66 P. 614 | Utah | 1901
The defendant, it appears, was prosecuted for, and convicted of, the crime of “having sexual intercourse with a female person over the age of thirteen years, and under the age of eighteen years.” Upon having been sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison for a term of two years, he appealed to this court.
It is also contended that the district attorney had no power or authority to file the information under which the defendant was finally convicted and sentenced to imprisonment. That information was filed April 24, 1901, pursuant to the act approved March I, 1901 (chapter 28, Sess. Laws 1901); but it is claimed that, under our Constitution, that act had not taken effect at the date of the filing of the information, because it had not been published, and that, therefore, the prosecution was unauthorized. The Constitution, in article 6, section 25, provides: “All acts shall be officially published, and no act shall take effect until so published, nor until sixty days after the adjournment of the session at which it passed, unless the Legislature by a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each house; shall otherwise direct.” Under this provision it is insisted that, notwithstanding an emergency may exist, no act of the Legislature can take effect until the same has been officially published. We do not regard
The judgment is affirmed.