Hartness v. Black

114 A. 44, 95 Vt. 190, 1921 Vt. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 3, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 114 A. 44 (Hartness v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartness v. Black, 114 A. 44, 95 Vt. 190, 1921 Vt. LEXIS 201 (Vt. 1921).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

The petitioner, as Governor of the State, brings this petition for a writ of mandamus, directing the petitionee, [192]*192as Secretary of State, to cause certain acts of the General' Assembly of 1921 to be engrossed and published as required by law. Among the facts established by the petition and answer are the following: The bienniel session of the General Assembly of 1921 took, final adjournment March 31, 1921. On the last three days of the session and the day following adjournment, divers bills — • eighty in number — were received by the petitioner, as Governor, which were approved and signed by him after the Legislature adjourned. TIis attention being called to the fact that the Secretary of State was of the opinion that certain of the bills so approved and signed were not entitled to be engrossed and promulgated as public acts, Governor Hartness addressed an inquiry to the Secretary of State which elicited the following reply: “I am of the opinion that the following bills passed at the last session of the Legislature, which received your approval and were delivered to me, are not entitled to be engrossed and promulgated- as public acts. The list of the bills is as follows, and I give in detail the date when received in your office and the date when approved by you, all as appears from the bills on file in my office: [Then follows a list of the bills designated by number, with the date when each was received by the Governor and when signed by him.] It thus appears that some of these bills were received in your office before March 31, the day of final adjournment, some on the day of final adjournment, and some on the day after final adjournment. All were signed after final adjournment. It is my opinion that in order to make effective acts of the General Assembly the same should have been presented to you and have received your approval before the Legislature took final adjournment and that your approval of the acts after the Legislature adjourned did not give them validity and entitle them to promulgation and engrossment as laws. I therefore respectfully decline to promulgate and publish the acts above specified and to cause such acts to be engrossed under the provisions of section 370 of the General Laws.” From the list contained in the foregoing communication it appears that twenty-seven bills were presented to the Governor March 29, and signed April 1; forty-three were presented March 30, and signed April 1; five were presented March 31, of which four were signed April 1, and one April 5; four were presented April 1 (the day after adjournment), one of which was signed the [193]*193same day and the other three on April 5$ and one (S-30) was presented March 30 and signed April 6.

It will be seen that there are three classes of bills presenting as many separate questions, viz.: (1) Does a bill which has

been presented to the Governor within three days before final adjournment and approved by him after such adjournment and within five days after presentation thereby become a law? (2) Does a bill which has been presented to the Governor the next day after final adjournment and approved by him within five days thereafter thereby become a law? (3) Does a bill which has been presented to the Governor within three days before final adjournment and approved by him more than five days after such presentation become a law? The answers to these inquires depend upon the interpretation to be given to the constitutional provision relating to the approval of bills. Chapter 2, Section 11, of the Constitution provides: ‘ ‘ Every bill which shall have passed the Senate and House of Eepresentatives shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the Governor; if he approve, he shall sign i't; if not he shall return it, with his objections in writing, to the House in which it originated; which shall proceed to reconsider it. If, upon reconsideration, two-thirds of the members present of that House shall pass the bill, it shall, together with the objections, be sent to the other House, by which it shall likewise be reconsidered, and, if approved by two-thirds of the members present of that House, it shall become a law.

“But, in all such cases, the votes of both Houses shall be taken by yeas and nays, and the names of the persons voting for or against the bill shall be entered on the journal of each House respectively. If any bill shall not be returned by the Governor, as aforesaid, within five days (Sundays excepted) after it shall have been presented to him, the same shall become a law in liké manner as if he had signed it; unless the two Houses by their adjournment, within three days after the presentation of such bill shall prevent its return, in which case it shall not become a law.”

The true relation of the executive department of government to matters of legislation lies at the foundation of the inquiry and can be better understood if account is taken of the successive steps by which the existing power has been reached. The Constitution of 1777 provided: “The Commonwealth or State of Vermont, shall be governed, hereafter, by a Governor, Deputy [194]*194Governor, Council, and. an Assembly of the Representatives of the Freemen of the same. ” ' It provided that the supreme legislative power should be vested in a House of Representatives, and the supreme executive power in a Governor and Council. A judiciary department was provided for by a requirement that courts of justice should be established in each county of the State. Under this general frame of government it was provided, “to the end that laws, before they are enacted, may be more maturely considered, and the ineonveniency of hasty determination as much as possible prevented,” that bills of a public nature should be first laid before the Governor and Council “for their perusal and proposals of amendment,” and should be printed for the consideration of the people before being enacted into laws; and, except temporary acts, which after being laid before the Governor and Council, could, in case of sudden necessity, be passed by the General Assembly, such acts could not become laws until the next legislative session. Const. 1777, Chap. 2, Sec. 14. “ In order that the freedom of this commonwealth may be preserved inviolate forever,” provision was made for the election in March, 1785, and in every septenary thereafter, of a Council of Censors whose duty it was “to enquire whether the Constitution has been preserved inviolate, in every part; and whether the legislative and executive branches of government have performed their duty as guardians of the people, or assumed to themselves, or exercised, other or greater powers than they are entitled to by the Constitution.” Con. 1777, Chap. 2, Sec. 44.

In discharge of the duties imposed upon them, the first Council of Censors, in their address to the freemen of the State, reviewed with considerable particularity the practices of the legislative and executive departments which they deemed censurable and pointed out changes in the frame of government to remedy the evils. They especially condemned “the fickleness of the Legislature and their want of deliberation in passing laws. ’ ’ Commenting on the inconvenience and expense to the State of the check upon hasty and ill-considered legislation intended by the 14th section of the frame of government, they concluded: “We cannot esteem the Legislature excusable in omitting it; and the notion of treating the general system of our statutes as temporary, we consider as an evasion of an article in the Constitution thought by the Convention to be of importance.” As [195]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 44, 95 Vt. 190, 1921 Vt. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartness-v-black-vt-1921.