Cottrell v. Faubus

347 S.W.2d 52, 233 Ark. 721, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 474
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 5, 1961
Docket5-2475
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 347 S.W.2d 52 (Cottrell v. Faubus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cottrell v. Faubus, 347 S.W.2d 52, 233 Ark. 721, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 474 (Ark. 1961).

Opinions

J. Seaborn Holt, Associate Justice.

The appellant, as a citizen and taxpayer, brought this suit for a judgment declaring Act 442 of 1961 to be unconstitutional. The original defendants were the Governor, the State Treasurer, and the members of the State Construction Board created by the act in question. Yarious state agencies, beneficiaries of the act, were permitted to intervene in the case. The appellant’s principal allegations of unconstitutionality are that the act is an omnibus bill of the type prohibited by Article 5, Section 30, of the constitution, and that the act delegates legislative power to the Construction Board, in violation of Article 4 of the constitution. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the complaint and dismissed the suit, thus in effect holding the act to he constitutional.

It is necessary to consider only the first allegation of unconstitutionality. We hold that Act 442 is clearly in violation of Article 5, Section 30, which reads as follows: “The general appropriation bill shall embrace nothing but appropriations for the 'ordinary expense of the executive, legislative and judicial departments of the State; all other appropriations shall be made by separate bills, each embracing but one subject.”

Act 442 contains at least 24 separate appropriations, totaling $12,478,000. Disregarding Section 9, which might be said to involve merely the transfer of funds, the appropriations made by the act may be summarized as follows:

Section 2 appropriates $800,000 for the Municipal Aid Fund.

Section 5 makes 16 appropriations for construction, improvements, repairs, etc., for State agencies and institutions as follows: Penitentiary, ' $350,000; Industrial and Training Schools, $650,000; Water System for Training School for Girls, $100,000;'Vocational Trade School, $500,000; Library Commission Building, $500,-000; National Guard Armories, $500,000; State Livestock Show, $500,000; Remodeling State Capitol, $250,000; State Parks, $2,900,000; Prairie Grove Battlefield Commission, $50,000; Arkansas Post, $65,000; History Commission, Archives, $25,000; Repairs to State Capitol, $135,000; Establishment of Diagnostic Clinics, $100,000; State Police, Construction of Communication Systems, $100,000; A. M. & N. College, Remodeling and Repairs, $150,000.

Section 6 appropriates $338,000 for District and County Livestock Shows.

Section 7 appropriates $2,000,000 for Salaries of Classroom Teachers.

Section 11 makes 5 appropriations for construction, improvements, repairs, etc., for State agencies and institutions, as follows: Tuberculosis Sanatorium, $500,000; Military Department, $300,000; Children’s Colony, $400,-000; State Hospital, $1,250,000; State Parks, $15,000.

It is settled by many cases that the purpose of a constitutional provision such as Article 5, Section 30, quoted above, is to prevent the inclusion of separate and unrelated appropriations in a single hill, because that practice opens the door to the evils that have come to he known as logrolling and pork barrel legislation. The general subject was first considered by this court in Fletcher v. Oliver, 25 Ark. 289, which involved a provision, in effect similar, in the constitution of 1868, requiring that no act embrace more than one subject. It was there said: “The object of this clause was to prevent combinations, by which various and distinct subjects of legislation should gain support, which they could not if presented separately.” And in Palmore v. State, 29 Ark. 248, the thought was repeated in this language: “The constitution required singleness of subject, to prevent omnibus hills, by which various distinct schemes could be united in one bill, and the like, and the friends of separate measures be thus united to carry through measures which, alone, could not be passed.”

Under the constitution of 1874 the leading case appears to be State v. Sloan, 66 Ark. 575, 53 S. W. 47, 74 Am. St. Rep. 106. In that case the court upheld an act which provided that a new state capitol should be built upon what was then the site of the state penitentiary, and, further, that the penitentiary commissioners should abandon the penitentiary grounds and construct a new penitentiary elsewhere. After pointing out that the different parts of an act must, under the constitution, relate directly or indirectly to the same object, the court adopted this rule: ‘ ‘ The unity of the subject of an appropriation is not broken by appropriating several sums for several specified objects, which ■ are necessary or convenient or tend to the accomplishment of one general design, notwithstanding other purposes than the main design may be thereby subserved.” Since the legislature had directed that the new capitol be erected where the penitentiary stood it was evidently necessary to construct a new penitentiary for the safekeeping of convicts, as required by law. Hence the act embraced only one subject, which the court stated to be “the building of a state capitol upon the ground now occupied by the penitentiary. ’ ’

The decision in the Sloan case is controlling here and indicates the invalidity of Act 442. This act contains more than a score of distinct appropriations for miscellaneous and disconnected subjects. It cannot seriously be contended that only one subject is embodied in a bill which makes separate appropriations for municipal aid, the penitentiary, schools, livestock shows, classroom teachers’ salaries, the children’s colony, the state parks, and several other purposes. The constitution was intended to prohibit the passage of just such an omnibus bill as this one.

We do not seem to have previously had occasion to hold an act invalid under this section of the constitution, but the reason is that no prior act considered by this court has even remotely resembled Act 442 in its wide diversity of unrelated purposes. In Fletcher v. Oliver, cited above, it was argued that an act providing for the construction of highways and bridges embraced two subjects, but we upheld the act for the obvious reason that bridges are essential parts of highways. In Ward v. Bailey, 198 Ark. 27, 127 S. W. 2d 272, it was held that an appropriation of $5,000 for various necessary expenses of the State Investment Board, all in connection with a refunding of bonds, was not an omnibus appropriation. The only prior case that can be regarded as having presented even a doubtful situation was the Sloan case, and we have discussed the grounds upon which the court concluded that only a single subject was involved there.

The diversified purposes embraced by Act 442 are so clearly disconnected that the appellees do not even argne that the several appropriations relate to a single subject-matter if the question is to be tested by the various appropriations themselves. It is insisted, however, that the act disposes of surplus funds and therefore such funds should be declared to be the only subject of the bill, thereby satisfying the constitutional requirement. In this connection an Oklahoma case, Black v. Okla. Funding Bond Commission, 193 Okla. 1, 140 Pac. 2d 740, is cited. That case is not similar to this one, because there the act appropriated net surplus revenues for one purpose only, the retirement of outstanding bonded indebtedness. There was no diversity of subject-matter such as appears in Act 442.

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Bluebook (online)
347 S.W.2d 52, 233 Ark. 721, 1961 Ark. LEXIS 474, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottrell-v-faubus-ark-1961.