Dyer v. Hall

199 N.W. 754, 51 N.D. 391, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 165
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 199 N.W. 754 (Dyer v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyer v. Hall, 199 N.W. 754, 51 N.D. 391, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 165 (N.D. 1924).

Opinion

Johnson, J.

This is an application by plaintiffs for a review of the action of the secretary of state in refusing to file a petition for the initiation of a constitutional amendment pursuant to section 202 of the Constitution, article 28 of Amendments thereto. The secretary of state declined to file the petition upon the ground that, in his judgment, the same is insufficient. Article 26 of amendments to the Constitution, which provides for the initiation of statutes by petition, is made applicable to proposed amendments to the Constitution initiated by the people, pursuant to article 2S of amendments. In article 26 it is provided that “the secretary of state shall pass upon each petition and if ho finds it insufficient he shall notify the 'committee for the petitioners’ ■ and allow twenty days for correction or amendment. All decisions of the secretary of state in regard to any such petitions shall be subject to review by the Supreme Court.” Acting pursuant to this authority, the secretary of state concluded that the petition was legally insufficient and refused to file it.

The attorney general, appearing in behalf of the secretary of state, alleges that the initiative petition is defective in several particulars. It is not necessary to discuss, or to enumerate, the alleged defects pointed out by the attorney general. In the view we take of the case, the action of the secretary of state was justified, and must be sustained, upon the ground that the petition does not contain the full text of the proposed amendment as required by article 26 of amendments, supr*a.

It is neither necessary nor proper, in this proceeding, to define the extent of the authority of the secretary of state with respect to the filing of initiative petitions. There is no statutory or constitutional provision that makes it his duty to find to be sufficient a petition which upon its face fails to comply with mandatory constitutional requirements. This proposition is not questioned even by those who contend for the most limited authority in that regard. See Scott v. Secretary of State, 202 Mich. 629, 168 N. W. 709.

The proposed amendment, as set out in the pe-tition, is a lengthy *393 document. It proposes important, and in some respects, fundamental changes in the state’s banking and fiscal system. Section 182 limits the power of the state to issue bonds and prescribes the conditions under which, and the purposes for which, state bonds may be issued. That section deals with no other subject. The proposed amendment takes no note of the fact that article 31 (§ 182) of amendments to the Constitution, was again amended at the primary election held March 18, 1924, and that by reason thereof, article 31 of amendments has been superseded.

The proposed amendment, as set out in the petition, directs a bond issue of $6,000,000, in addition to the present limit of bonded indebtedness. Four million dollars of this proposed issue is to be used to pay depositors in closed banks; two million dollars is to be used to purchase “notes and securities that have been pledged or deposited as collateral by insolvent state banks in the securing of loans to said insolvent banks.” It proposes to change the personnel of the guaranty fund commission to consist of the governor, the attorney general, and the secretary of state; “all the powers, duties and responsibilities of the present state guaranty fund commission” are vested in these three officials as constituting the guaranty fund commission. The secretary of the guaranty fund commission is to be named by the governor from a list of three names submitted to him by the president, the viee-presidout and the secretary-treasurer of the Association of Depositors in Closed Banks. The secretary is also to be known as the guaranty fund law commissioner, and is to have “any and all powers now held by the secretary of the guaranty fund commission and perform all his said duties;” the secretary “shall also have any and all duties now held by the state bank examiner of the state of North Dakota, and shall supersede him in office,” and shall be, ex-officio, receiver of all closed banks. The amendment specifically provides that “all the powers now vesred in the guaranty fund commission shall be vested in the state banking board, it being the intention of this constitutional amendment to abolish the offices created and occupied by the present guaranty fund commission and to have these offices filled by the three state officials herein-before named, and the said officials shall be vested with all the powers, duties and responsibilities of the present state guaranty fund commission.” The proposed amendment provides that “chapter 147 of the *394 3019 Session Laws of North Dakota, as amended, and Senate Bill Number 250, passed at the Legislative Session of 1923, amending and re-enacting the Depositors Guaranty Fund Law, shall not be repealed until the bonds issued under this amendment have been paid in full and the rate of assessments provided for shall not be amended in any manner except that § 30 is amended to read:”

Then follows § 10 of Senate Bill Number 250, being chapter 200 of the Session Laws of 1923, with proposed amendments.

It is then provided that §§ 5148 and 5149, Compiled Laws 3913, “are repealed and re-enacted” and the same are set out in full in the petition. These sections deal with the organization and incorporation of state banks, and the procedure concerning the same. It is provided in the proposed amendment that § 151 Compiled Laws, 1913, shall be applicable to the bonds issued pursuant to the amendment. Section 151 is not set out, nor are its contents further stated.

Five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) is appropriated for the purpose of carrying the amendment into effect.

Preceding the enacting clause the petition contains the following matter:

“Petition for Initiation of Constitutional Amendment Relating to Issuing of Bonds and Fixing Debt Limit Providing that Proceeds of the Bonds Shall Be Used for Protection of the Depositors in Insolvent State Banlcs and Providing for a Method of Organizing, Establishing and Regulating the Number of State Banlcs and for Assessments to be Paid by the State Banhs to the Depositors Guaranty Fund and Providing that the Guaranty Fund Commission shall Consist of the Governor, Attorney General and the Secretary of State, and that the same may be Sued.”
“We, the undersigned qualified electors of the state of North Dakota, consisting of over 20,000 of the electors at large, hereby propose the following Amendment to the Constitution of the State of North Dakota, and we request that the same be placed upon the ballot and that it be submitted to the qualified electors of the State of North Dakota at the next state-wide general election to be held after 120 days after the filing of this petition for approval or rejection.
“We do this in accordance with the provisions of § 202, as amended, óf the Constitution of the State of North Dakota and in accordance
*395 with the general laws of the State, in such case made and provided. The section sought to be amended and re-enacted is one relating to the issuing of bond's.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 N.W. 754, 51 N.D. 391, 1924 N.D. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-hall-nd-1924.