State v. the District of Narragansett

3 L.R.A. 295, 16 A. 901, 16 R.I. 424, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 2, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 3 L.R.A. 295 (State v. the District of Narragansett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. the District of Narragansett, 3 L.R.A. 295, 16 A. 901, 16 R.I. 424, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 10 (R.I. 1889).

Opinion

Durfee, C. J.

The question presented for decision is, whether chapter 710 of the Public Laws, passed March 22, 1888, is constitutional. By the first section of said chapter a portion of the town of South Kingstown, therein described, “ is incorporated into a District^by the name of Narragansett,” . and it is enacted that the “ inhabitants thereof shall have and enjoy the like benefits, liberties, and immunities, and be subject t.o the like duties and responsibilities, as the several towns in this State generally enjoy and are subject to, except as is hereinafter provided.” It is provided in a subsequent section that “ for all state and national elections, including that of senator and representatives in the General Assembly,” the district shall be merely a voting district of the town of South Kingstown. The bill for said chapter was introduced into the General Assembly in March, 1888, and was passed March 22, 1888, before the annual election of members for the legislative year ensuing, which did not occur until April. It is contended for the prosecution that *433 the chapter is void, because it was passed without compliance with the Constitution of the State, article 4, section 17, which is as follows, to wit: “Hereafter when any bill shall be presented to either house of the General Assembly, to create a corporation for any other than for religious, literary, or charitable purposes, or for a military or fire company, it shall be continued until another election of members of the General Assembly shall have taken place, and such public notice of the pendency thereof shall be given as may be required by law.”

It is contended for the defence that the chapter is valid, first, because said section 17 is merely directory, and, if mandatory, second, because the district is not a corporation within the meaning of the word as used in section 17.

Judge Cooley, in his excellent work on Constitutional Limitations, expresses the opinion that every constitutional direction should be regarded as mandatory, since it cannot be supposed that rules of proceeding would be prescribed in a constitution unless they were deemed to be essential. Perhaps this view may be too strict for some cases where a rule of proceeding is merely an incidental or subordinate part of the provision in which it occurs. The rule of proceeding prescribed by section 17 is not a subordinate part, but the whole of it. Doubtless the purpose is to notify the people of the pendency of the bill, and give them an opportunity to express themselves, according as they may like or dislike it, in the election of the new members, and thus exert an influence, more direct than they otherwise could, upon the question of its enactment. In this view it seems to us that a substantial compliance with the section must be regarded as indispensable to the valid enactment of any bill for the creation of any corporation to which the section applies. A proposition to amend the Constitution by striking out section 17 was submitted to the people in 1876 and rejected, a considerable majority of the votes cast being against it.

Is the district a corporation within the meaning of the word as used in section 17 ? It is indisputably a corporation, and must be held to be within the section unless there is some sufficient reason for holding otherwise. The contention for the district is that the word, though it is technically comprehensive enough to include *434 public corporations, is popularly used to signify only private corporations, and was so used in section 17. There can be no doubt that the word is frequently so used, it being assumed that it will be understood that it is so used in the absence of anything to show that a fuller meaning is intended. The use occurs not only in conversation, speeches, newspapers, and public documents, but even in the statute book. In Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 27, § 14, it is enacted that “ No corporation other than a corporation for religious, literary, or charitable purposes, or a military or fire company, shall be organized under a charter until the petitioners for the same shall pay into the general treasury, for the use of the State, one hundred dollars.” The language follows that of section 17, but it has not been held to cover public corporations. Chapter 152 is entitled “ Provisions respecting corporations in general,” and the provisions, though not in terms limited to private corporations, seem to be intended only for such corporations. There are decisions which recognize such a use of words. Street and sewer assessments for benefit are taxes, but they have been held not to be taxes within the meaning of the word as used in leases, charters, and statutes. In the Matter of College Street, 8 R. I. 474; Beals v. The Providence Rubber Co. 11 R. I. 381. The organic act of Washington Territory authorizes the legislative assembly of the territory to confer the right of suffrage on “ citizens of the United States above the age of twenty one years,” and the assembly conferred the right on such citizens, both male and female; but the Supreme Court of the territory has recently decided that the assembly had no power to confer it on women, because women, though technically citizens, are not citizens within the meaning of the word as used in the act. Bloomer v. Todd, 19 Pacific Reporter, 135. See, also, Opinion of Justices, 107 Mass. 604 ; Robinson's Case, 131 Mass. 376. “Every constitution,” it has been said, “ has a history of its own which is likely to be more or less peculiar, a.nd, unless interpreted in the light of this history, is liable to be made to express purposes which were never within the minds of people in agreeing to it.” Per Cooley, C. J., in People v. Harding, 53 Mich. 481.

The defendants contend further, in support of their views, that the section originated in certain jealousies or fears in regard to *435 private, not public, corporations. The fear was that sucb corporations, being armed with large powers and extraordinary franchises, might become, especially if multiplied unduly, dangerous to the common weal. This fear was aggravated by the decision in the Dartmouth College case. The fear was specially rife in regard to banks. The meagre report which we have of the proceedings of the convention to frame the Constitution shows that the section, as first offered, covered only “ banking companies for the purpose of issuing notes for circulation.” This was amended so as to include “ all banks.” A motion was then made to insert railroad and turnpike corporations. Some members then expressed a wish to have all corporations included except those for religious, charitable, military, and fire companies, and thereupon the section was referred, and subsequently reported in its present form and adopted; There was no mention of public corporations. Public corporations are not obnoxious to the jealousies and fears referred to. They are a part of the machinery of government, mere modes of organization, by virtue of which the people of a city, town, or district are enabled the better to perform their public functions, and they may be changed or abolished at the will of the legislature. “ They can be considered,” says Chancellor Bland, in McKim v. Odom, 3 Bland, 407, 417, “ in no other light than as the auxiliaries of the government, and consequently as the secondary and deputy trustees and servants of the people.

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Bluebook (online)
3 L.R.A. 295, 16 A. 901, 16 R.I. 424, 1889 R.I. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-the-district-of-narragansett-ri-1889.