Prouty v. Stover

11 Kan. 235
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 11 Kan. 235 (Prouty v. Stover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prouty v. Stover, 11 Kan. 235 (kan 1873).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Brewer, J.:

This is a proceeding by mandamus, instituted in this court, to compel the Lieutenant-Governor of this state and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, to furnish the plaintiif, S. S. Prouty, with a certificate of his election as state printer of the state of Kansas, he claiming to be entitled to such certificate by virtue of the-proceedings had in the joint session of the legislature on the third Tuesday of January, 1873. Three questions are presented, two of which at least must be decided in favor of the plaintiff before he will be entitled to the relief sought. First, Could a majority of [253]*253members present in the joint session and voting, elect, or did it require a majority of all the members elected to the two> houses? Second, Did the house of representatives consist of more than ninety members? Third, Can this court look back of the final declaration of the result by the joint convention, to see whether upon either of the votes any one other than the one declared elected, was in fact elected? These questions, as can readily be seen, are, so far as this court is concerned, of a delicate nature, for they concern the regularity of the proceedings of the legislative branch of the government; and they are also questions of great moment, for they involve the rightfulness of the organization of at least one body of the legislature. Our examination has been assisted by the efforts of able counsel, whose briefs are full and elaborate, and whose arguments were models of clearness and strength. We have given to the case the full consideration which its importance demands, giving to it a priority of attention in view of the public intereste affected by its result.

Statement of facts. 1. Joint conventions. Act of 1861 construed. There is no dispute as to the facts, and the questions are purely questions of law. On the first call, of the roll, as sb°wn by the journal of the proceedings of the joint convention, S. S. Prouty, the plaintiff, received 65 votes, and George W. Martin received 62 votes. No other votes were cast, so that the plaintiff received a majority of all the votes of all the members present and voting. Was he thereby elected? Art. 15, § 4, of the constitution, as amended in 1868, provided that a state printer should be “elected by the legislature in joint session.” This section is silent as to the manner of voting, or the number of votes necessary to elect; and if there be no limitation prescribed elsewhere it would seem that a majority of all the votes cast was sufficient. In 1861 the. legislature passed an act to regulate the proceedings of joint conventions which, at least in terms, has never been repealed. Sec. 6 of that act reads, “that to elect any person in said ioint convention a majority voting m the affirmative of all the members elected to the two houses shall be necessary.” [254]*254(Gen. Stat., 547, ch. 57, § 6.) As there were 133 persons elected and admitted to the two houses, the plaintiff failed by two votes of bringing himself within the rule prescribed in this section. To avoid this plaintiff claims, first, that this act is inapplicable; second, that it was repealed by the constitutional amendment of 1868, and third, that it is unconstitutional. Was it inapplicable? The election of a state printer is not one of the things named in the act to be, or which may be, done in the joint convention. Such an officer was then unknown to our laws, and of course was not within the thought of the legislature when it passed that act. Yet the language is broad and comprehensive: “ The two houses shall meet in joint convention for the ele.ction of United States senators, or for the purpose of doing any other act that may be authorized by law.” It includes everything that a joint convention has power to do. It is prospective in its reach, and every act which a joint convention.may hereafter be required or authorized to do, must, while that statute remains unrepealed, be .done according to the rules and limitations therein prescribed. The legislator acts for the future, as the judge does for the past. He prescribes a rule of conduct, and everything which comes within the limits of that rule must be guided by it. And when an act comes within the plain limits of a legislative rule, it is no objection to the applicability of the rule, that the act was not thought of, or was even impossible, at the time the rule was established.

2. Repeals by implication.

[255]*255 3. Limitation on legislative power.

[256]*256 Application of MMtions.

[257]*2574. Elections by join convention. Act of 1861 sustained and construed. [254]*254Was said act of 1861 repealed by the constitutional amendment of 1868? The amendment created the office of state printer, and gave to the legislature the power of election. It was s^enf as t° the manner and requisites of electi0n. These are prescribed in the act. The amendment did. not in terms, repeal the act. It could operate as a repeal only by implication. But to repeal by implication, there must be an inconsistency, a conflict between the two. The manner and requisites of election as prescribed in the act must amount to a limitation on the power granted by the amendment, or the two can stand together, and there [255]*255is no repeal. Prima facie there is no inconsistency, no conflict between the grant of a power and the regulations under which that power may be exercised. Judicial power is vested in certain courts. Prescribing the method of procedure in those courts is per se no limitation on that power. Power to enact laws is vested in the legislature. The rules and orders for transacting business work no abridgment of that power. But it is claimed that under the name of a regulation this section really works a limitation, because, by § 8 of art. 2 of the constitution a majority of each house constitutes a quorum; that when a quorum is present the house is present; that a quorum can transact any business except such as by specific sections of the constitution require the concurrence of a larger number; that a majority of the quorum binds the quorum; that its act is the act of the quorum, and therefore the act of the house; that this amendment grants the power of election to the legislature in joint convention, that is, to a convention composed of a quorum of-each house; that the majority of that convention, thus organized, binds the convention, its act is the act of the convention, and executes the power granted to the convention. The propositions thus stated bring up the third inquiry presented concerning this section: Is it constitutional? The claim made is really two-fold: first, that in the absence of express limitations the majority of a quorum of a deliberative assembly can do any act and exercise any power of that assembly, and second, that because the constitution has expressly declared that a given proportion of one or both houses shall be requisite for certain specified acts, it impliedly inhibits any limitation upon the power of a quorum in all other cases. The limitations on the power of that quorum are in this case expx’essed, expressed in the act of the legislature. All legislative power is vested in the legislature. Prescribing the rules, manner, and requisites of elections, is a legislative act. Thex’e is no express constitutional inhibition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Kan. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prouty-v-stover-kan-1873.