School Dist. No. 11 v. Chapman

152 F. 887, 82 C.C.A. 35, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4343
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 1907
DocketNo. 2,173
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 152 F. 887 (School Dist. No. 11 v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
School Dist. No. 11 v. Chapman, 152 F. 887, 82 C.C.A. 35, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4343 (8th Cir. 1907).

Opinion

VAN DEVANTER, Circuit Judge.

This writ of error challenges a judgment recovered by the defendants in error against the school district in an action at law upon certain coupons clipped from bonds issued by the school district in pursuance of a statute of the state of Nebraska, approved February 26, 1879 (Laws 1879, p. 170), and other acts amendatory thereof, including that of March 31, 1887 (Laws 1887, p. 597).

The chief contentions presented by the assignments of error are to the effect that the amendatory act of 1887 is invalid because cer-' tain of the requirements of article 3 of the Constitution of the state were not observed in its enactment. Three sections of this article are as follows:

“See. 8. Each bouse shall keep a journal of its proceedings, and publish them. * ⅜| ⅛ ”
“Sec. 10. The enacting clause of a law shall be ‘Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Nebraska,’ and no law shall be enacted except by bill. No bill shall be passed except by assent of a majority of all the members elected to each house of the Legislature. And the question upon final passage shall be taken immediately upon its last reading, and the yeas and nays shall be entered upon the journal.
“Sec. 11. Every bill and concurrent resolution shall be read at large on three different days in each house, and the bill and all amendments thereto shall be printed before the vote is taken upon its final passage. No bill shall contain more than one subject, and the same shall bo clearly expressed in its title. And no law shall be amended unless the new act contains the section or sections so amended, and the section or sections so amended shall be repealed. The presiding officer of each house shall sign, in the presence of the house over which he presides, while the same is in session and capable of transacting business, all bills and concurrent resolutions passed by the Legislature.”

The legislative journals, as published by authority, disclose these facts respecting the bill for the act in question: It originated in the [890]*890House of Representatives, where it was passed by the constitutional majority, the vote being taken by yeas and nays which were entered upon the journal. In the Senate it was amended and passed in its amended form by the requisite majority; the vote being taken and entered as in the House. It was then returned to the House with the request that the amendment be concurred in, but whether this was done, and if so by what majority, and in what manner the vote was taken, are matters in respect of which the journal of the House is silent. As enrolled under the supervision of the joint committee on enrollment, as signed by the presiding officer of each house, and as presented to and approved by the Governor, the bill embodied the amendment.

It is insisted that the amendment could only have, been concurred in by a .vote of the house in which the yeas and nays were taken and entered upon the journal, and that the absence of such an entry .renders the act void. Whether or not the insistence is well taken is to be determined by ascertaining what is the proper construction and application of the state Constitution, as settled by the decisions of the court of last resort of the state. South Ottawa v. Perkins, 94 U. S. 260, 24 L. Ed. 154; Post v. Supervisors, 105 U. S. 667, 26 L. Ed. 1204. Turning to the decisions of that court, we find that in Hull v. Miller, 4 Neb. 503, it was held that a provision in the state Constitution of 1866, substantially the same as that in section 10, supra, respecting the entry upon the journal of the yeas and nays on the passage of a bill, did not apply to a vote of concurrence by either house in an amendment of the other, but only to the vote taken upon the passage of a bill following its last or third reading in each house, which was treated as the vote on its final passage. And in State ex rel. v. Liedtke, 9 Neb. 490, 4 N. W. 75, which related to an act passed after the adoption of the present Constitution, the court, after observing that “the words ‘final passage,’ as applied to matters of legislation, were well known to the framers of the Constitution, and presumably to the people who adopted it,” held that the requirement of section 11, supra, that “the bill and all amendments thereto shall be printed before the vote is taken upon its final passage,” does not apply to an amendment proposed by a committee of Conference after disagreeing votes in the two houses, but only to amendments proposed before the vote following the last or third reading in each house, which was again treated as the vote on final passage. These decisions show that, under the authoritative interpretation of the state Constitution, a concurrence b)' one house in an amendment of the oth-' er is not the final passage of a Hill on which the yeas and nays are required to be taken and entered upon the journal.

It is next insisted that, though such concurrence be not the final passage of a bill within the meaning of section 10, supra, the entire silence of the journal respecting a concurrence by the House renders the act void. But the rule in Nebraska is otherwise, at least in respect of matters like this which are not specially required by the Constitution to be entered upon the journal. It was so held in Hull v. Miller, supra, where the court said of the requirement that every bill shall be read on three different days:

[891]*891“But inasmuch as it is not required, as it is in respect of bills on their Anal passage, that each house shall enter upon its journal and preserve the evidence of its having obeyed this rule, it will be presumed that they did so, unless the contrary clearly appear.”

In other cases, notably Webster v. Hastings, 59 Neb. 563, 568, 81 N. W. 510, and State v. Burlington & Missouri River R. R. Co., 60 Neb. 741, 746, 84 N. W. 254, the rule relating to the impeachment of a duly authenticated and enrolled act by reference to the legislative journals is stated in this way:

"The rule established by our former decisions is that the due authentication and enrollment of a statute affords only prima facie evidence of its passage, and that me legislative journals may be examined for the purpose of ascertaining whether the measure was enacted in the mode prescribed by the Constitution. If the entries found in the journals explicitly and unequivocally ■contradict the evidence furnished by tiie enrolled bill, the former will prevail. The journals, being the records of legislative proceedings kept in obedience to the command of the Constitución, are considered the best evidence of what affirmatively appears in them regarding the enactment of laws.”

And in State v. Frank, 60 Neb. 327, 333, 83 N. W. 74, 75, it was said, after reiering to prior decisions:

"What they decide is that tiie journals are unimpeachable evidence of what they contain; not that their silence convicts the Legislature of having violated the Constitution. livery presumption is m favor or the regularity of legislative proceedings; and it is rather to be inferred that the journals are imperiect records of what was done than that the Legislature failed to perform the more solemn and important duties enjoined upon it by the Constitution. In Ex parte Howard-Harrison Iron Co., 119 Ala. 481, 491, 24 South. 516, 519, 72 Am. St. Rep. 928, cited in State v. Abbott, 80 N.

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Bluebook (online)
152 F. 887, 82 C.C.A. 35, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/school-dist-no-11-v-chapman-ca8-1907.