit of the people and must receive a liberal construction. ’ ‘The principle of strict construction would frustrate important provisions in every newly constructed frame of government. ’ Such is the general rule, the keynote, as it were, of all interpretation of constitutional provisions, and is in harmony with the principles already discussed.’ ”
Section 13, art. 2, of the constitution does not prohibit a member of the legislature, during the term for which he was elected, from being appointed or elected to office, generally, in the state. The preclusion extends only to any office which shall have been created, or the emoluments of which shall have been increased, during the term for which he was elected. Of course, the purpose of the rule is obvious. It is as was stated in Fyfe v. Kent County Clerk, 149 Mich. 349, 112 N. W. 725, in construing a similar constitutional provision, as follows:
“The purpose of these provisions is ‘to preserve a pure public policy,’ or, as we said in Ellis v. Lennon, 86 Mich. 468, speaking through Justice McG-rath, ‘to prevent officers from using their official position in the*674 creation of offices for themselves or for the appointment of themselves to place. ’ ’ ’
The commission is created by, and its members derive their powers from, an act of the legislature. The term of service is fixed. It uses the process of the state to compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of books and papers. Its members administer oaths. It has at its disposal twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) of the state’s money for carrying out the purposes of the act. On behalf of the state, of its own independent motion and will, it makes investigations and holds hearings within the state when, where and for whatever length of time it pleases. Its defined duties are under the direction and control of no superior. And each member, in addition to his expenses, receives compensation for each day’s actual service.
In oral argument counsel for relators interestingly called attention to the wisdom of that plan of the act by which advantage to the state would be greatly increased in having as a member of the legislature, when it considers an act or acts proposed by the commission, one who was a member of the commission, as would happen in the event a member of the commission were a member of such session of the legislature. There is force in the argument that one who had listened to the details of the inquiries of the commission and of the information it had received would be already familiar with the subject and of peculiar and signal help to other legislators in the final shaping of contemplated legislation. But these considerations go only to the propriety, or lack of it, in the constitutional provision in question as it is written. Most any rule has its disadvantages as well as its virtues. To be persuaded by the argument of counsel would induce the writing of an exception to the rule in the constitution. On the contrary, it must be held that, in adopting the
Other than the one just discussed, there is no objection to the validity of the act. The provision found to be unenf orcible because of the ineligibility of a member of the legislature to membership on the commission must be considered as directory and easily separable from the remainder of the law without affecting its validity. Manifestly, one of the dominant ideas of the act concerning the membership of the commission is that “the governor shall appoint a commission, consisting of five citizens of the state of Washington,” and if, by reason of a deep interest in the important subject-matter, the legislature suggests a rank or class denied by the constitution from which a member of the commission should be chosen by the appointive power, such situation will in no sense deprive the governor of the right and power to appoint some other citizen of the state, eligible to be a member of the commission, instead of the one determined to be ineligible.
It results from the foregoing that the writ applied for in cause No. 15417 should be, and it is, denied; also that the writ applied for in cause No. 15418 should be, and it is, granted.
Holcomb, O. J., Main, Mackintosh, and Tolman, JJ., concur.