Gardner v. Collector

73 U.S. 499, 18 L. Ed. 890, 6 Wall. 499, 1867 U.S. LEXIS 998
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 30, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 73 U.S. 499 (Gardner v. Collector) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Collector, 73 U.S. 499, 18 L. Ed. 890, 6 Wall. 499, 1867 U.S. LEXIS 998 (1868).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MILLER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The date of the President’s approval of the bill is undoubtedly the date at which it became a law, if it ever did. In the volume of the statutes now before us, published in *505 1863, the approval is dated December 24th [1861], but the figures 1861 are in brackets, by which it is understood that no such figures are found in the original enrolled act on file in the Department of State. And it is conceded that on inspection, the roll shows on the face of the bill no other date for the approval of the President than the day of the month already stated.

It is not denied that the President’s signature to the bill is genuine, and that he did approve it. The volume of the United States Statutes at Large, which contains.this act, was published by authority the year before the entry was made of his tea by the plaintiff. The record kept in the office of the Secretary of State shows that this enrolled statute, with the President’s approval on it, was filed in that office, December 26th, 1861. The journal of the House of Representatives in Congress shows that a message was received from the President, January 6th, 1862, stating that on the 24th day of the preceding month he had approved this bill. So that, if we can look to any of these sources of information, the court can have no doubt that the bill was in force as a statute at the time the duties on plaintiff’s tea became chargeable.

The whole of the very able and ingenious argument of counsel for plaintiff rests on these two propositions, as stated in his own language: “ That the President alone can make the record which is to show the date of his approval; and that if the President’s record is defective in respect to the year when it was made, no resort cau be had to extrinsic evidence to supply that defect.”

• The first of these propositions assumes that no act of Congress can become a valid statute, unless some official written statement is found in it of the precise date when the President approved it, and that it is a part of the duty of the President to make this statement; a duty so important that unless made by him, and by no one else, all the previous proceedings of the two Houses of Congress, and the approval of the President, and his signature attesting that ap proval, are all vain and nugatory.

*506 We should reasonably expect to find a duty so very important as this, the neglect, of which is followed by such serious consequences, prescribed by some positive and express provision of the Constitution, or, at least, by some act of Congress.

The only duty required of the President by the Constitution in regard to a bill which he approves is, that he shall sign it. Nothing more. The simple signing his name at the appropriate place is the one act which the Constitution requires of him as the evidence of his approval, and upon his performance of this act the bill becomes a law.

“ Every bill which shall have passed the House of Bepresentatives and the Senate shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the President of the United States; if he approve, he shall sign it, but if not, he shall return it, with his objections, to that House in which it shall have originated.” “If any bill shall not be returned by the President within ten days (Sunday excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, the same shall be a law in like manner as’if he had signed it.” Here are two courses of action by the President in reference to a bill presented to him, each of which results in the bill becoming a law. One of them is by signing the bill within ten days, and the other is by keeping it ten days, and refusing to sign it. , Even in the event of his approving the bill, it is not required that he shall write on the bill the word approved, nor that he shall date it.

If a date by the President is essential to the validity of the statute, it must be as essential when he retains the bill and fails to sign it as when he signs it. It is his action in retaining the bill for ten days which, makes it a law as much as it is in signing it. Yet, in the latter case, no evidence is required of the President, either by the Constitution or in actual practice, to show that he had ever received or considered the bill.

It is not possible, therefore, to hold that the Constitution, either expressly or by just implication, imposes upon the President the duty of affixing a date to his signature to a bill

*507 Nor does any act of Congress require him to do this. The statutes of September 15th, 1789, and of July 7th, 1888, so far from requiring the President to affix a date to his act of signing bills, provide another means of ascertaining when a statute takes effect, namely, by finding it on file in the office of the Secretary of State; for by this statute all such bills, orders, resolutions or votes of Congress as shall become laws, or shall take effect, are to be received from the President and filed in that office. The duty, then, of making such memorandums as shall show when they were received by .this Department, in which the rolls are to remain permanently, and where alone they can be inspected, is much clearer than any such duty on the part of the President. As the only valu-. able purpose of having a date is to determine when the statute takes effect, it is reasonable that this should be made by the officer who receives it from the President forthwith, and who is to be the future custodian of the statute — who alone can give certified copies of it, and from whose office the legally authorized publisher receives the copy from which it is printed.

If neither the Constitution nor the statutes impose this duty upon the President, we are equally unable to find anything in the practice of the English Parliament to sustain this view. The custom there anciently was for the enrolled bill, on receiving the assent of the Ki$g, generally given by commission in Parliament, to be delivered, with the statement of this fact indorsed on it, to the clerk of Parliament. From thence transcripts were sent to the sheriffs of tbe counties, who were ordered to proclaim them in their county courts, where the transcripts were filed for reference. Since the art of printing, this latter custom has been abandoned. But an act of 33 George III, chap. 15, requires the clerk of Parliament to indorse the date of the King's approval.upon the roll of each statute, which is to be the date from which it shall take effect. * The enactment of such a statute shows that no rule had previously existed, that the date was affixed *508 by the King or by the commissioners who, in his name, gave his assent to the bill.

The second proposition, that “if the President’s record is defective in respect to the year when it was made, no resort can be had to extrinsic evidence to supply that defect,” is still more at variance with both principle and authority than the one we have jus't considered.

The statute under consideration is a public statute, as distinguished from a private statute. It is one of which the courts take judicial notice, without proof, and, therefore, the use of the words “ extrinsic evidence ” are inappropriate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 U.S. 499, 18 L. Ed. 890, 6 Wall. 499, 1867 U.S. LEXIS 998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-collector-scotus-1868.