Hays v. McDaniel

196 S.W. 934, 130 Ark. 52, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 18, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 196 S.W. 934 (Hays v. McDaniel) 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
Hays v. McDaniel, 196 S.W. 934, 130 Ark. 52, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 377 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The General Assembly, at its 1917 session passed an act, Act No. 100,p.478, entitled, “An Act to borrow money to cover deficiencies in the State’s General Revenue Fund, to issue interest-bearing evidences of indebtedness therefor, to levy a tax to create a sinking fund to pay the interest and principal of said loan, and for other purposes.”. The State Debt Board is charged with the performance of certain duties in the execution of the provisions of the act, but the persons composing this board are not named in this act. The Treasurer of State, eio nomine, is charged with the duty of registering negotiable promissory notes which the act provides shall be issued by the State Debt Board in the negotiation of the loan of money there authorized, and the act imposes certain other duties upon the State Treasurer. Appellant, who is a citizen and taxpayer of the State, filed a complaint, in which he alleged that the Treasurer of the State is about to perform the duties imposed upon him by sáid act, and will do so unless enjoined from .so doing, and the complaint contained a prayer for this relief.

As ground therefor, it is alleged that the act is unconstitutional, being violative of Section 1 of Article 16 of our Constitution. It is further alleged that the act is void for indefiniteness, in that it does not designate the members of the State Debt Board and the membership of said board is not otherwise designated.

The section of the Constitution referred to reads as follows:

“Neither the State nor any city, county, town or other municipality in this State shall ever loan its credit for any purpose whatever; nor shall any county, city, town or municipality ever issue any interest-bearing evidences of indebtedness, except such bonds as may be authorized by law to provide for and secure the payment of the present existing indebtedness, and the State shall never issue any interest-bearing treasury warrants or scrip.”

This section contains three inhibitions, as follows:

First, that neither the State, nor any city, county, town or other municipality therein, shall ever loan its credit for any purpose whatever.

The second inhibition is that no county, city, town or municipality shall ever issue any interest-bearing evidences of indebtedness, except such bonds as may be authorized by law to provide for and secure the payment of the indebtedness existing at the time of the adoption of the Constitution.

The third is that the State shall never issue any interest-bearing treasury warrants or scrip.

The act of the Legislature under consideration does not violate the first subdivision of this section 1 of article 16 of the Constitution, because the act does not contemplate any loan of the State’s credit. No ordinary definition of the word “loan,” nor ordinary construction of the language of the clause in which it appears, can make it cover the act which the State is here seeking to do. The State is not lending its credit, but is proposing to use its credit for its own purposes. The State is -not undertaking, in any manner, to assume any obligation for any purpose other than its own use, and this use of its credit can not be called a loan thereof. The construction of the language employed, which we think is ambiguous, is reinforced by a consideration of the contemporaneous history, which discloses the evil against which the Constitution was providing. The State had loaned its, credit, and in a manner which had largely destroyed this credit, whether employed for its own use, or loaned in promotion of interests which it had undertaken to foster. It appears that the Constitution-makers have employed a word which denies to the State the right to permit another agency to use its credit, but which does not deny the State its right to use this credit for its own purposes.

The second inhibition is, that no county, city, town or municipality shall ever issue any interest-bearing evidences of indebtedness, except such bonds as may be authorized by law to provide for and secure the payment of the indebtedness existing at the time of the adoption of the Constitution. It is said that the word “municipality” here employed, includes the State. But we do not agree with counsel in this contention. If it be conceded that the word municipality has sometimes been used by courts and text-writers as of sufficient breadth to include a sovereign State, it does not follow that it was so employed here. The framers of the Constitution were dealing with a subject of the highest importance and evidently chose their language with great discrimination, and we can not assume that they intended the word “municipality” to embrace the State. To do so would render meaningless and wholly unnecessary the third clause of this section, which provides that the State shall never issue any interest-bearing treasury warrants or scrip. This second clause inhibits the issuance of any interest-bearing evidences of indebtedness. Treasury warrants and scrip are evidences of indebtedness, and it would have been an idle thing to do to prohibit the State,' along with the counties, cities and towns therein, from issuing any interest-bearing evidences of indebtedness, and then, in the following clause of the same section, to repeat the inhibition against the issuance of a form of indebtedness which was inhibited under the preceding clause.

The State is intended and is designated only in the first and third clauses of this section of the Constitution, and the State alone is designated in the third clause, and we must, therefore, conclude that the State would have been named in the second clause had it been intended that its inhibitions should apply against the State.

The Constitution is not a grant of power to the State, and we are not required to look to the Constitution for authority for legislative action. The State, acting through its Legislature, may borrow money for* its own uses unless that right is denied to it by the Constitution and the only inhibition against the State there contained, in this respect, is that it shall not issue any interest-bearing treasury warrants or scrip.

We have more than once said that a statute, enacted shortly after a constitutional convention, by a Legislature containing members of the convention, should be given weight as indicating the construction put upon the Constitution under which the statute is enacted. Speer v. Wood, 128 Ark. 183, 193 S. W. 785. A session of the General Assembly, which convened in the year in which the Constitution was adopted, and which numbered several members of the constitutional convention among its membership, passed an act to provide means for paying the expenses of the State government, and to retire outstanding Auditor’s warrants and Treasurer’s certificates. Acts 1874 (December 23, 1874), page 72. Section 11 of this act is as follows:

“Sec. 11. None of said bonds shall be sold for money for any other purpose than to defray the expenses of the State government and the proceeds of such sales shall be applied to that purpose exclusively, and shall be apportioned by said board among the various appropriations for paying the said expenses in such manner as may best serve the interest of the people, and no money shall be paid out by the Treasurer except in pursuance of such apportionment; provided, that not more than five hundred of such bonds shall be sold for money in any one year.”

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W. 934, 130 Ark. 52, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-v-mcdaniel-ark-1917.