In Re Todd

193 N.E. 865, 208 Ind. 168, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 164
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1935
DocketNo. 26,513.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 193 N.E. 865 (In Re Todd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Todd, 193 N.E. 865, 208 Ind. 168, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 164 (Ind. 1935).

Opinions

Treanor, J.

—The General Assembly of 1931 enacted the following:

“The Supreme Court of this state shall have exclusive jurisdiction to admit attorneys to practice law in all courts of the state under such rules and regulations as it may prescribe.” Acts 1931, ch. 63, p. 150.

In July, 1931, this court adopted rules regulating admission to the practice of law in Indiana. Under these rules an applicant is required to take an examination to determine his professional fitness. Petitioner, Lemuel S. Todd, insists that under §21, Art. VII, of the Constitution of Indiana neither the General Assembly nor this court can require of applicants an examination for the purpose of testing professional fitness.

Amici curiae, representing the Indiana State Bar Association, suggests that the petition be dismissed, supporting their suggestion by brief. The position of amici curiae is in substance as follows:

1. The rules of this court, as to their substantive requirements, are valid, being a reasonable means of ascertaining the “good moral character” and residence of the applicant and consequently do not violate §21, Art. VII.
2. Section 21, Art. VII, of the Constitution of 1851-2 was stricken from the Constitution by amendment at the general election November 8, 1932.

If §21 of Art. VII of the Constitution of 1851-2 was stricken from the Constitution by amendment at the general election November 8, 1932, there can be no question about the power of this court to make and enforce the rules of which applicant complains. The vote upon the amendment in question was 439,949 for adoption and 236,613 against. Thus a majority of the voters who voted upon the amendment favored its adoption. But *172 the number of voters favoring its adoption was much less than half the number of voters who voted for political candidates at the general election. Consequently to hold that the amendment was adopted it would be necessary to overrule the cases- of State v. Swift, 1 In re Denny 2 and In re Boswell; 3 which have announced the rule that a proposed amendment which is submitted to the electors at a general election fails of adoption unless it is approved by a majority of all the voters who vote at the general election.

When the overruling of previous decisions involves only a question of public interest in no way af fecting private interests the rule of stare decisis does not control.

“The case of House v. Board, etc., supra, and cases following, do not involve property rights, nor has the rule, which they declare, in any sense become a rule of property, or a basis for contracts. The overruling of those cases will not produce uncertainty in titles, or introduce doubt and confusion in questions of property or contracts. Under such circumstances, it is the duty of the court to correct its own errors, and the doctrine of stare decisis can not be successfully invoked to perpetuate them.”' 4

And this is especially true when a constitutional question is involved. Consequently we feel no hesitancy in considering the merits of the constitutional question presented by amici curiae, and we feel freer to re-examine this question in view of the strong dissenting opinions in the cases of State v. Swift and In re Denny 5

The procedure which must be followed in order to *173 make a proposed amendment a part of the Constitution is clearly set out in Article XVI. At two sessions of the General Assembly it must be approved by “a majority of all the members elected to each house”; and it must then be submitted “to thé electors of the state” and be ratified “by a majority of said electors.” No one has questioned the obvious meaning of a “a majority of all the members elected to each house,” but there has not been such unanimity as to the meaning of “a majority of said electors.”

The first case to come before this court which involved Art.- XVI was State v. Swift, supra. A proposed amendment had received the approval of a majority of the members elected to each of the two houses of the General Assembly in the sessions of 1877 and 1879 and wras submitted to the electors of the state at the spring election of 1880, which was held to elect township officers. The pleadings reveal that the total number of votes cast in the counties for township officers was 380,471; and that the votes cast on the proposed amendment were 169,483 for and 152,251 against. By a three to two decision this court held that the proposed amendment had not been ratified. There is considerable diversity in the reasoning of the judges.

In the personal■ opinion of Biddle, J., “majority of the said electors” meant more than one-half of the electors of the state. But he concedes that it is impossible for a court to know the exact number of electors of the state; “for the number, on account of deaths and coming of age” is not the same any twenty-four hours. He finally rests upon “the practical meaning- of the phrase ‘all the electors of the state,’ ” which he defines as “that substantial number who vote at general state elections, and the number of whose votes is officially returned by sworn officers, into the office of the secretary of state.” Apparently he would not recognize as *174 the number of electors of the state the total number voting at an election held specially to vote on amendments. And this is clear from the statements in the majority opinion respecting the Wabash and Erie canal amendment (Art. X, §7, Ind. Const.). This amendment was submitted at a special election in 1873 and was approved by an overwhelming majority of the votes cast at the election, and the governor proclaimed the afnendment adopted in accordance with the provisions of the legislative act under which the submission took place. The submission act made no provision for a determination of the total number of qualified voters of the state; and the returns were made and the result declared on the basis of the votes cast for and against the amendment. The majority opinion in State v. Swift assumes that the Wabash and Erie canal amendment had become a part of the Constitution despite the fact that official records of which this court was required to take judicial notice failed to show that a majority of the qualified voters of the state had voted in favor of the amendment. Since the validity of the Wabash and Erie canal amendment was not before this court in the case of State v. Swift any reference thereto was merely dictum. But it is interesting to note that the opinion in State V. Swift declares that the amendment had become a part of the.

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Bluebook (online)
193 N.E. 865, 208 Ind. 168, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-todd-ind-1935.