Oxnard Beet Sugar Co. v. State

102 N.W. 80, 73 Neb. 57, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 25
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1905
DocketNo. 13,995
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 102 N.W. 80 (Oxnard Beet Sugar Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oxnard Beet Sugar Co. v. State, 102 N.W. 80, 73 Neb. 57, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 25 (Neb. 1905).

Opinions

Oldham, C.

The plaintiff below, who is also plaintiff in error in this court, is the manufacturer of sugar from beets grown within this state. Its claim against the state is based on the provisions of chapter I, laws of 1895, entitled “An act to provide for the encouragement of the manufacture of sugar and chicory and to provide a compensation therefor,” passed March 29, 1895, by a constitutional majority, over the governor’s veto. Having complied with all the provisions of this act, it presented its claims for bounty to the auditor of the state, which were audited and approved, and warrants drawn for the various amounts due plaintiff under this act. In the case of State v. Moore, 50 Neb. 88, it was held by this court that claims for bounty could not be paid without a specific appropriation for such purpose. In this opinion, however, the validity of the claims was not considered. Plaintiff in error presented its claims to the legislature at its session in 1903, asking that an appropriation be made for their payment. The house of representatives on April 2, 1903, passed a resolution reciting, among other things, the presentation of these claims for payment, and that “the validity of each of said claims, or the right to payment thereof, is questioned,” and authorizing the plaintiff in error to prosecute an action against the state in the district court for Lan[59]*59caster county for the purpose of ascertaining and determining said claims and the liability of the state for the payment thereof. After the passage of this resolution, plaintiff filed its petition in the district court for Lancaster county, setting forth in detail its compliance with all the provisions of chapter 1, laws of 1895, the filing of its claims with the auditor, the approval of the claims and the drawing of the warrants, countersigned by the treasurer, and also alleging, by way of inducement, that plaintiff had engaged in the manufacture of sugar, relying on the provisions of this act, and. had paid the minimum of $5 a ton, required by the act, for beets raised in the state, from which sugar was manufactured, when it could have procured such beets for the sum of $4 a ton. To this petition the state interposed a demurrer, for the reason that chapter 1, laws of 1895, is unconstitutional and in contravention of section 11, article III, of the constitution of the state of Nebraska, in that it embraces two separate and distinct subjects in one act; and also because the object of such act was not a public object, nor such an object as the legislature of the state had poAver to aid by the appropriation of the public revenue, or the promise of such appropriation. This demurrer was sustained by the trial court, and plaintiff electing to stand on its petition, judgment was entered dismissing the petition; and from this judgment plaintiff has taken error to this court.

The only objection to the constitutionality of the act in controversy which it will be necessary to examine is that it is in contravention of so much of section 11, article III of the constitution, as provides that “No bill shall contain more than one subject, and the same shall be clearly expressed in its title.” In considering this constitutional restriction upon legislative power, it is well to remember that this court has followed the trend of the best considered cases in other states, and held it mandatory and not directory in its nature. Referring to this provision of the constitution we said in the case of Kansas City & O. R. Co. v. Frey, 30 Neb. 790:

[60]*60“The object of the framers of the constitution was not to embarrass legislation by making laws unnecessarily restrictive in their scope and operation, and thus greatly multiply their number, but it was intended that a proposed measure should stand upon its own merits, and that the several members of the legislature should be apprised of the purpose of the act when called upon to support or oppose it; in other words, members were prohibited from joining two or more bills together in order that the friends of the several bills may combine and pass them.”

Again in the case of Trumble v. Trumble, 37 Neb. 340, Irvine, C., in an able and exhaustive opinion in which the former decisions of this court were considered, said:

“Is this act within the inhibition of that clause of the constitution providing that no bill shall contain more than one subject? This question is in most cases surrounded with difficulty. As was said in Kansas City & O. R. Co. v. Frey, 30 Neb. 790, this clause of the constitution ‘was never designed to place the legislature in a strait jacket and prevent it from passing laws having but one object under an appropriate title.’ Provided the object of the law be single the whole law may be embraced in a single enactment, although it may require any number of details to accomplish the object. The purpose of the constitutional inhibition upon the other hand was to require each proposed measure to stand upon its own merits, and to apprise the members of the legislature of the purpose of the act when called upon to support or oppose it, and perhaps a still stronger purpose was to prohibit the joining of several measures in one act in order to combine the friends of each measure and pass the bill as a whole, where probably a majority' could not be procured in favor of any one of its different objects.”

On the other hand, in the case of Hopkins v. Scott, 38 Neb. 661, in discussing the validity of chapter 50, laws of 1891, relating to the keeping of state and county funds, we said:

“It is urged that the act of 1891 is unconstitutional, as [61]*61containing more than one subject. The act provided both for the depositing of state funds and for the depositing of county funds and it is contended that each of these forms a separate subject of legislation. The general object of the act is to provide for the safe custody of public funds, and it seems to us that this is a single subject of legislation, whether the funds are state or county. The object of the act is plainly expressed in its title, and the combination of provisions in regard to both state and county funds presents none of those objections which influenced the adoption of the constitutional inhibition against uniting two or more subjects in a single act.”

In Van Horn v. State, 46 Neb. 62, in which the validity of chapter 32, laws of 1895, providing for toAvnship organization, had been assailed as containing more than one subject, it Avas said:

“It has always been said that the legislature might choose for itself its manner of legislation, and that an act, no matter hoAV comprehensive, Avould be valid providing a single main purpose was held in vieAV, and nothing embraced in the act except what was naturally connected with and incidental to that purpose. Thus, in State v. Page, 12 Neb. 386, the act of 1879, already referred to, entitled ‘An act concerning counties 'and county officers,’ was held to contain but one subject because it had ‘but one general object’ fairly expressed in the title, although this act contained a complete scheme of county government, and so operated as to materially change the law on other subjects related thereto.”

Also in the recent case of Wenham v. State, 65 Neb.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 N.W. 80, 73 Neb. 57, 1905 Neb. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oxnard-beet-sugar-co-v-state-neb-1905.