60 Ala. 361 | Ala. | 1877
The question presented for our determination in this cause is, whether or not the “act to change the boundary line betiueen the counties of Blount, Walker, and Jefferson, and to authorize the removal of the county-seat of Blount county,” approved February 8, 1877, is a valid enactment. It is supposed to be obnoxious to, or that it was not passed in accordance with, several provisions of the constitution.
Doubtless, the sections of that instrument which prescribe rules concerning the introduction and progress of bills through the two houses of the general assembly, and the conduct of their business, are mandatory upon the members of those bodies. .The obligation to observe them, arising from their accepting the position of legislators, is confirmed by the official oath they take — the same oath by which judges are bound to a faithful and conscientious discharge of their duties.
There is a wide difference, however, between the functions and modes of proceedings of the legislative, and those of the judicial department of the government; and out of this difference arises a political necessity, recognized in the constitution itself, that each shall, in its action, be almost wholly independent of the other. Except in the few instances in which the duty is expressly imposed by the constitution, or required by the plain meaning of its provisions, and in those cases, perhaps, in which the journals of the senate and house of representatives affirmatively and conclusively show that the rules of proceeding prescribed to them by the constitution have not been observed, it would generally be practically as inconvenient and difficult, as it would be unseemly, for the judiciary to undertake to regulate, or critically to scrutinize, the manner or degree in which the legislature conforms to, or disregards, the requirements of parliamentary law in the transaction of its business.
However formally and unexceptionably a statute may have been passed by the general assembly, yet, whether its provisions do not contravene the constitution of the State, or of the United States, or treaties made by the latter, — to which all the departments of the State government must yield obedience, — and whether the courts are not forbidden by this superior law from enforcing such enactment, and re
But, except in such cases, their mere silence does not invalidate. The principal objects, in requiring the journals to be kept, probably were first, that the members might be thereby informed, from day to day, of the progress and state of the business before them ; and, secondly, that constituencies might afterwards see how their representatives had per
Discussing provisions in the constitution of New Jersey, similar to those in our constitution, the Supreme Court of that State, in a very able opinion by Chief-Justice Beasley, said: “ Its language is, ‘ Each house shall keep a journal of its proceedings, and from time to time publish the same ; and the yeas and nays of the members of either house, on any question, shall, at the desire of one-fifth of those present, be entered on the journal.’ And by the last clause of paragraph sixth, it is further directed, • • • ‘that the yeas and nays of the members voting on such final passage shall be entered on the journal.’ These are all the constitutional requirements relating to these diaries; and it will be observed that, with the exception of recording the yeas and nays, there is no prescription in the constitution of what they shall contain. They are not required to be attested in any way whatever; nor is it said that they shall even be read over to the houses, so that their correctness may stand approved. • • • * In the nature of things, they must be constructed out of loose and hasty memoranda, made in the pressure of business, and amid the distractions of a numerous assembly. • • • Can any one deny that, if the laws of the State are to be tested - by a comparison with these journals, so imperfect, so unauthenticated, that the, stability of all written law will be shaken to its foundation?”
Serious, indeed, would be the consequences, no less in reference to past legislative acts, under which the affairs of communities and of individuals may have been long administered, than in reference to future enactments, if they must be tried, to the extent contended for, by such fallible and fallacious tests. It would almost be impossible to know which of the acts, published from time to time in the statute-books as laws, were laws in fact. Whenever a case should arise under any of them, the printed journals of the two houses would be poured over and scrutinized, to ascertain when and how the bills in which they had their origin were introduced, and what motions had been made, readings had, references ordered, amendments proposed, and votes taken, in respect to them, for the purpose, by these examinations, of finding out objections, to be raised in the courts, to the validity of such acts. The journals would become as important to the ascertainment of what the law is, as the statute-books themselves ; and few persons could be sure that they were not
We refrain from going into any more detail in respect to our conclusions, because there are cases before us, in which the question may be considered in other aspects. Of course, though, we do not hold that judges are prevented from examining the journals, or seeking evidence elsewhere, to satisfy themselves, as it is their duty to do, of the existence of a law, or of the time when it was enacted, when a well-founded doubt of either may exist. Such investigations are within the province of the courts; and upon this subject, there have been delivered several learned and well-considered opinions.—Gardner v. Collector, 6 Wallace, 499; The People v. Devlin, 33 N. Y. 278, et seq. But the courts are not at liberty to treat as void acts which are authenticated, in the long-used and proper manner, as statutes of the general assembly, because the journals do not show that they were passed in accordance with all the rules of parliamentary law prescribed in the constitution for the conduct of legislative business.
Accordingly, this court has heretofore held, since the constitution does not expressly require the journals to show that the notice prescribed by section 24 of article IY, of an intention to apply for the passage of a local or special act, was in fact given, that we will presume, when the journals are silent, that the legislature did not pass such a bill without sufficient proof on that subject.—Harrison v. Goudy, at the last term. The assignment of error based on that section is, therefore, not sustained.
For the same reasons, we decline to pronounce the act under consideration void, because it does not appear by the journals (if, indeed, it does not) that the bill in which it had its origin had received three readings in each house. If the journals do not show that it had been read three times, it is to be presumed that the members knew that this had been done, from their own participation- in the proceedings, or from memoranda on the bill, wrhen they voted for its passage.
Suppose the title were simply, “An act to reconstitute Blount county/’ under this title, it would be allowable to change the boundary upon any side of Blount county, or entirely around it, and to change the county-seat. All of this would be entirely germane to the subject expressed in that title; and whatever is germane to, and congruous with the subject of a statute, may be embodied as a part of it in the same act, without destroying the unity of the subject.—Board of Revenue v. Barber, 53 Ala. 589; Ex parte Hickey, 52 Ala. 229. The subject of a statute may be a large one, having several branches, and requiring much detail; as an act to raise revenue, for instance. And it would protract tbe work of legislation enormously, and make it almost impossible of performance, if the constitutional provision in question were so construed, as to require a separate statute for the enactment of each detail. There can be no doubt, that the general title above suggested for the act under discussion would authorize the introduction into the act of all the provisions it now contains, and more.—See People v. Mahony, 13 Mich. 500; Blood v. Mercelliott, 53 Penn. St. 391; Cooley’s Con. Lim. 145, et seq.; Harris v. People, 59 N. Y. 599. And it thence follows that this act does not contain more than one subject.
Is this subject clearly expressed in the title ? Certainly, what the statute enacts is defined with more precision, than it would be under the more comprehensive title expressive of a single subject, above set forth as sufficient. Eor this
The object-of the constitutional provision is two-fold: first, truly to inform members, who are to vote upon the bill, what the subject' of itúsrKQ'i:l^~fe5yTMy~ñbf' pefform~that duty, deceived or ignorant of "what they are doing; and, secondly, to preveni-the-miscEie-voim^-TegisTatxv'e~pfactice known as log^olKrrg-fHrhat is,-of embracing in one .bill several distinet-matter-Sj-none of- whiehr-perh-aps, could singly obtain the assent of the legislature, and then -procuring its passage by a combination of the minorities-iu-favor of each of the measures, into a majority that will adopt them alL No object of the constitutional provision referred to is defeated or impugned by the title of this act, or by the act itself; and we cannot hold that the constitution makes the statute void.
Let the judgment be reversed, and the cause be remanded.