State v. Lathrop

93 Ohio St. (N.S.) 79
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 16, 1915
DocketNo. 14903
StatusPublished

This text of 93 Ohio St. (N.S.) 79 (State v. Lathrop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lathrop, 93 Ohio St. (N.S.) 79 (Ohio 1915).

Opinion

Nichols, C. J.

Defendant in error, James H. Lathrop, was convicted in the Lucas county probate court for selling a preparation of morphine in violation of the provisions of Section 12672, General Code, as amended in 103 Ohio Laws, 505.

Judgment of the probate court was affirmed by the court of common pleas, and this judgment of affirmance was reversed by the court of appeals on [80]*80the sole ground that Section 12672, found in 103 Ohio Laws, page 505, was repealed by 103 Ohio Laws, page 340.

This judgment of reversal is now in the supreme court for review.

It appears that the amendment to the section in question found in 103 Ohio Laws, page 340, was enacted into law by the general assembly on the 15th of April, 1913; and two days later, on the 17th of April, the general assembly again ámended the same section by adding opium and its derivatives to the list of proscribed drugs. The disputed question arises over the fact that the governor, to whom, under the constitution, all bills must be transmitted after their passage by the general assembly — inadvertently, we may safely assume — signed the bill later passed first; that is, he signed the act of April 17 on May 2 and that of April 15 on May 3.

The bill signed on the 3d of May was the so-called agricultural commission enactment, amending many sections of the General Code, as well as enacting several supplementary sections.

The bill signed on May 2 amended-but one section and in addition repealed Section 12674.

The court of appeals based its decision on the fact that the act signed on the 2d was repealed by the act of the governor in signing the act on the 3d, and counted of no effect the fact that the legislature passed the measure so held to have been repealed two days later than the .measure which the court holds repealed it.

[81]*81The effect of this decision is that the bill last signed, although first passed, repealed the act first signed, although later passed.

We thus have presented the anomalous situation of the governor being granted an additional power of veto not contemplated by the constitution. He may, if this decision is permitted to stand, by mere order of the time of signing, determine which of two acts relating to the same subject-matter may survive, and, although signing both, may kill the one as effectually as if he had vetoed it; and furthermore— as happened in this instance — may defeat the manifest purpose of the legislature by signing first in order the later expression thereof, and do this, it would appear, without intending to do so, and in effect defeat not only the intention of the legislature, but his own as well.

The anomaly' of the situation is further emphasized by the apparent paradox of the executive killing the bill by approving it, whereas, by vetoing it, it most likely would have survived, for the general assembly would most certainly have repassed the bill by the required constitutional majority, there being no conceivable reason why the unrestricted sale of cocaine and its associated drugs should be forbidden, and opium and its derivatives permitted, and the time necessary to have brought this about would have made the later act the last to go into effect.

The executive should not be permitted to defeat the legislative will except by constitutional methods ■— that is, by the exercise of the veto power. If it [82]*82were permitted him to do so, grave possibilities of encroachment on the legitimate functions of the general assembly might reasonably be apprehended.

The executive has, under our constitution, no part to play in the legislative field except through the veto. It is not necessary, to give effect to the act of the general assembly, that he even sign a bill; it will become a law just as effectually without his approval as with it. The ten-day period fixed by the constitution for the consideration by the governor of such measures as the general assembly may enact, is not so much for the purpose of gaining his approval as for the determination of whether or not he shall disapprove it.

Section' 1 of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio provides that the legislative power of the state shall be vested in a general assembly consisting of a senate and a house of representatives, the people reserving to themselves the power to propose laws to the general assembly and to adopt or reject them by referendum, and the further power of adopting or rejecting any law passed by the general assembly. If the governor, by mere order of the time of approval of measures passed by the general assembly, can make or unmake laws, then, contrary to the express terms of the constitution, he becomes the lawmaking power and his intention, rather than that of the legislature, governs.

After a bill has been passed by the legislature and the three days for reconsideration have passed, it has no further authority in the premises. It cannot recall the bill from the hands of the governor. If it were the will of the legislature to de[83]*83feat its former enactment, it can then only act through the instrumentality of another law.

It is perhaps pertinent to this inquiry to observe that the amendment to the section in question, passed on the 15th of April, in nowise changed the subject-matter of the section, but simply substituted the words “agricultural commission” for the words “and the members of the state board of pharmacy,” this being essential on account of the fact that the law took certain functions from the state board of pharmacy and transferred them to the agricultural commission, while the act of April 17 materially changed the substance of the act. And it bears the strongest of internal evidence that it was sought to and did amend the act as passed two days previous, and not old Section 12672, General Code. It would indeed be a strange proceeding to hold that the legislature passed on the 15th of April a law repealing an act which it did not pass until the 17th of the same month, and which, for aught we know, may not at the time have been even introduced in the lawmaking body, for it is by no means rare that a bill is introduced and enacted into law, through suspension of the constitutional requirements, within a period of two days. It is not difficult to understand how this situation developed. The agricultural commission law was long and involved, the other bill was short and confined to but one subject, and the executive, in giving consideration to the two measures thus transmitted to him, would naturally require greater time for the one than the other.

[84]*84We are not unmindful of the provisions of Section 16 of Article II of the Constitution, requiring that “every bill passed by the general assembly shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the governor for his approval. If he approves, he shall sign it and thereupon it shall become a law and be filed with the secretary of state,” under the express terms of which the two measures in question became laws of the date of his approval. There is nothing in the record to indicate which of the two acts was first presented to the governor, but it must be presumed in the ordinary course of events that the act first passed was first presented, and, had there been neither approval nor veto, then the act of April 17 would have been the act last to go into effect.

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Bluebook (online)
93 Ohio St. (N.S.) 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lathrop-ohio-1915.