Harwood v. Wentworth

162 U.S. 547, 16 S. Ct. 890, 40 L. Ed. 1069, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2232
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 13, 1896
Docket756
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 162 U.S. 547 (Harwood v. Wentworth) 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
Harwood v. Wentworth, 162 U.S. 547, 16 S. Ct. 890, 40 L. Ed. 1069, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2232 (1896).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Hablan,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The statute which purports to be an act of the legislature of the Territory of Arizona, entitled “ An act classifying the counties of the Territory and fixing the compensation of officers therein,” and to have been approved by the Governor on the 21st day of March, 1895, not only appears in the published laws of the Territory, but is filed with and in the custody of the secretary of the Territory, and is signed, the parties agree, by the Governor, the President of the territorial Legislative Council, and the Speaker of' the territorial House of Representatives.

Is it competent to show, by evidence derived from the journals of the Council and House of Representatives, as kept by their respective chief clerks, from the indorsements or minutes made by those clerks on the original bill while it was in the possession of the two branches of the legislature, and from the recollection of the officers of each body, that this act, thus in the custody of the territorial Secretary, and authenticated by the signatures of the Governor, President of the Council, and Speaker of the House of Representatives, *558 contained, at the time of its final passage, provisions that were omitted from it without authority of the council or the house, before it was presented to the Governor for his approval ?

Upon the authority of Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649, 671, et seq., this question must be answered in the negative. That case, in its essential features, does not differ from the one now before the court. It was claimed in that case that a certain provision or section was in the act of Congress of October 1, 1890, c. 1244, 26 Stat. 567, as it passed, but was ■omitted without authority from the bill or act authenticated by the signatures of the presiding officers of the two houses of Congress and approved by the President. "What was said in that case is directly applicable in principle' to the present ■case. After observing that the Constitution expressly required certain matters to be entered on the journal, and, waiving any expression of opinion as to the validity of a legislative enactment passed in disregard of that requirement, the court said : “ But it is clear that, in respect to the particular mode in which, or with what fulness, shall be kept the proceedings of either house relating to matters not expressly required to be entered on the journals; whether bills, orders, resolutions, reports and amendments shall be entered at large on the journal, or only referred to and designated by their titles or by numbers; these and like matters were left to the discretion of the respective houses of Congress. Uor does any clause of that instrument, either expressly or by necessary implication, prescribe the mode in which the fact of the original passage of a bill by the House of Representatives and the Senate shall be authenticated, or preclude Congress -from adopting any mode to that end which its wisdom suggests. Although the Constitution does not expressly require bills that have passed Congress to be attested by the signature of the presiding officers of the two houses, usage, the orderly conduct of legislative proceedings and the rules under which the two bodies have acted since the organization of the government, require that mode of authentication.” Again: “ The signing by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and by the President of the Senate, in open session, of an enrolled *559 •bill, is an official attestation by the two houses of such bill as one that has passed Congress. It is a declaration by the two houses, through their ,presiding officers, to the President, that a bill, thus attested, has received, in due form, the sanction of the legislative branch of the government, and that it is delivered .to him in obedience to the constitutional requirement that all bills which pass Congress shall be presented to him. And when a bill, thus attested, receives his approval and is deposited in the public archives, its authentication as a bill that has passed Congress should be deemed complete and unimpeachable. As the President has no authority to approve a bill not passed by Congress, an enrolled act in the custody of the Secretary of State and having the official attestations of the Speaker of the House of Eepresentatives, of the President of the Senate and of the President of the United States, carries, on its face, a solemn assurance by the legislative and executive departments of the government, charged, respectively, with the duty of enacting and executing the laws, that it was passed by Congress. The respect due to coequal and independent departments requires the judicial department to act upon that assurance and to accept, as having passed Congress, all bills authenticated in the manner stated, leaving the courts to determine, when the question properly arises, whether the act, so authenticated, is in conformity with the-Constitution.”

It is said that, although an enrolled act properly authenticated is sufficient, nothing to the contrary appearing on its face, to show that it was passed by the territorial Legislature, it cannot possibly be — that public policy forbids — that- the judiciary should be required to accept as a statute of the Territory that which may be shown not to have been passed in the form in which it was when authenticated by the signatures of the presiding officers of the territorial Legislature, and of the Governor. This,.it is contended, makes it possible for these officers to impose upon the people, as a law, something that never, in fact, received legislative sanction. Considering a similar contention in Field v. Clark, the oourt said: “ But this possibility is too remote to be seriously considered in the pres *560 ent inquiry. It suggests a deliberate conspiracy to which the-presiding officers, the committees on enrolled bills and the clerks of the two houses must necessarily be parties, all acting . with a common purpose to defeat an expression of the popular will in the mode prescribed by the Constitution. Judicial action based upon such a suggestion is forbidden by the respect due to a coordinate branch of the government. The evils that-may result from the recognition of the principle that an enrolled act, in the custody of the Secretary of State, attested by the signatures of the presiding officers of the two houses of Congress, and the.approval of the President, is conclusive evidence that it was passed by Congress, according to the forms-of the Constitution, would be far less than those that would certainly result from a rule making the validity of Congressional enactments depend upon the manner in which the jour- , nals of the respective houses are kept by the. subordinate Officers charged with the duty of keeping them.” These observations are entirely Applicable. to the present case.

But it may be added that, if the principle announced.in Field v. Clark

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Bluebook (online)
162 U.S. 547, 16 S. Ct. 890, 40 L. Ed. 1069, 1896 U.S. LEXIS 2232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harwood-v-wentworth-scotus-1896.