Miller Insurance Agency v. Porter

20 P.2d 643, 93 Mont. 567, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 32
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1933
DocketNo. 7,095.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 20 P.2d 643 (Miller Insurance Agency v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller Insurance Agency v. Porter, 20 P.2d 643, 93 Mont. 567, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 32 (Mo. 1933).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, a Montana corporation and taxpayer, brought this action to enjoin the issuance and payment of warrants for fire insurance on the state capítol building, the buildings at the various educational and other state institutions. The plaintiff is engaged in the sale of fire insurance policies, and is the agent for a number of “non-board” fire insurance companies.

The various policies for fire insurance on all of the buildings, the property of the state, were about to expire on September 1, 1932. A meeting was held by the state board of examiners to consider the securing of policies of insurance on the above enumerated buildings. No call for bids was advertised by the board. The plaintiff, through its authorized representative, attended the meeting and offered in writing to furnish insurance on a substantial portion of the risks to be carried at a rate somewhat less than theretofore paid or thereafter agreed to be paid for such insurance. The board refused to accept the bid and proceeded to enter into contracts for insurance with other companies at a higher rate.

The legislative assembly in 1931 made two appropriations for the payment of fire insurance premiums on state buildings. One appropriation is found in the general appropriation bill for the expense of the government of the state of Montana. *570 Another is an appropriation from the university millage fund and is a part of the appropriation bill for the operation and maintenance of the various educational institutions, for the support of which this millage fund is levied. and collected. It was the plan of the board of examiners at the time of the letting of the insurance to pay for the insurance on the buildings of the various units of the educational institutions from the latter appropriation, and to pay the insurance premiums on the state capitol and the other state institutions from the appropriation in the general appropriation bill.

It was proposed by the state board of examiners to secure policies of fire insurance for a period of three years from September 1, 1932, the payments to be made as indicated, with the exception that the amount appropriated from the millage fund was insufficient by approximately $6,000 with which to pay the costs of the insurance on the buildings to be insured from that fund.

The plaintiff by this action sought to prevent the payment for the various policies of fire insurance upon two general grounds: Namely, (1) that the various appropriation bills containing these appropriations were in contravention of certain constitutional provisions, hereinafter noted, ■ and therefore void; (2) that the state board of examiners was without authority to let contracts for insurance unless they first advertised and received bids in accordance with certain statutory provisions.

On the filing of the complaint in the lower court a restraining order, and order to show cause, was issued in accordance with the prayer of the complaint. Answer was1 filed, and in due course a hearing had; thereafter the restraining order was dissolved and plaintiff’s application for an injunction denied. The appeal is from the order dissolving the temporary restraining order and refusing further injunctive relief.

The plaintiff asserts that the titles to the appropriation bills are in violation of sections 23 and 33 of Article Y of our Constitution. The title to House Bill 190 (Laws 1931, p. 571) is: “An Act to Appropriate Money for the Operation *571 and Maintenance, and Other Purposes, as Designated Herein, for Certain State Departments, Boards, Bureaus and Commissions for the Period Beginning July 1, 1931, and Ending June 30, 1933.”

It is apparent from the reading of the foregoing title as well as the bill itself that the bill was a general appropriation bill. Section 33 of Article V permits more than one subject to be included in a general appropriation bill, provided there is embraced “nothing but appropriations for the ordinary expenses of the legislative, executive and judicial departments of the state. * * * ” The only question raised by plaintiff with reference to this particular bill is that fire insurance is not ordinary expenses of some one of the three co-ordinate departments of state government.

The insurance provided by this particular bill was on the state eapitol and other state institutions, such as the penitentiary, insane asylum, etc. Ordinary expenses include the current expenses of the government. (State ex rel. Branch v. Leaphart, 11 S. C. 458; In re Limitation of Taxation, 3 S. D. 456, 54 N. W. 417.) The expense of salaries of officers and enlisted men of the national guard have been held to be ordinary expenses of the legislative, executive or judicial department within the meaning of a like constitutional provision. (State ex rel. Davis v. Carter, 31 Wyo. 401, 226 Pac. 690.) Appropriations for the support of a farmers’ institute are said to be, although not within a narrow definition of the expenses of the state government, nevertheless fairly included in the title of a general appropriation Act, and are proper charges assumed in the definition of the legislative assembly as expenses of state government. (Illinois Farmers’ Institute v. Brady, 267 Ill. 98, 107 N. E. 784.)

The insurance of buildings, the property of the state, is an expense that will occur from time to time if the state is to follow the same care and caution exercised by ordinarily prudent citizens in the conduct of their own affairs. Any expense which recurs from time to time and is to be reasonably anticipated as likely to occur in order for the proper operation *572 and maintenance of the departments of the state government is an ordinary expense. Fire insurance premiums' are clearly of this nature. A general appropriation bill is not violative of the section of the Constitution complained of, containing appropriations to pay premiums on buildings determined by the legislative assembly to be necessary for the proper function of the governmental departments.

The other appropriation was contained in House Bill No. 222 (Laws 1931, p. 590), the title to which is as follows: “An Act to Appropriate Money for the Operation and Maintenance of the Six (6) Units of the University of Montana, for the Agricultural Experiment Stations and the Substations, for Farmers’ Extension Work, for the Bureau of Mines, for the Students Railroad Fare Refund and for Fire Insurance Premiums on the Physical Plant of the University of Montana and Its Various Branches, for the Period Beginning July 1, 1931, and Ending June 30, 1933.”

It is urged that this title is in violation of section 23 of Article V of the Constitution, prohibiting the inclusion of more than one subject which shall be clearly expressed in the title. In view of the fact that the title expressly mentions “Fire Insurance Premiums,” the objection is narrowed to the question of whether or not the inclusion thereof renders the Act vulnerable by reason of containing two subjects.

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.2d 643, 93 Mont. 567, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-insurance-agency-v-porter-mont-1933.