Koon v. Bottolfsen

169 P.2d 345, 66 Idaho 771, 1946 Ida. LEXIS 169
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 4, 1946
DocketNo. 7283.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 345 (Koon v. Bottolfsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koon v. Bottolfsen, 169 P.2d 345, 66 Idaho 771, 1946 Ida. LEXIS 169 (Idaho 1946).

Opinion

GIVENS, J.

Appellants, under Chapter 103 of the 1943 Session Laws, page 199, as an emergency act effective February 27, 1943, entered into a contract June 23, 1943, with respondent Koon, doing business as Courtright Publishing Company, for the publication of a code in six volumes. The *774 other respondents are sub-contractors and a financing assignee.

Section 4 of the statute in part provides:

“* * *; that said publishing company shall have said code printed, published, bound and ready for delivery on or before July 1,1944.”

March 1944, the Courtright Company secured from the commission an extension of time to some undisclosed date subsequent to July 1, 1944. Thereafter, the exact date not being given, but evidently prior to October 1944, respondents delivered one thousand units of Volume I of the Code to the office of the Secretary of State. November 7, 1944, the Company asked for a second extension of time from October 1, 1944, to January 1, 1945. The commission denied this application November 25,1944. The application was thereafter renewed by the Company and apparently no further official action was taken in regard thereto by the commission.

No further volumes were then completed or since offered for delivery and further work was suspended pending the determination of this suit, instituted by respondents to obtain a declaratory judgment to the effect that the above provision in Section 4 was directory and not mandatory; that the commission therefore has authority to grant extensions of time. The delays in the production were asserted to be due to war conditions affecting employment of labor.

The Attorney General’s office, representing the commission, urges the statute is mandatory.

The learned trial court held that the statute was not mandatory — hence this appeal by the commission.

A justiciable case within the purview of our declaratory judgment statute is thus presented.

Coordinately construing all parts of the statute, there are these internal evidences that the language was mandatory and not directory: First, the mandatory language used in Section 4; second, the composition of the commission as set forth in Section 1 and Section 6, namely, “the present Governor of the State of Idaho,” thus designating the spe *775 cific individual, not just the holder of the office, with a limited term, Section 33-203, I.C.A., for the biennium 1943-1944, the then “present Governor” had official duties to perform as such.

“Upon certificate of the foregoing Commission that such compilation has been completed and published, the Governor shall make a proclamation announcing its publication, and from and after such proclamation said compilation shall be in force and shall be received in all the courts and by all judges, public officers, commissions and departments of the state government as evidence of the statute law of the State of Idaho, and as an authorized compilation of the statutes and codes of Idaho. Said compilation shall be known by such name as may be determined by the foregoing Commission.” (Section 6, 1943 Session Laws, p. 202.)

While the then “present Governor” might have been reelected, the thought expressed is clear that the legislature intended that particular individual Governor — not whoever might be the incumbent — should perform the official duties in connection with the code, perforce during his then term. The legislature had to recognize that the term of office of governor was for only two years. After its expiration, he could not officially function as governor, yet it was as governor he had to authenticate the” codes.

Third, that the legislature authorized the inclusion only of the enactments of the 27th session of the legislature. While the statute does not prohibit the inclusion of subsequent sessions, if the legislature had contemplated the work was to extend beyond the biennial period and include subsequent sessions, it would have used other language under the doctrine that inclusio unius est exclusio alterius, hence only the session laws of 1943 were to be included, Poston v. Holler, 64 Ida. 322 at 330, 132 P. (2d) 142, and Meader v. Unemp. Comp. Div., 64 Ida. 716 at 722, 136 P. (2d) 984, thus indicating the language in Section 4 was mandatory.

Likewise, Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 6, 1 page 396, *776 and House Concurrent Resolution No. 12, 2 page 406, 1943 Session Laws, clearly indicate that the 1943 codification authorized by Chapter 103 (H.B. 138) supra, was to be completed within the time specified.

*777 Fourth, Section 7 contemplates the Code was to be used by the next succeeding session of the legislature or the 28th; otherwise, all acts of the 28th session amending or repealing existing laws would necessarily have had to refer to the 1932 code or intervening session laws, which would have created confusion, and necessitated further and additional publication.

Counsel contends In re Overland Co. v. Utter, 44 Ida. 385, 257 P. 480, compels a holding that Section 4 is directory and not mandatory. That case construed a statute authorizing the county commissioners to sit as a board of equalization with the provision that they * * “must complete such business and adjourn as a board of equalization on the third Monday of July, * * *.”

The court stated: “If the history of legislation in this state clearly shows that the legislature intended that words in a statute should be construed as directory rather than mandatory, courts will not be limited in their construction of a statute to its form, but will rather look to its substance.” Then reviewed the revenue statutes subsequent to 1863 and concluded that the “third Monday of July” was *778 not an ultimate and fatal deadline, but that * * * “To carry out the intention of the legislature the provision of the statute with reference to the time of adjournment should receive reasonable construction, and a reasonable construction would seem to be that, although a time is fixed for the adjournment of the board, time is not of the essence of the statute. We do not wish to be understood as holding that a county board of equalization might meet at any time or continue in session for an indefinite period. * * *” (Emphasis ours.)

Adopting the above historical criterion, sole declared basis for holding the statute therein construed to be directory, we find upon examination that there have been a number of statutes authorizing code revisions, all conclusive that it was not only the legislative intent, but the practice and compliant conduct of the various code commissions that the several compilations should be and were completed within the biennial period of the authorization, or extended by specific legislative enactment. 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 345, 66 Idaho 771, 1946 Ida. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koon-v-bottolfsen-idaho-1946.