In Re Initiative State Question No. 10

1910 OK 185, 110 P. 647, 26 Okla. 554, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 95
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 22, 1910
Docket1784
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1910 OK 185 (In Re Initiative State Question No. 10) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Initiative State Question No. 10, 1910 OK 185, 110 P. 647, 26 Okla. 554, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 95 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

*555 WILLIAMS, J.

1. In order to dispose of this ease, it is essential to determine whether Senate Bill No. 126 (chapter 66, Sess. Laws 1910, pp. 121-127), styled, “An act carrying into effect provisions relating to the initiative and referendum; prescribing the method of procedure for submitting and voting for proposed amendments to the Constitution and other propositions, and prescribing the method of appeal from petitions filed or from the ballot title; repealing sections 6, 7, and 16 of article one, chapter forty-four of the Session Laws of Oklahoma, 1907-8,” is now in force, so as to apply to this proceeding. Sections 6, 7, 16, art. 1, e. 44, Sess. Laws 1907-08, relate to the sufficiency of initiative and referendum petitions, right of appeal, speedy trial assured, title, and the canvass and return of the votes cast on initiative and referendum measures. Section 58 of article 5 of the Constitution of Oklahoma provides:

“No act shall take effect until ninety days after the adjournment of the session at which it was passed, except enactments for carrying into effect provisions relating to the initiative and referendum. * * * ”

In Re Norris et al. v. Cross, Secretary of State, 25 Okla. 287, 105 Pac. 1000, it is said:

“The word 'enactment/ as used in the saving clause, is synonymous with the word 'act/ It is to be noted that the language of this clause excepts only 'enactments/ and not 'enactments or parts of enactments/ putting in force the initiative and referendum provisions of the Constitution. The word 'act/ as used in the general enacting clause of section 58, means a- bill passed by the Legislature, as to which all of the formalities required to make it a law have been performed, and refers to the entire statute enacted, and we think that the matters excepted from the general clause were of the same character, and it was intended to except the whole statute passed as one act for the purpose of putting in force the initiative and referendum provisions, and that it was not intended that a bill, whose object and purpose was other than mentioned in the saving clause, should be included because it contains some clause or section that incidentally or directly relates to the initiative and referendum provisions. Senate Bill No. 179 consists of *556 70 or more sections, only 4 of which deal directly with the initiative and referendum. All the other sections pertain to matters, any law upon which it was unquestionably the intention of the framers of the Constitution, and the people who adopted it, should not become effective until 90 days after the adjournment of the session of the Legislature at which it was passed, unless passed as an emergency measure, and that the people should have the right of referendum thereon. To give the saving clause the construction that any act containing a clause or provision that -relates to the initiative and referendum becomes effective immediately, and is concluded and cannot be referred, would open the door for making numerous acts effective at once, and preventing the referendum thereon, that were not intended by the Constitution to be made effective until 90 days after the adjournment of the session at which they were passed, unless the emergency clause should be attached. A construction which is so in conflict with the purpose and spirit of the other section of the Constitution relative to the referendum should not be given to this clause, but the strict construction should be applied. We therefore hold that only acts whose sole purpose is to put in force the initiative and referendum provisions are included within the clause of section 58, reading: ‘Except enactments for carrying into effect provisions relating to the initiative and referendum.5 An act passed only for the purpose of putting in force the initiative and referendum provisions, or á general appropriation bill, becomes operative upon the completion of all the formalities required by the Constitution for its enactment, if it contains no provision, and there exists no general statute, fixing the time when the same shall become effective, and such act is not subject to the referendum, and can be destroyed only by a measure repealing the same, initiated and adopted by the people or enacted by the Legislature.”

The exception here is enactments (not the first enactment or one enactment) for carrying into effect provisions relating to the initiative and referendum. The entire .enactment or act (Senate Bill No. 126, supra) relates only to such provisions, including constitutional amendments by means of the initiative and referendum. The initiative and referendum provisions of the Constitution both as to legislation and constitutional amendments not being self-enforcing (Ex parte Wagner, 21 Okla. 33, 95 Pac. 435), *557 this procedure for amendments thereunder is valid. State v. Shields, 4 Mo. App. 259. it follows that Senate Bill No. 126, carrying into effect provisions relating to the initiative and referendum, approved by the Governor on March 17, 1910, became effective on that date.

•2. Section 2, e. 66, p. 121, Sess. Laws 1910, provides:

“When such original petition is filed in said office it shall be the duty of the Secretary of State to forthwith cause to be published in at least one newspaper of general circulation within the state, a notice setting forth the date of such filing. Any citizen of the state may, within ten days, by written notice to the Secretary of State and to the party or parties who filed such petition, protest against the same, whereupon the Secretary of State shall fix a day, not sooner than five days thereafter, at which he will hear testimony and argument for and against the sufficiency of such petition. A protest filed by anyone hereunder may, if abandoned by the party filing same, be revived within five days by any other citizen.”

This section nowhere requires the written notice to be personally served upon the Secretary of State and the party or parties filing the initiative petition; the exact language being that “any citizen * * * by written notice to the Secretary of State and to the party or parties who filed such petition” may'protest against the same, whereupon (immediately thereafter) the Secretary of State shall fix a day for hearing. When this written notice constituting a protest is lodged with the Secretary bf State, that is notice to all parties in interest. The publication by the Secretary of State in at least one newspaper of general circulation of the filing of such petition and the filing of the written notice to the Secretary of State and the party or parties who file the petition in the form of a protest with the Secretary of State are essential acts, but when these requirements are met, every act has been performed that is necessary in order for the Secretary of State to set the day for hearing, and all parties thereto, without further notice, are charged with knowledge or notice of his orders. If notice was to be served in person upon the party or parties filing *558 the initiative petition before the setting of a day for hearing the protest was essential., such notice must be served within 10 days. And if such service could not be obtained in 10 days, the right to protest would fail.

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Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 185, 110 P. 647, 26 Okla. 554, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-initiative-state-question-no-10-okla-1910.