State v. Staub

23 A. 924, 61 Conn. 553, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 21
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 17, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 23 A. 924 (State v. Staub) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Staub, 23 A. 924, 61 Conn. 553, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 21 (Colo. 1892).

Opinion

Andrews, C. J.

The respondent is the comptroller of public accounts. Upon the application of the state’s attorney the Superior Court for Hartford County issued an alternative writ of mandamus, commanding him forthwith to distribute among the several towns of the state the money which by section 2228 of the General Statutes it is provided that the comptroller shall distribute, namely, one dollar and fifty cents for every person within such town of school age *560 as ascertained from the returns required, and to transmit the amount distributed to each town to its treasurer, etc., etc.

The respondent appeared in the Superior Court and moved to quash the alternative writ, because: — “1. The official action which said writ requires him to perform is included in and is the exercise of the powers and duties vested in and imposed upon him as an independent officer of the executive department by the constitution, and the exercise of such powers and the performance of such duties cannot lawfully be enforced by writ of mandamus. — 2. The statutes mentioned in said writ and the law of the state do not require him to perform the official acts enjoined by said writ.”

If the matter alleged in the second ground is sufficient, an examination of the first ground will be unnecessary. It will be convenient therefore to consider that one first.

Section 2228 of the General Statutes is as follows:— “ The income of the school fund which, after deducting all expenses attending its management, shall remain in the treasury on the twenty-eighth day of February in each year, and also one dollar and fifty cents for every person between four and sixteen years of age belonging to any school district, as ascertained from the last returns of the school visitors, shall annually, as soon as may be after said day, be divided and distributed by the comptroller among the several towns in proportion to the number of persons in each between the ages of four and sixteen years as ascertained from said returns, and he shall transmit the amount distributed to each town to its treasurer on the application of US'.school visitors, or of its school committee if such town constitute but one school district; but no money shall be transmitted to any town until the comptroller shall have received from its school visitors or committee a certificate, signed by them or their chairman and secretary, and substantially in the following form, * *

This section has been in force in very nearly the words in which it now appears since the year 1854, and there is no dispute but that the respondent has received from the sev *561 eral towns of the state the returns and certificates required thereby.

In 1877 the legislature passed an act (Acts of 1877, ch. 120,) providing for specific appropriations for all purposes authorized by law. This act is now sections 377 and 378 of the General Statutes of 1888, which are as follows; — “ Section 377. The General Assembly in behalf of the state, the representatives of the towns, and the senators residen in the several counties in behalf of their respective cou; ties, every city by its common council, when so authorized by its charter or by the freemen in legal meeting assembled, and every town, borough or school district by legal meeting of its qualified voters, may make appropriations of specific sums of money for any purpose authorized by law, and by .the warnings of the meetings at which the appropriations are made. Section 378. Whenever any specific appropriation of money may have been made by the General Assembly, by the representatives and senators of any county, or by any community or corporation named in the preceding section, every agent, commissioner or executive officer of the state, or of any county, city, borough, town or school district, who shall willfully authorize or contract for the expenditure of any money or the creation of any debt for any purpose in excess of the amount specifically appropriated for such purpose by the General Assembly, the county representatives and senators, or the community or corporation of which he is the agent, commissioner or executive officer, unless such expenditure shall be made or debt contracted for the necessary repair of roads or bridges or the necessary support ,of schools or paupers in cases arising after the proper appropriation has been exhausted, shall be fined not exceeding one thousand dollars or imprisoned in the county jail not exceeding one year, or both.”

The plan of specific appropriations for state expenditures was greatly enlarged in the year 1884, (Acts of 1884, ch. 108,) and a method of procedure for making estimates and passing appropriation bills was carefully elaborated. Most of the provisions of this later act appear now in the General *562 Statutes of 1888, sections 879-384 inclusive, and sections 403-410 inclusive.

Section 407 is as follows: — “ No department of the state government, no officer of the same, and no officer of any public institution, shall expend in any fiscal year or years any sum in excess of appropriations made by the General Assembly for such year or years, or involve the state in any contract for the future payment of money in excess of any such appropriation. Nor shall any accounting or disbursing officer-of any department of the government allow or pay any account or charge whatever, growing out of or in any way connected with any regular department of the government, or with any special or other commission, until special appropriation shall have been made by law to pay such^accounts and charges, or after the special appropriation, has been exhausted; and no money appropriated for. contingent, incidental or miscellaneous purposes shall be expended or paid for official or clerical compensation.”

The General Assembly at its session in January, 1889, made specific appropriations for the purposes mentioned in section 2228 for the two years ending June 30th, 1891. But the General Assembly of 1891 has made no appropriation for said expenses or for any other expenses of the state.

In this condition of things is the respondent forbidden to distribute the money according to the command of the alternative writ? In other words, in the absence of any specific appropriation by the General. Assembly is the prohibition ■contained in the act operative or inoperative?

Upon this part of the ease the eminent counsel for the •state have furnished us with an argument so clear and •decisive that we have felt impelled to use portions of it, making only slight changes.

If the latter of these provisions, (that is, the special appropriation act,) is binding under existing circumstances, then the law is the equivalent of a law providing that for .an indefinite period the officers charged with the maintenance of the state government shall not perform thé duties •imposed on them by law; courts shall not be held; persons *563 charged with crime shall be refused a trial; prisoners in the state prison shall be released or starved; the property of the state shall be abandoned, uncared for and unprotected. Such a law. is obnoxious to certain plain provisions of the constitution, as well as to a fundamental principle underlying all government. It would seem to be beyond the power of the legislature to pass.

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Bluebook (online)
23 A. 924, 61 Conn. 553, 1892 Conn. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-staub-conn-1892.