In re Ross

94 A. 304, 86 N.J.L. 387, 1 Gummere 387, 1914 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 37
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 94 A. 304 (In re Ross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Ross, 94 A. 304, 86 N.J.L. 387, 1 Gummere 387, 1914 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 37 (N.J. 1914).

Opinion

Tlie opinion of the conrt was delivered hy

Gummere, Chief Justice.

The present petition is filed by Robert S. Ross and William J. Field, as citizens of the state, under authority conferred upon them for that purpose by section 3 of the act of March 3d, 1873 (Comp. Stat., p. [388]*3884978), entitled “An act providing for decreeing and making known that certain laws and joint resolutions have become inoperative and void.” The constitutionality of that statute has already been declared by this court. In re Public Utility Board. 83 N. J. L. 303; and its scope commented upon, In re Jaegle, Id. 313. By their petition Mr. Eoss and his associate attack the validity of chapter 90 of the laws of 1914, upon the ground that its passage through the two houses of the legislature did not comply with constitutional requirements; and ask this court to exercise the power conferred upon it by the act of March 3d, 1873, and decree the legislation to be null and void.

The purpose of the statute thus attacked is to provide a tax upon the stock of banks and trust companies, and the distribution of the moneys raised by such taxation between the counties and the taxing districts in which the banks and trust companies of the'state are severally located. The averments of the petition are that this statute is a revenue measure; that it originated in the senate; and-that because of the fact that it so originated, its enactment was in violation of paragraph 1 of section 6 of article 4 of the state constitution, which provides that “all bills for raising revenue shall originate in .the house of assembly; but the senate may propose or concur with amendments as on other bills.”

It needs no argument to demonstrate that a statute of the character of that involved in the present proceeding is a revenue measure; and, indeed, it is conceded to be such by the attorney-general and his associates. It is further conceded by them that if the bill in fact is one which originated in the senate, it is void as violative of the constitutional provision appealed to by the petitioners. It is insisted, however, on behalf of the state, that the averment of the petition that this statute so originated is contrary to the fact.

The history of the legislation is as follows: On the 16th day of February, 1914, a bill was introduced into the senate, the material provisions of which coincided with those contained in chapter 90 of the laws of that year; it passed the senate .on the 10th of March, and on the next day was de[389]*389iivered to the house of assembly; on the same day that house referred the bill to the committee on taxation, and that committee forthwith reported it back to the house favorably without amendment, and the bill was read a second time by its title. On the 18th of March the bill was recommitted by the house to the same committee, and that committee promptly reported a hill entitled “Assembfy Committee Substitute for Senate Bill No. 176” (that being the number of the bill which had been sent over from the senate). The house accepted the substitute as reported, and proceeded to deal with it as an original bill — that is, passed it on three separate readings as inquired by the constitution, having slightly amended it during its passage. The substitute bill thus passed was sent to the senate, and that house, instead of dealing with the bill as one which had originated there, and merely concurring in, or disapproving of, the house amendments, treated it as a hill originating in the house of assembly, gave it three readings, and finally passed it. The bill then, in its regular course, went to the governor for his approval, and received it.

The petitioners do not dispute the accuracy of this statement of facts, but insist that, because the bill as passed is practically a replica of that which was introduced into and passed by the senate, and then sent to the house, and because the committee in reporting it entitled it an assembly committee substitute for a senate bill, instead of “Assembly Bill No.

it was not an original bill introduced into the house by its committee, hut merely ail amendment of a pending senate bill.

The fact that the hill reported by the house committee was practically identical with that which was passed by the senate and sent by it to the house, has no bearing upon the question of the validity of the statute, for it is perfectly manifest that both houses intended to pass a statute of the tenor and effect of Senate No. 176; and that is what they did, whether the assembly substitute is an original bill or a mere amendment of that which came to it from the senate.

Nor is the fact that the house committee, in reporting the bill, designated it as a substitute for No. 176, at all conclusive [390]*390on the question whether what was reported was an original hill, or an amended senate bill. We are told by counsel for the petitioners that it is universally agreed by writers on parliamentary rules, and by lexicographers, that the word “substitute,” when used in legislative proceedings, has a fixed and invariable meaning, viz., the amendment of a pending bill or resolution; and that, therefore, we are compelled, in considering the constitutionality of this law, to declare that Assembly Substitute for Senate No. 176 is nothing more than an amendment thereof. If so broad a statement has been made by the writers referred to we beg leave to dissent from it. The meaning to be given to a word used by a legislative body must be that which has been impressed upon it by the body itself in its user. It may be that, as a general rule, the word “substitute” is the equivalent of “amendment,” in parliamentary definitions, and will ordinarily be so accepted; but when it is manifest that a legislati ve body, in a given case, uses it as expressive of an entirely different meaning, namety, the discarding of a measure then under consideration, and the- putting of a new and independent measure in its place, the general definition of pailiamentarians and lexicographers must give way, and the meaning given to the word by the body using it must be accepted. We, therefore, consider the situation which existed at the time of the reporting by the committee of this assembly substitute. Senate Bill No. 176 was, plainly, a bill for raising revenue, and its introduction in, and passage through, the senate, was, therefore, in contravention of the constitutional provision already adverted to. The only explanation of this course of action by the senate which can be entertained is that, in the hurry of business, this mandate of the constitution was overlooked, for no one will suggest that the violation was intentional and deliberate. The action of the house of assembly on the senate bill prior to its recommittal to the house committee on taxation is only explainable on the same theory. "When it is remembered that manjr of the members of each house were men trained in the law, it can readily be conceived that after the original report of the house committee upon the senate bill, some one or more of them waked [391]*391up to the fact that such a bill could not constitutionally originate in the senate, and that, if finally passed and approved as a senate bill, it would be an absolute nullity. If it was desirable that a law of the purport of Senate Bill No. 176 should take its place on the statute book, it was necessary that its practical counterpart should originate in the house.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 304, 86 N.J.L. 387, 1 Gummere 387, 1914 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ross-nj-1914.