Kavanaugh v. Chandler, Lieut. Governor

72 S.W.2d 1003, 255 Ky. 182, 95 A.L.R. 273, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 187
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 22, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 72 S.W.2d 1003 (Kavanaugh v. Chandler, Lieut. Governor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kavanaugh v. Chandler, Lieut. Governor, 72 S.W.2d 1003, 255 Ky. 182, 95 A.L.R. 273, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 187 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

OPINION op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

The cases present the question whether or not the signature of the presiding officer of the Senate is essential to the enactment of a legislative hill into a law.

The first-styled ease relates to House Resolution No. 69 of the General Assembly of the regular 1934 session, authorizing the purchase of a number of copies of a book entitled, “Kentucky Directory, 1934,” for the uses and purposes therein set out. The second case relates to House Resolution No. 55 providing for the payment of certain employes of the capitol for extra services rendered during the session. They are brought, against Hon. Albert B. Chandler, Lieutenant Governor, and the Auditor of Public Accounts, seeking to compel the former to sign the enrolled resolutions and to haT7e it held that such signature would have the same effect as if the resolutions had been signed in open session of' the Senate, and thereupon that the Auditor be required to draw his warrants covering the appropriations, respectively. Both suits went out on demurrers to the petitions, which effectually denied the relief sought.

The third styled suit is brought by the state highway commission, and involves House Bill No. 34 granting to municipalities the right to lay and maintain pipe lines and conduits upon the public highways of the state upon complying with certain provisions. The *184 prayer of the petition is for a construction of the Constitution pertaining to the situation and for a' declaration of rights. The answer admits the facts of the petition, and charges that the bill was duly passed by the Senate and submitted to the Lieutenant (governor for his signature, and that he “unlawfully and arbitrarily and without right capriciously refused. to sign said bill when presented to him.” The answer claims that the defendant has the right established by the bill to lay and . maintain a water line on a certain highway. The judgment, rendered upon the pleadings, is that the bill did not become a law and that the defendant does not have the right claimed under the bill.

The resolutions and bill referred to are published in the Acts of 1934, as chapters 587, 582, and 115, respectively.

• The journals of the two houses of the Legislature show that these resolutions and bill were duly passed by the House of Representatives on March 12, 1934, and on the same day were reported to the Senate and given their first reading. Following the third reading, they were duly passed by that body on March 15th. Regular procedure was followed, and the enrolled instruments, after having been signed by the Speaker of the House, were returned to the Senate, and the course prescribed in section 56 of the Constitution was observed. But the Lieutenant Governor refused to sign them, and caused to be entered on the journal, “Lieutenant Governor refused to sign.” Proceeding as though they had been signed, they were presented to the Governor, who, in due time, approved, signed, and transmitted them to the Secretary of State as the custodian of the laws.

We are informed that the signature of the Lieutenant Governor was withheld because of his opinion that the resolutions and bill had not become laws, since they-were given their first reading in the Senate on the same day they were passed in the House, Section 46 of the Constitution provides that “Every bill shall be read at length on three different days in each house. * * * ’ ’ While the requirement that the reading of the bills shall be on different days is mandatory, we do not construe the provision to prevent the first reading of a *185 bill in one house on the .day it was passed in the other, for the reading in each body is independent of and without reference to the other. The purpose is to secure caution and deliberation in each house. The bill passes from the consideration of the house in which it originates when it is delivered to the other body, and we can conceive of no reason why it should not be presented on the same day. Such is the uniform construction of similar provisions. Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, p. 288; 59 C. J. 551; Skipper v. Street Improvement District, 144 Ark. 38, 221 S. W. 866; Chicot County v. Davies, 40 Ark. 200; State v. Persica, 130 Tenn. 48, 168 S. W. 1056; Smith v. Mitchell, 69 W. Va. 481, 72 S. E. 755, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 588. The opinion of the presiding officer, therefore, seems to have been an erroneous one.

For convenient consideration, we quote section 56 of the Constitution in full:

“No bill shall become a law until the same shall have been signed by the presiding officer of each of the two houses in open session; and before' such officer shall have affixed his signature to any bill, he shall suspend all other business, declare that such bill will now be read, and that he will sign the same to the end that it may become a law. The bill shall then be read at length and compared ; and, if correctly enrolled, he shall, in presence of the house in open session, and before any other business is entertained, affix his signature, which fact shall be noted in the journal, and the bill immediately sent to the other house. When it reaches the other house, the presiding officer thereof shall immediately suspend all other business, announce the reception of the bill, and the same proceeding shall thereupon be observed in every respect as in the house in which it was first signed. And thereupon the clerk of the latter house shall immediately present the same to the governor for his signature and approval.”

The interpretation of that section of the Constitution involved in the case at bar was before the court in Hamlett v. McCreary, 153 Ky. 755, 156 S. W. 410, 411, and it was held that the failure of the presiding officer of the Senate to sign a bill prevented it from *186 becoming a law. The facts in the two cases are the same, except that the omission of the Lieutenant Governor to sign the bill in the Hamlett Case appears to have' been an inadvertence, and the bill was not approved by the Governor, as here. The imperious character of the demand of the Constitution was thus declared in that case:

“This language is express, sweeping, and mandatory. It provides, in express terms-, that no bill shall become a law until the same shall have been signed by the presiding officer of each of the two houses in open session, and after certain specified and formal prerequisites shall have been complied with.”

The opinion reférs to cases from Kansas and one from Nebraska holding that the failure of the president of the Senate to sign a bill does not invalidate it.

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Bluebook (online)
72 S.W.2d 1003, 255 Ky. 182, 95 A.L.R. 273, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kavanaugh-v-chandler-lieut-governor-kyctapphigh-1934.