People v. McCallum

1 Neb. 182
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1 Neb. 182 (People v. McCallum) 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
People v. McCallum, 1 Neb. 182 (Neb. 1871).

Opinion

Crounse, J.

The grounds, mainly upon which the denial of McCallum’s right to exercise the duties and receive the emoluments of clerk of the District Court of Otoe county, is placed, are :

1. The alleged'unconstitutiouality of the act of February 9, 1869, which takes from the judges of the District Court the authority to appoint clerks of that county, and which makes the county clerks of the several counties, ex-officio, such clerks; and,

2. The failure of McCallum to give a bond for the faith[194]*194ful performance of his duties of clerk of the District Court, other than that given as county clerk.

The unconstitutionality complained of is that the act referred to, was enacted in violation of so much of section nineteen, article two of the State constitution, as declares that, “ No bill shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title ; and no law shall be revived or amended, unless the new act contain the entire act revived and the sections amended.”

With respect to its title : The act contains but one subject, which is, to provide clerks for the District Coúrt. By section one of the act which is amended, such clerks were appointed by the judges of the respective districts. The amendment makes county clerks ex-officio clerks of the District Court. This is quite well expressed in the title, “ An act to amend section 1 of an act entitled, An act to provide for the appointment of clerks of the District Court, approved June 22, 1867.” It is not required that the title should contain an abstract of the bill, nor set out the particulars of the amendment. Whether this requirement of the constitution is designed as a rule for the government of the legislature, an observance of which is enjoined by a sense of duty and the official oath of each member, and not subject to any supervisory power of the courts (3 Ohio State, 481 ; 6 Ib. 179), it is unnecessary to stop to inquire. The constitution not having fixed the degree of particularity with which a title is to express the subject, it is enough that the legislature, with this provision before them, have selected their own title ; and although we might not agree upon it as the most suitable or comprehensive, the act for that reason is not to be declared void.

The purpose of this provision is to prevent surprise in legislation, by leaving matter of one nature embraced in a bill whose title expresses another. — State v. County Judges of Davis Co. 2 Iowa, 282. There can be no suggestion [195]*195of any such deception in the title of the act before us. It is only in cases clearly Involving the mischief provided against, that this court should be called upon to declare void the acts of the legislature. Chief Justice Oakley of the New York Superior Court, well remarked : “ It is not a light thing to set aside an act of the legislature, even when its objections are grave and weighty ; but when they touch, not the substance of the law, or the authority of the legislature to pass it, but are merely criticisms upon its form or phraseology, the exercise of such a power by the judiciary of the State would be prolific of evil, and would soon be universally condemned.” — The Sun Mutual Insurance Co. v. The City of New York, 5 Sand. 10.

The further question is presented under this section of the constitution, whether the new act shall contain the section as it stood before amendment, or simply set out the section as amended ? The able counsel for the relator contends that the new act must recite the old section and that literally. This construction is rested chiefly upon the case of Langdon v. Applegate, 5 Ind. 328, which, upon a clause of the constitution of Indiana, similar to this, adopt the interpretation insisted upon. The decision of that case was by a divided court, and the opinion published quite meagre and unsatisfactory. It seems never to have challenged respect, but having been announced by the highest court of that State was, tor a time, adhered to, not without protest however.

Judge Goodkin, in a case where he felt constrained to follow, remarked, “Were this an original question I would not so decide.” — Littler v. Smiley, 9 Ind. 118. At last, however, the Supreme Court boldly met and overturned Langdon v. Applegate, in the well considered case of Greencastle Southern Turnpike Co. v. The State ex rel. Malat, 28 Ind. 382. This was a somewhat recent case, and was not cited upon the argument before us.

[196]*196If the case under consideration were, in my mind, a doubtful one, this action of tbe Supreme Court of Indiana would go far in resolving it against tbe plaintiff in error. The inconvenience must be great and the error quite obvious, which would induce the same court to overturn one of its own decisions. “When a rule has once been deliberately adopted and declared,” says Chancellor Kent, 1 Com. 476, 11 it ought never to be disturbed by the same court, except for very cogent reasons and upon a clear manifestation of error.” .

The only State, I believe, having a like constitutional provision, which has given it the interpretation here claimed, is Louisiana. Some early cases of that Slate are referred to, but I have been unable to possess myself of them, to see the reasoning upon which they proceeded. Neither have I been able to advise myself whether, like Indiana, the courts of that State have not reversed-these early cases, and relieved themselves from the annoyance and embarrassment attending them.

Judge Cooley, Constitutional Limitations, 152, after referring to the rule expressed in these early cases in Indiana and Louisiana, says : “It is believed, however, that the general understanding of the provision in question is different, and that it is fully complied with in letter and spirit, if the act or section revised or amended is set forth and published, as revised or amended, and that anything more only tends ho render the statute unnecessarily cumbrous.” The construction insisted on, in my judgment, is wanting in reason as well as authority to support it.

As the best light in which to discover the true meaning of this provision of the constitution, let us briefly inquire into the purpose of its institution, and perhaps the mischief it was designed to correct may be as well illustrated by reference to the course of past legislation. Taking up a volume of Territorial Laws nearest me, I open at page 20, [197]*197Laws of the Territory of Nebraska, 1867, upon “An Act to amend Section 34, Chapter 46, of the Revenue Law,” which does it in the following rather stenographic manner :

“ Section 1. Be it enacted by the Council and House of Representatives of the Territory of Nebraska, that line four, section thirty-four, be amended as follows : Strike out the word “ two,” and insert the word “ five : ” that after the word “ precinct ” in tenth line, insert the word “ voting.” Several serious objections to this character of legislation are obvious. With terms as blind as this, a bill may be read three different times, as required by the constitution, or a hundred times, and no one, from its reading alone, except he who drafted the bill, or those immediately interested in it, would comprehend its object.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Neb. 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mccallum-neb-1871.