Herold v. Townsend

169 S.E. 74, 113 W. Va. 319, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 137
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1933
Docket7546
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 169 S.E. 74 (Herold v. Townsend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herold v. Townsend, 169 S.E. 74, 113 W. Va. 319, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 137 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

This proceeding involves the constitutionality of the "Tax Limitation Amendment” (House Joint Resolution No. 3, Adopted August 6, 1932, Chapter 9, Acts 1932, Extraordinary Session), which was submitted for ratification on Tuesday, November 8, 1932. The basis of the attack is that the proposed amendment was not "published at least three months before” the last general election "in some newspaper in every county in which a newspaper is printed,” as provided in section 2, Article XIV of our Constitution.

The question is raised on the petition of A. C. Herold, and others, as citizens and tax-payers, in which they pray that a writ of mandamus issue against the state tax commissioner, requiring him, as such, to revoke instructions issued to the assessors of the state requiring them to list and classify real estate for purposes of taxation in conformity with said purported amendment, and to issue instructions requiring said assessors to proceed with said listing as provided by section 1, Article X, Constitution, and the laws enacted in pursuance thereof. The petition avers, in substance, that, in order to meet the requirements of Section 2, Article XIV, Constitution, the proposed amendment should have been published in some newspaper in each county in which a newspaper is printed on, or before, Monday, August 8, 1932; and that such publication was not effected in more than fifteen counties of the state.

The return of the tax commissioner avers that immediately upon the adoption of the resolution the Governor, in accordance with the enabling act (Chapter 10, Acts 1932, Extraordinary Session), proceeded, with all possible dispatch, to communicate with newspapers published in each and every county of the state, asking for rates at which they would publish the proposed amendment, and used every possible diligence to the end that such amendment might be published *321 in conformity to the literal requirements of Section 2, Article XIV, Constitution; that it was impossible to comply literally with tbe terms of the Constitution, relating to publication of amendments, between Saturday, August 6, 1932, the date the amendment was finally passed by the Legislature, and August 8, 1932, since in a majority of the counties no newspaper was published on August 6th, 7th or 8th; that the amendment was published in the counties of Brooke, Cabell, Hancock, Harrison, Kanawha, Marion, Marshall, Mercer, Mingo, McDowell, Ohio, Randolph, Summers, Tajdor, and Tyler— a total of fifteen — on or before August 8, 1932, and in all other counties in the first issue of any paper printed therein after August 6, 1932; and that the proposed amendment was actually published in each and every county in West Virginia on or before August 13, 1932.

No issue of fact being raised by the pleadings, the question narrows down to one of construction. Was the amendment properly advertised? The relators contend that such regard must be had for the provision of publication as to make a strict and literal compliance therewith, while the respondents maintain that a substantial compliance therewith is sufficient. Both are in kccord that under the great weight of authority of our state and nation, the provisions of the Constitutions are usually mandatory. Capito v. Topping, 65 W. Va. 587, 64 S. E. 845; Simms v. Sawyers, 85 W. Va. 245, 101 S. E. 467. In the last of the above cases the Court said: “The provisions of the constitution, the organic and fundamental law of the land, stand upon a higher plane than statutes, and they will, as a rule be held mandatory in prescribing the exact and exclusive methods of performing the acts permitted or required.”

“Constitutions,” says Judge Story, “are not designed for metaphysical or logical subtleties or niceties of expression, for critical propriety, for elaborate shades of meaning, or for the exercise of philosophical acuteness or judicial research. They are instruments of a practical nature, founded on the common business of human life, adapted to common wants, designed for common use, and fitted for common understanding. The people make them, the people adopt them, the people must be supposed to read them with the help of common *322 sense, and cannot be presumed to admit in them any recondite meaning or. any extraordinarjr gloss.” Story on the Constitution (5th Ed.), sec. 451. The foregoing language applies with equal force to amendments, and the fact that an amendment can be separated into two or more propositions concerning the value of which diversity of opinion may exist is not alone decisive.

The state constitution of Montana provides: “The provisions of this constitution are mandatory and prohibitory, unless by express words they are. declared to be otherwise.” But in the case of State ex rel. May v. Alderson, 49 Mont. 387, 414, 142 P. 210, where a question similar to the one here under consideration was raised, the court said: “So long as human agencies are to be employed in carrying out the constitutional scheme of amendment, slight errors and defects in procedure are certain to occur, and to impose the rule of literal compliance would, for all practical purposes render the adoption of any amendment absolutely impossible and defeat one of the very purposes of the constitution itself. "We ought not, by any strained construction, make the language of our constitution niean something altogether different from what the people had in contemplation in its adoption. No rule of construction should be invoked which will trammel the people in their efforts to exercise the right reserved to themselves to change their constitution by popular vote.”

Again, the adoption of the amendment to the state constitution of Kansas at the general election of 1880 prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, except for certain specified purposes, gave rise to several actions brought to test the validity of the amendment itself and its effect, if valid. Four of these cases were heard and considered together. Constitutional Prohibitory Amendment, 24 Kans. 700. The court there held, in substance that substantial compliance with the mandatory provisions of the constitution for its own amendment is sufficient in the absence of any intimation that injury — substantial or unsubstantial — resulted. And, in the course of the opinion, Brewer, J., who afterwards became a justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, said: “The two important, vital elements in every constitutional amendment are the assent of two-thirds of the legislature and a *323 majority ® * * vote. Beyond these, other provisions are mere machinery and forms. * * * Take a strong illustration: The constitution requires that the 'secretary of state shall cause the same to be published in at least one newspaper in each county of the state where a newspaper is published, for three months preceding,’ etc. Suppose a unanimous vote of both houses of the legislature, and a unanimous vote of the people in favor of the constitutional amendment but that the secretary had omitted to publish in one county in which a newspaper was published, would it not be simply an insult to common sense to hold that thereby the will of the legislature and the people had been defeated ? Is it within the power of the secretary, either through ignorance or design, to thwart the popular decision?”

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Bluebook (online)
169 S.E. 74, 113 W. Va. 319, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herold-v-townsend-wva-1933.