STATE Ex HARBAGE v. FERGUSON Et

36 N.E.2d 500, 68 Ohio App. 189, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 129, 22 Ohio Op. 139, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 656
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 2, 1941
DocketNo. 3435
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 36 N.E.2d 500 (STATE Ex HARBAGE v. FERGUSON Et) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE Ex HARBAGE v. FERGUSON Et, 36 N.E.2d 500, 68 Ohio App. 189, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 129, 22 Ohio Op. 139, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 656 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

*130 OPINION

By GEIGER, PJ.

This action was begun in the Court of Common Pleas with the filing by the plaintiff-appellant, a taxpayer, of a petition wherein he seeks to enjoin the treasurer and the auditor of state from paying out any money for expenses to members of the 94th General Assembly other than their annual salaries of $2000.00 each.

Answers in the nature of general denials were filed on behalf of each of the defendants, and when the cause came on for hearing on the merits in the court below, the court found for the defendants and ordered that the petition of plaintiff be dismissed.

Notice of appeal to this court was given on questions of law and fact. With leave of this court plaintiff-appellant filed an amended petition in which it is alleged that pursuant to the provisions of Article II, §31 of the Constitution .the Assembly has provided that the members thereof shall receive as compensation a salary in the sum of $2000.00 per annum; that the members, in violation of said Article, have provided by statute a travel allowance of five cents per mile each way each week to and from their homes, to be paid the member during the session of the body, and have appropriated money for the payment of such traveling expenses. The amended petition further alleges that unless enjoined the defendant auditor and treasurer will issue voucher and make payments for such travel allowance.

It is then alleged that the payment of any money for traveling expenses to any member of the Assembly in excess of $2000.00 is illegal and in violation of the Constitution, and the unlawful withdrawal of funds, and an injunction is asked.

To this amended petition the defendants-appellees have filed a demurrer on the ground that said amended petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

QUESTION INVOLVED.

The only question raised by the demurrer and to be determined by this court is, do provisions of §50 GC, contravene the provisions of Article II, §31 of the State Constitution. Article II, §31, provides as follows: (Emphasis óurs).

“The members and officers of the General Assembly shall receive a fixed compensation, to be prescribed by law, and no other allowance or perquisites, either in the payment of postage or otherwise; and no change in their compensation shall take effect during their term of office.”

Sec. 50 GC, where pertinent, is as follows: (Any emphasis is by the Court).

“Every member of the General Assembly shall receive as compensation a salary of $2000.00 a year during his term of office. Such salary for such term shall be paid in the following manner * *
“Each member shall receive a travel allowance of five cents a miles each way for mileage once a week during the session from and to his place of residence * * * to be paid at the end; of each regular or special session. * * *"

The section in addition to the compensation of $2000.00 a year fixes a travel allowance, and it is claimed by the plaintiff-appellant that such allowance is in violation of the constitutional provision.

The Attorney General files a comprehensive brief arriving at the conclusion that that part of §50 which pro *131 vides that each member of the Assembly shall receive a travel allowance at a fixed rate as part of his compensation. is not in conflict with Article II, §31, or any provision of the Constitution, and that therefore the demurrer of the defendant should be sustained.

Counsel for plaintiff-appellant in his brief contra demurrer, recites interesting history of the legislative action leading first to the adoption of Article I, §19 of the Constitution of 1802, the provision of which Constitution was,

“* * * No member, of the legislature shall receive more than two dollars per day, during his attendance on the legislature, nor more for every twenty-five miles he shall travel in going to'and returning from the General Assembly.”

This provision as to mileage is not as clear as it might be, but as we interpret it, it is to the effect that the member shall not receive as mileage more than two dollars for every twenty-five miles he shall travel in going to and returning from the General Assembly.

Counsel then furnishes us with a discussion in the Constitutional Convention of' 1850, wherein the various resolutions were offered in reference to compensation of members and the mileage to be paid. The compensation suggested in these resolutions was very modest. These discussions show that at that time there was considerable criticism of the amounts which the members returned for postage and stationery, which might account for special mention of this item. After much discussion §31 was adopted In the form as set up above and is now in effect. Counsel for the appellant takes the position that the debates of the convention show that many abuses had grown up in fifty years between the Constitution of 1802 and that of 1851, and that it was the desire of the constitutional convention to eliminate certain conduct of the. members of the Assembly in spending sums for personal use ¿nd charging the same to the State as postage, and that it was the desire of the framers of the amendment to prohibit this questionable practice. He points out the fact that while there was a provision in the Constitution of 1802 of $2.00 for each twenty-five miles, that the provision for mileage was eliminated from the Constitution of 1851.

It is quite proper to consider the debates of the members of the- constitutional convention where they will throw light upon-the proper interpretation of any provision of the Constitution, but these debates are oniy useful for the purpose of shedding such light as they may upon the words that finally appear in the constitutional provision. If these are clear and may be read without' interpretation, the discussion that finally led to their adoption is of no value, nor can we consider the various statements by the members and resolutions offered during the convention as determinative of the meaning of the amendment. The final result is the adoption by a majority of the convention of the provision incorporated into the Constitution.

Counsel for appellee in their reply-brief put a different construction upon the reported debates quoted by the plaintiff-appellant, and asserts that an examination of the portion of the debates quoted readily reveals that the members, of that constitutional convention endeavored at all times to draft an amendment that would permit the payment of mileage, and it is asserted that - the discussion will- disclose that the members of the convention in construing an amendment were concerned only with the abuses which had arisen in connection with allowance for postage and stationery, and that the. question-now before us was not one then giving the members- any concern. But all that was ninety years ago. The Constitutional Convention of 1912 made no change in the provision.

The only way, we can safely consider the, question as to whether the statute violates the Constitution is to examine both in the light of such decisions as have been rendered interpreting eithér. The article provides that the members

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.E.2d 500, 68 Ohio App. 189, 34 Ohio Law. Abs. 129, 22 Ohio Op. 139, 1941 Ohio App. LEXIS 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-harbage-v-ferguson-et-ohioctapp-1941.