7 Alaska 522 | D. Alaska | 1927
The plaintiff, James Wickersham, on May 6, 1927, filed his bill in equity, seeking an injunction to restrain the defendant Walstein G. Smith, as treasurer of the territory of Alaska, from paying out of the territorial treasury various sums of money appropriated by the Legislature of the territory and contained in the general appropriation act of 1927, on the ground that the appropriations were illegal and void. The specific appropriations objected to and claimed to be illegal by the plaintiff are, as follows:
For tbe office of tbe Governor:
Additional salary for the secretary to the Governor, $720 per annum $1,440
One clerk, at $2,100 per annum 4,200
One stenographer, at $1,800 per annum 3,600
Janitor, messenger, and other service at the house to supplement the federal appropriation, $600 per annum 1,200
Travel and contingent expenses of the Governor to supplement federal appropriations 2,000
Dissemination of information about Alaska, publication and circulation of pamphlets and booklets, under direction of Governor 2,000
For entertainment at the executive mansion of officers and representatives of the United. States, the states of the Union, or of foreign countries 2¡000
Repairs and improvements to the executive mansion 1,250
Total $17,690
Salary of secretary of the territory for work carried on under territorial laws, $2,000 per annum 4,000
Salary of chief clerk, $2,640 per annum 5,280
Salary of assistant clerk, $2,100 per annum 4,200
For additional and necessary clerical help for the biennium 3,600
For office rent for biennium ■ 3,120
For contingent expenses, telephone, electric lights, secretary’s bond, etc., $750 per annum 1,500
Total $21,700
Special legislative expenses:
For compensation to Bartley Howard for supervision and preparation of Senate Journal subsequent -to the session of the Legislature, ten days at $15 a day 150
For compensation to Sumner S. Smith for supervising and preparing House Journal subsequent to the session of the Legislature, 10 days at $15 a day 150
For employment of extra clerical help, including overtime to the regular employees, Eighth session, also employment of special clerical help to compile, compare, and have printed Senate Journal; and other contingent expenses, to be expended under the direction of the Governor and certified by the President of the Senate, or so much thereof as may be necessary 1,500
For employment of extra clerical help, including overtime of regular employees, Eighth session, also employment of special clerical help to compile, compare, and have printed House Journal, and other contingent expenses, to be expended under the direction of the Governor and certified by the Speaker of the House, or so much thereof as may be necessary 1,500
Total $3,300
The plaintiff alleges that he is a taxpayer of the territory, and that the items complained of will be paid out of the territorial treasury by the defendant illegally and in violation of the laws of the United States, unless this court prevents defendant from so doing by its power of injunction; that the said sums will thereby be lost from the public funds and the possession of the defendant as territorial treasurer, and that
At the time of presenting the complaint a motion was presented by the plaintiff for a temporary restraining order pendente lite. On reading the complaint, an order to show cause why an injunction pendente lite should not issue was granted, returnable on May 11, 1927, at 2 o’clock p. m. At the hour set for the return on the order to show cause, there appeared Hon. Karl Theile, secretary of the territory, by his counsel, Hellenthal & Hellenthal, and Hon. Geo. A. Parks, Governor of the territory, separately appeared by the same counsel and moved the court for leave to intervene as having an interest in the matter in litigation. Messrs. Hellenthal & Hellenthal, attorneys, also appeared with the Attorney General of the territory for the defendant Walstein G. Smith, the territorial treasurer, and thereupon the plaintiff objected to the court’s granting the motion of the secretary and the Governor of the territory to intervene, on the ground that Hellenthal & Hellenthal were not authorized to appear for the intervening parties. The plaintiff also objected to Hellenthal & Hellenthal’s appearing for the territory, on the ground that the Attorney General of the territory was alone authorized to appear on behalf of the territory, or for the treasurer of the territory, and moved that the said attorneys be required to show their authority to enter their appearance as attorneys for the defendant and for the interveners.
The motion was denied, for the reason that, as to the appearance for the interveners, it is to be presumed that their authority to appear for the interveners was authorized from the fact that the complaints in intervention were verified by the interveners under the signature of the above-mentioned attorneys, and, as to the defendant Smith, it appears that the Attorney General of the territory had joined with the attorneys named in entering an appearance, thus disclosing authority for the appearance of the attorneys in both instances. The objection of the plaintiff to the allowance of the intervention was
A special demurrer was then interposed to the complaints in intervention by the plaintiff on three alleged grounds, namely, that the interveners were public officials of the United States, and had no authority to intervene herein without authority from the Secretary of the Interior or the Attorney General of the United States; that the complaints in intervention do not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the interveners, and that the court has no jurisdiction of the plaintiff or subject of the action in the complaints in intervention or the plaintiffs therein. The first and third grounds of demurrer were overruled, but a ruling on the second ground of the demurrer was reserved, as it involved a discussion of the whole subject in controversy.
Also, in pursuance of the order to show cause, a demurrer was interposed to the plaintiff’s complaint by the territorial treasurer, alleging that the plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue, and that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The first ground of the demurrer is, I take it, that the plaintiff, by the allegations of the complaint, has not shown himself entitled to the relief sought by the complaint. The argument of counsel for the defendant is based on the proposition that a taxpayer is not entitled to injunctive relief against the executive officers of the government paying out moneys in pursuance of appropriations made by the legislative authority. In
“The attack upon the statute in the Frothingham Case is generally the same, but this plaintiff alleges in addition that she is a taxpayer of the United States, and her contention, though not clear, seems to be that the effect of the appropriations complained of will be to increase the burden of future taxation and thereby take her property without due process of law. The right of a taxpayer to enjoin the execution of a federal appropriation act, on the ground that it is invalid, and will result in taxation for illegal purposes, has never been passed upon by this court. In cases where it was presented, the question has either been allowed to pass sub silentio or the determination of it expressly withheld” — citing several cases, including Bradfield v. Roberts, 175 U. S. 291-295, 20 S. Ct. 121, 44 L. Ed. 168. “The case last cited came here from the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, and that court sustained the right of the plaintiff to sue by treating the case as one directed against the District of Columbia, and therefore subject to the rule, frequently stated by this court, that resident taxpayers may sue to enjoin an illegal use of the moneys of a municipal corporation. * * * The interest of a taxpayer of a municipality in the application of its moneys is direct and immediate and the remedy by injunction to prevent their misuse is not inappropriate. It is upheld by a large number of state cases and is the rule of this court. Crampton v. Zabriskie, 101 U. S. 601, 609 [25 L. Ed. 1070]. Nevertheless, there are decisions to the contrary. See, for example, Miller v. Grandy, 13 Mich. 540, 550.
“The reasons which support the extension of the equitable remedy to a single taxpayer in such cases are based upon the peculiar rela*532 tion of the corporate taxpayer to the corporation, which is not without some resemblance to that subsisting between stockholder and private corporation. 4th Dillon, Municipal Corporations (5th Ed.) § 1580 et seq. But the relation of a taxpayer of the United States to the federal government is very different. His interest in the moneys of the treasury — partly realized from taxation and partly from other sources —is shared with millions of others, is comparatively minute and indeterminable, and the effect upon future taxation, of any payment out of the funds, so remote, fluctuating, and uncertain, that no basis is afforded for an appeal to the preventive powers of a court of equity. The administration of any statute, likely to produce additional taxation to be imposed upon a vast number of taxpayers, the extent of whose several liability is indefinite and constantly changing, is essentially a matter of public and not of individual concern. If one taxpayer may champion and litigate such a cause, then every other taxpayer may do the same, not only in respect of the statute here urlder review but also in respect of every other appropriation act and statute whose administration requires the outlay of public money, and whose validity may be questioned.”
■The plaintiff, in the case at bar, alleges in paragraph 4 of the complaint that the items complained of will be paid out illegally and in violation of the laws of the United States, unless the Treasurer is enjoined from doing so by this court, and thereby said sums lost from the public funds of the territorial treasury and their unlawful payment greatly increase the taxes which the plaintiff and other taxpayers in Alaska are obliged to pay to maintain the government.
The power of a court of equity to restrain, at the instance of a taxpayer, the imposition of illegal taxes or the unlawful payment of public funds by municipal authorities is based upon the present or future injury to the taxpayer by increasing the burden on him or squandering the property of the taxpayers ; it being the theory that the municipality is trustee of the corporate property and the taxpayer the cestui que trust. Whether an action of this nature- is limited to municipalities as such, including counties, or can be brought against the state is a more serious question and one on which the courts are divided. As was said by the Supreme Court in the case last cited:
“That question may be considered only when the justification for some direct injury suffered or threatened, presenting a justiciable issue, is made to rest upon such an act. Then the power exercised is that of ascertaining and declaring the law applicable to the controversy. It amounts to little more than the negative power to disregard an unconstitutional enactment, which otherwise would stand in the way of the enforcement of a legal right. The party who invokes the*533 power must be able to show, not only that the statute is invalid, but that he has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining some direct injury as the result of its enforcement, and not merely that he suffers in some indefinite way in common with people generally. If a case for preventive relief be presented, the court enjoins, in effect, not the execution of the statute, but the acts of the official, the statute notwithstanding. Here the parties plaintiff have no such case. Looking through forms of words to the substance of their complaint, it is merely that officials of the executive department of the government are executing and will execute an act of Congress asserted to be unconstitutional; and this we are asked to prevent. To do so would be not to decide a judicial controversy, but to assume a position of authority over the governmental acts of another and coequal department, an authority which plainly we do not possess.”
Judge Amidon, in Scott v. Frazier (D. C.) 258 F. 669, which was a suit in equity to restrain the defendants, state officers, from paying out public funds from the state treasury, amounting to several hundred thousand dollars, says:
“It may be doubted whether taxpayers may maintain a suit against state officers to vindicate alleged rights of a state. I have been unable to find any authority that would support such a doctrine. Such suits have been confined to actions against municipal officers to vindicate the rights of cities. Such are all the cases cited by Judge Dillon in his work on Municipal Corporations at section 1579. The reasons which permit such suits in the case of municipal corporations have no application to. states. Municipal corporations exist under special charters and have only such powers of taxation as are specifically conferred upon them. They have many of the qualities of a private corporation and the right to maintain taxpayers’ suits has been rested upon the same ground as the right of stockholders to maintain similar suits in behalf of a private corporation. States are not municipal corporations. Their powers are not defined by charter. They possess all powers, except as they are limited by the state and federal Constitutions. This is especially true of their power to tax. The power to maintain taxpayers’ suits, even against municipal officers, has been denied by the courts of New York, Massachusetts, and several other states. Dillon, § 1585 et seq. I can find no justification for extending the doctrines to actions against state officers.”
The doctrine cited by Judge Amidon is followed, so far as my investigation has reached, by -a majority of the states of the Union. In State v. Frear, 148 Wis. 456, 134 N. W. 673, 135 N. W. 164, L. R. A. 1915B, 569, 606, Ann. Cas. 1913A, 1147, the question was considered by the Supreme Court in a very elaborate opinion, in which an action by a taxpayer to restrain the paying but of public moneys by the auditing-officers of the state was dismissed, the court saying:
*534 “This se'ems to be-a taxpayers’ action pure and simple, brought in the circuit court to stay the hands of state officers from paying moneys out of the state treasury. We have already held in this opinion that no taxpayer’s action can be maintained in the Supreme , Court against the auditing or disbursing officers of the state. If such relief is sought, it must be in an action by the state itself, either brought by the Attorney General, or, in case of his refusal, by authority of the court itself, upon the relation of a private citizen. It would seem, a fortiori, that no taxpayer’s action shall be entertained in the circuit court where the purpose is to halt the auditing and disbursing officers of the state. We regard this ,as the better administration. It is enough that this court has the power to authorize such action if the exigency demands [it]. To divide up that power and scatter it among the. trial courts of the state, and allow every such court to judge of the exigency, might well lead to the bringing of many improvident actions.”
A very vigorous dissenting opinion, to a part of the majority decision, was rendered by Judge Timlin, who says, in commenting upon the authority of the taxpayer to maintain an action against the state officials for the payment of funds from allegedly unconstitutional appropriations:
“It has been sometimes said by law writers and courts that this rule rested upon the consideration that, if one suit could be maintained in such ease, each person affected might also bring suit and thus the defendant be ruined by litigation. This consideration has special significance and force in a state where the law permits suits to be brought by private persons against administrative officers ■charged with the ‘administration of’ law. New officers would attempt an efficient administration at such risk, and the ultimate result must be either injustice or inefficiency. But there is another reason for the rule, which lies deeper and upon a broader foundation of governmental policy. That is the policy which places the prosecution of public wrongs in the hands of the public prosecutors and out of the hands of those who may be actuated by private revenge or gain, malice, or political intrigue. * * * If the state as a sovereign is to have its proper and lawful recognition in our jurisprudence, it is, in the absence of statute, subject to no defense of laches, no limitation of time, and no liability to suit, and it must also be regarded as the repository of governmental policy and political discretion. When and how it will assert and enforce its sovereign prerogatives is often a political question, a matter of state policy, and to leave these great questions in the hands of every private litigant has a tendency to create confusion in jurisprudence, lack of wisdom in state policy, and contempt for authority.”
In the case of Jones v. Reed, 3 Wash. 57, 27 P. 1067-1069, the Supreme Court of the state of Washington, by Justice Dunbar, in discussing the question of the right of a taxpayer to
“The Supreme Court of the United States has spoken on this subject in Crampton v. Zabriskie, 101 U. S. 601 [25 L. Ed. 1070]. The doctrine was thus laid down by Justice Field: ‘Of the right of resident taxpayers to invoke the interposition of a court of equity to prevent an illegal disposition of the moneys of the county, or the illegal creation of a debt which they in common with other property holders of the county may otherwise be compelled to pay, there is at this day no serious question.’ It will be observed, however, that this ease falls short of asserting the doctrine claimed here by the respondent, that courts of equity will restrain the action of state officers in matters of public concern on the petition of a taxpayer who shows no special interest; nor will the language or argument of the court bear any such construction. On the other hand, it is based on the relationship of the taxpayer to the municipal, or quasi municipal, corporation. Indeed, of all the cases cited by the respondent, not one case goes beyond the doctrine laid down in Crampton v. Zabriskie, so that it will not be necessary to review them here. Nor have we been able to find a case which extends the doctrine beyond that case. In all the cases reported, the restraining order has been asked against a county, town, city, or district officers.
“It is argued by respondent that, notwithstanding the absence of authority, there is no difference in principle between restraining county officers and state officers, in matters of public concern, on the prayer of a taxpayer. The principle upon which the doctrine in regard to municipal, or quasi municipal, corporations is based, flows from its analogy to a well-settled doctrine in equity governing private corporations, where each stockholder has an interest in the property of the corporation, and may interfere to protect the corporate funds from the illegal or fraudulent acts of its officers. * * * But this reasoning cannot apply to a state government. The county is a quasi corporation ; the state is a sovereignty. The county only possesses such powers as the Legislature of the state confers upon it. Its revenues, its property, its very existence, depend upon statutory enactment. It can be enlarged, dismembered, or annihilated, at the will of the state.”
Whether a like rule applies to the territory is a question that requires serious consideration. A territorial organization is more comprehensive than a municipal or county organization, and whether or not the rule approved in the cases cited applies to the territory is a matter on which I am very much in doubt. The territory organized by the Congress of the United States
The legislative power of the states in that regard is limited by the Constitution of the United States and.the general laws of the United States applicable to the states, and where they may be in conflict with either the Constitution or the laws of the United States applicable to the states under the authority of the Constitution, they are invalid. In the one case the power is limited by the qualification of the Constitution and laws of the United States applicable to the territory as well as the prohibitions of the Organic Act. In the other there is the same constitutional prohibition as well as prohibition of legislation within the delegated powers of Congress. As was said by Judge ‘Dunbar, in Jones v. Reed, a territory is not like a state in its sovereignty. It possesses only such powers as are granted by the Congress of the United States. Its revenues, its property, and its very existence depend upon the will of Congress. It can be enlarged or annihilated at the will of Congress.
So, whether a taxpayer can invoke the interposition of a court of equity to compel the officers of a territory to do their duty, or restrain them from illegally increasing the burden of taxation by squandering the public funds of the territory, is a serious question, especially in the territory of Alaska, where, as is well known, there is no direct property taxation, but all taxation for the support of the territorial government is provided for by licenses or occupational taxes, which taxes are in the nature of a privilege granted by the territory to pursue'a particular occupation or business. The point was not argued
The territorial officers have sought the opinion of the -court on the several items of the appropriations, and the Attorney General of the territory has submitted a statement of the questions involved, without expressing an opinion thereon, and seeks a decision of the court, not only on the validity of the appropriations involved, but other questions incident thereto. For this reason, and the further reason that, in view of the conflict of opinion as to the validity of the several appropriations under the statute and the importance of the issues raised to the territorial government, I deem it necessary that a decision on the appropriations involved be had for the future guidance of the territorial officers. The gravity of the questions raised as to the appropriations, as appears from the intervening complaints of the Governor and the secretary of the territory, is such that the whole system of the territorial government is in jeopardy, should these appropriations be declared invalid.
In approaching the subject of the constitutionality of a statute regularly enacted by legislative bodies, several canons of construction are to be considered. One is that every intendment should be given to the validity of the statute, and before the court should declare the statute invalid its invalidity must be clear and convincing. If the court is .in doubt, that doubt should be resolved in favor of the validity of the statute. If, however, the court is convinced of the unconstitutionality or invalidity of the statute, it should not hesitate to so declare. As to appropriations, it is a canon that the Legislature is elected to make laws for the public good, and not for the benefit of individuals. It has control of the public moneys, and should provide for their disbursement for public purposes only. Cooley, Const. Lim. 184. In other words, the Legislature has not the power to levy taxes or make appropriations of public moneys for purely private purposes; yet, in making appropriations of public moneys, the Legislature is not confined within the strict limits of what in cases between individuals would be considered a legal obligation, but may - recognize moral or equitable obligations, such as a
The plaintiff herein contends that the Legislature has not passed any law creating the obligation or authorizing the appropriations for the uses objected to and that there is no law authorizing the same except as to the secretary’s salary; that the Legislature has no power to create obligations authorizing the appropriation of public moneys from the territorial treasury, except by enactment of law in the manner and form prescribed by the Organic Act, and that the Legislature has not enacted any law authorizing the appropriations, and that the appropriations are void, because they are made without the authorization of a pre-existing law, citing in support of this contention section 1760, R. S. 1878 (5 USCA § 52), and a number of cases from Colorado, none of which cases is pertinent to the conclusion reached by the plaintiff. Section 1760, R. S. 1878, is a section of a statute of the United States regulating the payment of moneys to employees, and reads as follows:
“No money shall be paid from the treasury to any person acting or assuming to act as an officer, civil, military, or naval, 'as salary, in any office when the office is not authorized by some previously existing law, unless such office is subsequently sanctioned by law.”
The only construction to be given to this section is that it denies the payment of moneys from the United States Treasury to any person assuming to act as an officer of the United States without the office having been created or subsequently authorized by law. The case cited from Kansas of Bailey v. Kelly, 70 Kan. 869, 79 P. 735, passes on the question whether an appropriation contained in the general appropriation bill for ■maintaining the executive mansion authorized the disbursement of part of the appropriation for the purchase of provisions to be used there and it arose on mandamus proceedings to compel the treasurer to make payment of a certain sum for entertainment in the executive mansion. The court, after discussing the effect of the contention, stated that such an appropriation would be to increase the compensation of the Governor of the state during his term of office and was void as being in contravention of the constitutional provision prohibiting any increase of compensation to the Governor during his term of office.
I am unable to discover any other case supporting the contention of plaintiff as stated by him, as to the necessity of a prior authorization for an appropriation by an act of the Legislature before such appropriation could be included in the general appropriation bill for the expenses of the territory. The Organic Act itself does not so limit the general appropriations by the Legislature of the territory. The further question is raised that the appropriation bill if the appropriations are valid embrace more than one subject, which is not specified in the title. This contention ! will discuss later on.
The specific appropriations objected to are, first, those appropriated in the general appropriation bill for the expenses of the Governor’s office. The title of the bill (House Bill No. 97) is:
“An act to make appropriations for the expenses of the territory of Alaska for the last three quarters of the fiscal year 1927, beginning April 1 and ending December 31, for the fiscal year ending December 31,1928, and for the quarter ending March 31,1929, and for the school year ending June 30, 1929, and declaring an emergency.”
The first item in this schedule is for additional salary for the secretary to the Governor, in the amount of $1,440 for the biennium ending March 31, 1929. It is urged that there is no existing law authorizing this appropriation, and that, if its presence in the appropriation bill authorized its payment, the bill would be void as being in violation of section 8 of the Organic Act (48 USCA § 76 [U. S. Comp. St. § 3535]), which provides that no law shall embrace more than one subject which shall be expressed in its title; that section 11 of the Organic Act (48 USCA § 83 [U. S. Comp. St. § 3538]) provides that no person holding a commission or appointment under the United States shall be a member of the Legislature or shall hold any office under the government of the territory and that therefore the appropriation is void for that reason; that by the general appropriation bill of Congress for the Department of the Interior there was appropriated the sum of $2,800 for clerk hire for the Governor’s office, and that the payment of this additional sum appropriated by the Legislature would be a violation of the general laws of the United States and particularly section 1765, R. S. 1878 (5 USCA § 70), and section 66 et seq. of the Code of 1926. Section 1765, R. S., provides:
“No officer in any branch of the public service, or any other person whose salary, pay, or emoluments are fixed by law or regulations, shall receive any additional pay, extra allowance, or compensation, in any form whatever, for the disbursement of public money, or for*541 any other service or duty whatever, unless the same is authorized by law, and the appropriation therefor explicitly states that it is for such additional pay, extra allowance, or compensation.”
The inhibition in this section of the statute is that no officer in any branch of the public service, or any other person whose salary, pay, or emoluments are fixed by law or regulation, shall receive additional compensation in any form for any other service, unless the same is authorized by law.
This refers, in my opinion, to a claim for compensation from the United States for services performed in its behalf. This interpretation of the statute is borne out by the exception in section 66 of title 5 of the Code of the United States, 1926, providing that no government officer or employee shall receive any salary in connection with his services as such official employee from any source other than the government of the United States, except as may be contributed out of the treasury of any state, county, municipality, etc. This last section impliedly allows salaries to be paid to employees from sources other than private sources, in effect denying or prohibiting any officer or official of the United States from receiving any compensation whatever from private sources. The statute is further limited in its prohibition to those officers of the United States whose salary, pay or emoluments are fixed by law or regulation. It, therefore, can apply only to officers of the United States, or persons whose salary, pay, or emoluments are fixed by law or by regulations of the United States.
This leads us directly to the question whether the secretary to the Governor is an officer of the United States, or a person whose salary, pay, or emoluments are fixed by any law or regulation of the United States. It is evident that the secretary to the Governor is not an officer of the United States, as provided by the Constitution. Article 2, § 2. This article provides that:
“The President shall * * * have power, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to make treaties, * * * and he shall nominate, and by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, shall appoint ambassadors * * * and all other officers of the United States, whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for, and which shall be established by law; but the Congress may by law vest the appointment of such inferior officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of departments.”
“The distinction between officer and employee in this connection does not rest upon differences in the qualifications necessary to fill the. positions or in the character of the service to be performed, whether the incumbent is an officer or an employee is determined by the manner in which Congress has specifically provided for the creation of the several positions, their duties and appointments” — citing a number of cases.
In Martin v. United States, 168 F. 198-203, approved by the Supreme Court, the Circuit Court of Appeals says:
“Because the defendant’s services were secured under authority granted to the Secretary of the Interior to employ assistants, because his position was never made an office by law, because it had neither duration nor tenure, because its duties were not prescribed, nor its emoluments fixed, by law, and because it was without greater dignity, importance, and independence than the positions of many other employees, and it had much less of either than many inferior offices of the United States have, our conclusion is that the defendant was not an officer of the United States.”
So, in the case at bar, because the secretary to the Govern- or is not an officer provided for in any law of Congress, and because his appointment has not been delegated to the President alone,- nor delegated to any head of a department by any law of Congress, and because he has no tenure of office, and because thebe is no fixed emoluments provided by any law of the United States, I must conclude that he is not an officer nor a person whose pay or emoluments are fixed by law or any regulation of the United States, and that he does not come within the inhibitions of section 1765, R. S. 1878, nor within the provisions of section 66 of the Code of the United States, 1926.
I therefore conclude that the appropriation for the salary of the secretary to the Governor is not void, for the reason that there is any conflict with section 1765 or because of any prohibition in any of the general laws of the United States.
The title of the general appropriation bill is that it is an act to make appropriations for expenses of the territory for the last three-quarters of the fiscal year and subsequently, and it is sufficiently comprehensive to cover all necessary expenses of the territory for the period named. See Commonwealth v. Brown, 91 Va. 762, 21 S. E. 357, 28 L. R. A. 110; State ex rel. Jackson v. Topeka Club, 82 Kan. 756, 109 P. 183, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 722, 20 Ann. Cas. 320; Hyman v. State, 87 Tenn. 109, 9 S. W. 372, 1 L. R. A. 497. If the title of the statute expresses a general purpose, all matters reasonably connected with that purpose, and all measures which are convenient or appropriate or fairly calculated to facilitate the accomplishment of that purpose, are proper parts of the statute under the constitutional requirements. Burrows v. Delta Transportation Co., 106 Mich. 582, 64 N. W. 501, 29 L. R. A. 468. If all the provisions of the law relate to one
I am of the opinion that the title of the act under consideration is sufficiently comprehensive and while embodying a number of appropriations apportioned to the different offices of the territory for defraying the expenses of the territorial government for the ensuing biennium, all the appropriations are germane to the subject of the act as expressed in the title;
But it is said that the expenses objected to are not authorized by any existing law and that therefore the appropriations for expenses not authorized constitutes new legislation not embraced in the title. This is a refinement of reasoning which requires a strict construction of the provisions of the Organic Act which is not in consonance with the weight of authority. The statutes of the territory (chapter 60, Raws of 1925) provide for a budget of the probable expenses of the territory for the ensuing biennium, to be - prepared by the territorial treasurer and submitted to the Legislature. It is reasonable to suppose that the appropriations mentioned in the complaint, being a part of the general appropriation bill, were submitted to the Legislature as a part of the budget so prepared, and that the Legislature considered and approved the items submitted and incorporated them into the appropriation bill as a necessary part of the expenses of the territory, basing their conclusion on the duties imposed on the officers and employees of the territory under its laws and the customary workings of the territorial government.
In viewing the administration of the territorial government, as disclosed by the statutes of the territory, the most prominent feature obtaining is that duties have been imposed upon the Governor and the secretary of the territory and other federal" officers appointed by the President, by the territorial Legislature not comprehended in their duties as federal officials. Some of these duties were imposed by the first Legislature of 1913, and as each session of the Legislature met biennially thereafter, other statutory duties were imposed not only on
In 1914 the case of Callaham v. Marshall (C. C. A.) 210 F. 230, arose over the attempt of Marshall to collect the poll tax of Callaham, in pursuance of the statute of the Legislature of the territory passed in 1913. Our Circuit Court of Appeals decided that Marshall, holding an appointment under the United States, was ineligible to any office under the territorial government, because of the provision contained in section 11 of the Organic Act to the effect that no person holding a commission or .appointment under the United States shall be a member-of the Legislature or shall hold any office under the government of said territory. Then Congress passed the Act of August 29,' 1914 (48 USCA §§ 91, 121 [¶] S. Comp. St. § 3544a]) entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act creating a legislative assembly in the territory of Alaska and conferring legislative power 'thereon/ ” etc. This act provides, so far as is material to this controversy, that nothing in that act of Congress entitled “An act creating a legislative assembly,” etc., shall be so construed as to prevent the courts from enforcing all laws passed by the. Legislature within the power conferred upon it the same as if such laws were passed by Congress, nor to prevent the Legislature from passing laws imposing additional duties, not inconsistent with their present duties of their respective offices, upon the Governor, marshal, etc., and providing the necessary funds for the enforcement of such duties.
Since the passage of this act, it has been universally held that the duties imposed on the Governor theretofore as a member of territorial boards and as auditing officer of the territory were validated, and thereupon other and further duties were imposed as each Legislature convened, so that, the major portion of the affairs of the territory are administered through the Governor’s office. The Legislature thereby imposes not only extra work upon the Governor, but upon the employees of his office. These facts are set forth in substance in the
I am of the opinion, therefore, that the appropriation for the salary of the secretary to the Governor and the appropriations for the Governor’s office for an extra clerk and a stenographer are valid. I am further of the opinion that the appropriation for publicity purposes, or so much thereof as is necessary, is not objectionable. The dissemination of publicity relative to the resources of the territory has been an adjunct of the Governor’s office ever since the territorial government was organized; It is for a public purpose, having in view the development of the dormant resources of the territory, and being for a public purpose, and resulting in the imposition of extra work and expense, should be paid for. The appropriation for the travel expenses of the Governor, to supplement the federal appropriation for the same purpose, is payable only in reimbursement for expenses incurred in carrying out the territorial laws and becomes available only when necessary for that purpose and when not chargeable to the federal appropriation or when that appropriation is insufficient and not available for such expenses.
The last two items in the appropriation for the Governor’s office, one for the entertainment of representatives of the United States, etc., in the amount of $2,000, and for repairs and improvements to the executive mansion, in the amount of $1,250, are in the nature of contingent appropriations for expenditure only when necessary. Whether or not an expense against the territory .will be incurred under these appropriations is uncertain. The appropriations are made for contingency only, arising in the future, and are available only
As to the appropriation for legislative expenses, it is urged that this appropriation is invalid as a whole, as being in violation of the provisions of section 7 of the Organic Act (48 USCA § 75 [U. S. Comp. St. § 3534]), as supplemented by section 15 thereof (48 USCA § 87 [U. S. Comp. St. § 3542]). It is also pointed out that it contravenes section 1888, R. S. U. S. 1878 (48 USCA § 1470 [U. S. Comp. St. § 3477]). Section 7 of the Organic Act refers to the organization of the Legislature and provides for the election, by each of the two houses, of their presiding officers and the election of subordinate officers mentioned in section 1861, R. S. 1878, and their compensation as therein fixed. The section concludes with this proviso:
“That no person shall be employed for whom salary, wages, or compensation is not provided in the appropriation made by Congress.”
Section 15 of the Organic Act, after providing for appropriations by Congress annually in a sufficient amount to pay the members and authorized employees of the Legislature, the printing of the laws and other incidental expenses thereof, and the disbursement of the amount appropriated under the direction of the Governor, provides:
“And no expenditure, to be paid out of money appropriated by Congress, shall be made by the Governor or by the Legislature for objects not authorized by the acts of Congress mating the appropriations, nor beyond the sums thus appropriated for such objects.”
Section 1888, R. S. 1878, provides that:
“No legislative assembly of a territory shall, in any instance or under any pretext, exceed the amount appropriated' by Congress for its annual expense.”
The compensation of legislators of the territory of Alaska is a per diem compensation, payable for attendance during the term that the Legislature is in session only. If a member is not in attendance while the Legislature is in session, he receives no per diem for the period of his absence. After the Legislature adjourns, if he performs services for the territory at the instance of territorial officials, under the sanction of law, I see no inhibition against his receiving compensation therefor. He is not acting during the session for ¡which compensation is made by the United States, nor does the compensation come within the limitation of section 11 of the Organic Act. The object of the appropriation is- that the legislative journals become a permanent and correct record of the transactions of the legislative assembly, and is for a public purpose, and I see no objection to the appropriations for services to be rendered by the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House after the session of the Legislature is adjourned, in making a permanent record of the transactions of the session.
The further appropriations for clerical help to compile, compare, and prepare the journals for printing come within the same class, being for a public purpose, and I deem it within the’discretion of the Legislature. The item therein for extra clerical help during the session is not objectionable, as being in conflict with the Organic Act of the territory and general laws of the United States. The proviso in section 7 is to be construed in connection with sections 15 and 1855, R. S-, and means that no officer as such, other than those whose compensation is provided for by Congress, shall be employed. It cannot mean that extra clerks and stenographers employed to assist the enrolling or engrossing clerks shall not be employed by
The reasoning of the Supreme Court of New Mexico in the well-considered case of Baca v. Perez, 8 N. M. 187, 42 P. 162, and that of the territory of Oklahoma, in Braithwaite v. Cameron, 3 Okl. 630, 38 P. 1084, considering the force of sections 1861 and 1888 of the Revised Statutes, apply with full force to the proviso of section 7 of our Organic Act, and, in my judgment, are conclusive that the Legislature has power, in case of necessity, to employ persons to assist the regularly' authorized employees in the performance of duties incident to legislation authorized to be enacted. It is unnecessary to quote these decisions, for they are familiar to all who have considered the subject. They, have been known to and acted upon by territorial Legislatures as correct expositions of the law ever since they were promulgated, nor has Congress or any individual since, to my knowledge, raised any objection to such employment.
That part of the appropriation for overtime to the subordinate officers of the Legislature during the session, in my opinion, is invalid, for the reason that their compensation is fixed by the laws of the United States for their services and cannot be increased by the Legislature. In taking the positions as subordinate officers of the Legislature, authorized by Congress, for which their per diem is fixed by law, they become employees of the government of the United States, and impliedly agree to perform services assigned to them as such subordinate officers for the compensation fixed by the laws of Congress, and the Legislature cannot lawfully increase the compensation as impliedly agreed upon.
Appropriations for the Office of the Secretary. — The secretary of the territory is an officer of the United States, appointed by the President of the United States, pursuant to section 1843, R. S. (48 USCA § 1454 [U. S. Comp. St. 3429]), and the question clearly arises, in view of the prohibition of section 11 of the Organic Act, whether he can receive compensa
“In ease the law requires or authorizes any service to be performed or any act to be done by the secretary of the district of Alaska, and there is no provision of law requiring the payment of a fee for such service by the person for whose benefit the same is performed, the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe such fees for said service as he may deem proper.”
Prior to the enactment of the Organic Act the government of the territory was vested in federal officials only, under laws enacted directly by Congress. There was no territorial government, like that provided for other territories of the United States. No authority was vested by Congress in the inhabitants of the territory to enact any law for the government of the territory. All power for that purpose was reserved to Congress and the executive officers, appointed by the President, pursuant to the acts of Congress, represented the United States, and were subject only to the laws passed by Congress. The Organic Act of 1912 provided for a limited form of territorial government. The powers granted to the Legislature were more circumscribed in many particulars than those granted in general to the territories of the United States. These limitations on the legislative power, as set forth in the Organic Act, cannot be trespassed upon by the Legislature of the territory, and any act in violation of the limitations of the power would be null and void. On the other hand, the Legislature was granted power to alter, amend, or modify the laws then in force in the territory, with certain exceptions'.
The interveners contend that the provisions of the Act of Congress approved August 29, 1914, providing that nothing in the Organic Act shall be so construed to prevent the Legislature passing laws imposing additional duties not inconsistent with the present duties of their respective offices, upon the Governor, marshal, and others, and providing the necessary funds for performing such duties, gives a rule of construction of the provisions of section 11 of the Organic Act, and since it mentions some of the federal officers upon whom additional duties may be imposed by the Legislature, it cannot be construed to prevent the Legislature from imposing similar duties under similar circumstances on all federal officers, for the reason that a rule of construction of a statute is always uniform in its operation and effect; that under this rule the Organic Act must be so construed to mean that the Legislature may impose upon any officer of the United States duties not conflicting with their present duties, and that this includes, not only the officers mentioned in the statute, but also includes the secretary of the territory, whose office is not mentioned in the statute.
It is suggested, on behalf of the plaintiff, that the act cited by the intervener is not applicable to the territory of Alaska, it being a proviso attached to' the rider incorporated in the general appropriation bill for the expenses of the Interior Department, and further that the territory of Alaska was- not an organized territory at the time of the passage of the act, and that it could not apply to the territories organized thereafter. It is argued on the part of the interveners that section 1843, R. S., would also apply only to the territories then in existence, and that, being the statute under which the present incumbent of the office of secretary of the territory holds his appointment, there would be no authority for his appointment as secretary by the President and he would not be an officer of the United States.
Considering these last contentions of counsel, I am of the opinion that the Act of Congress of June 19, 1878, 20 Stat, 193, providing for the payment of fees to the secretary of the territory for all official duties imposed by the territorial Legislature was a special act of Congress applicable only to the territories of the United States then in existence, and that because the territory of Alaska was not then in existence, and no Legislature was organized in the territory of Alaska, it could not apply to the secretary of the territory of Alaska. I am further of the opinion that section 1843, R. S., is a general statute of the United States, applicable not only to the territories then in existence, but to all future territories that might be organized under the laws of the United States, and I am also of the opinion that section 1855, R. S., as it is incorporat
On the qúestion whether the secretary of the territory is eligible for appointment to any office under the territorial government, I am of the opinion that he is ineligible, although, ever since the assembling of the territorial Legislature in 1913, duties have been imposed on the secretary of the territory by the Legislature. One of the first acts of the Legislature was to provide for the registration of vital statistics, and the ex officio secretary of the territory was made the registrar of vital statistics, and certain duties were imposed upon him as such registrar, with authority to collect certain fees therefor. There was also imposed upon him the duty of printing and distributing the laws of the territory, the duties relative to domestic corporations. An act regulating banking was enacted, and he was made a member of the banking board, with duties attached. Fees for filing and recording of papers in his office were provided, to be collected by him for services performed, and a certain percentage of such fees were assigned to him as compensation for his services; also in the general appropriation bills of every session from 1913 to and including the present session, moneys were appropriated for clerk hire in carrying out work under territorial laws. At each session his duties were enlarged, and further duties were imposed upon the office, until at the present time much of the various activities of the territory are carried on through his office. ‘During the whole of this period the validity of the acts of the secretary of the territory as registrar of vital statistics, or in relation to corporations, or as a member of the several territorial boards, have never been questioned. He, therefore,, by acquiescence, is an officer de facto of the territorial government.
Perhaps the most comprehensive definition of an officer de facto is given by Chief Justice Butler in the case of State v. Carroll, 38 Conn. 449, 9 Am. Rep. 409:
*554 “An officer de facto is one whose acts, though not those of a lawful officer, the law, upon principles of policy and justice, will hold valid, so far as they involve the interests of the public and third persons, where the duties of the office were exercised, first, without a known appointment or election, but under such circumstances of reputation or acquiescence as were calculated to induce people, without inquiry, to submit to or invoke his action, supposing him to be the officer he assumed to be; second, under color of a known and valid appointment or election, but where the officer has failed to conform to some precedent, requirement or condition, as to take an oath, give a bond, or the like; third, under color of a known election or appointment, void, because the officer was not eligible, or because there was a want of power in the electing or appointing body, or by reason of some defect or irregularity in its exercise, such ineligibility, want of power, or defect being unknown to the public; fourth, under color of an election or appointment by or pursuant to a public, unconstitutional law, before the same is adjudged to be such.” , '
The present secretary of the territory, thus being a de facto officer, clothed with certain public duties, was the Legislature authorized to appropriate any money for the performance of those duties or for the maintenance of the means to carry out those duties ? While a' de facto officer is not entitled to any compensation for services performed as such de facto officer, does it necessarily follow, where an office is created, and specified duties, such as registration and other clerical duties,, are prescribed by law to be performed by the public, or for the benefit of the public, at the office so created, that the appropriation for carrying out those duties should fail because the officer is only a de facto officer? I do not think it can be so concluded, but, on the contrary, I am of the opinion that, until the de facto officer is ousted in the manner provided by law, all appropriations for carrying on the duties prescribed by law should be available to such office.
It is a close point, but, in view of the necessities of the case, its importance to the public, and the general rule of construction of statutes that all appropriations for a public purpose should, if possible, be upheld, if within the law, and that no specific restraint on the power of the Legislature to make such appropriation for carrying on'the duties prescribed by law is contained in the enabling act or the general laws of the United States applicable to the territory, and for the further reason that for 12 years last past the secretary has been performing the duties imposed by the Legislature, not a part of his duties as a federal officer, that until the year 1925 his office as ex
From the foregoing I am of the opinion that an injunction pendente lite should issue, restraining the defendant, the territorial treasurer, from paying out any money from the territorial treasury for overtime to the subordinate officers of the Legislature whose compensation was provided for by the United States, and that he should also be enjoined from the payment of any moneys to the secretary of the territory as salary for work carried on under the territorial laws, and that, as to the other items objected to by the plaintiff herein, no injunction pendente lite should issue.
Let an order be entered accordingly.