Stephens v. Chambers

168 P. 595, 34 Cal. App. 660, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 216
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 17, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1757.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 168 P. 595 (Stephens v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. Chambers, 168 P. 595, 34 Cal. App. 660, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 216 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an application for a writ of mandate requiring respondent, as state controller, to draw his warrant in favor of petitioner “for such portion of the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, as petitioner may require. ’ ’

At the recent session of the legislature there was regularly passed an act entitled “An act to provide for the celebration of the national memorial reunion and peace jubilee at Vicksburg, Mississippi, and making an appropriation therefor,” which act was by the Governor approved and took effect July 31, 1917 (Stats. 1917, p. 1608). Section 1 thereof reads, in part, as follows: “There is hereby appropriated . . . the sum of fifteen thousand dollars, to be expended by the Governor, in his discretion, for the purpose of assisting to defray the expenses of a public nature incident to the holding of the national memorial reunion and peace jubilee to commemorate the victories and virtues leading to the half century of peace and prosperity to the American nation, and further to strengthen the fraternal ties of amity in the United States,” said reunion to be held at Vicksburg in October, 1917, on certain named days.

Section 2 provides that the Governor shall “demand from the state controller, and the state controller is hereby authorized and instructed upon such demand, to draw his warrant in favor of the Governor for the sum of fifteen thousand dollars to be expended by him as above provided, and the treasurer is hereby authorized and directed to pay the same.”

By way of answer and return to the petition for a writ of mandate, respondent alleges that said petition ‘ ‘ does not state facts sufficient to entitle the petitioner to the relief prayed for,” and it is contended that the attempted appropriation óf money is contrary to the provisions of section 34, article IV, of the Constitution, which reads: “No bill making an appropriation of money, except the general appropriation bill, shall contain more than one item of appropriation, and that for one single and certain purpose, to be therein expressed.”

Thus it will be observed that, so far as the pleadings in this proceeding are concerned, the legality of the statute or appro *662 priation in question is attacked upon one ground only. Indeed, in his brief, the attorney-general appears to concede that it is within the constitutional competence of the legislature of this state to appropriate money from the funds of the state for the purpose and object for which the appropriation is made by the act under attack here, for he says: “In the determination of the validity of this appropriation, it is not necessary to question the objects and purposes of the reunion to be held at Vicksburg. It may well be admitted that such reunion tends to do all of the things expressed in the act as the reasons for holding such reunion. Nor do we here contend that the holding of such reunion is not a matter of state and national importance and one which it might well be to the state’s advantage to encourage, even to the extent of appropriations of money to defray the expenses incident thereto.” In thus expressing himself, the attorney-general doubtless took into consideration, as properly he should, the act of the Sixty-fourth Congress of the United States (Session of 1915-16)—Act Cong. Sept. 8, 1916, c. 464, 39 Stat. 812— whereby money was appropriated for defraying the expenses of the “National Memorial Celebration and Peace Jubilee at Vicksburg, in the year 1917, by the survivors of the armies of the Tennessee and of the Mississippi,” who participated in the memorable battle of Vicksburg in the month of July, 1863, for the reason that the appropriation involved in the act whose validity is here challenged is in aid of the purposes and objects of said act of the national Congress. With this concession of the attorney-general that there legally reside in the state the power and the right to appropriate a reasonable amount of the public moneys to aid in the achievement of the purposes of the act of Congress referred to, further consideration herein thereof might well be waived or dismissed, but, in view of the strictness with which the Constitution, by certain provisions therein contained, guards the disposal of the public revenues, and of certain cases expounding those provisions, some observations with respect to that proposition need not be deemed out of place herein.

Prom what has already been said, it is doubtless plain enough that we are in full accord with the concession of the attorney-general that the legislature may, without offending any of the inhibitory mandates of the Constitution with regard to the appropriations of the public moneys, make such *663 an appropriation as the one whose legality is challenged in this proceeding; and so we express ourselves because of the conviction that, while the legislature will not be permitted to go beyond the bounds expressly established by the people through their Constitution in the matter of the disposal of the revenues raised for the support of the state government, it would be opposed to and, indeed, conceivably in many instances, subversive of the highest ends and the best interests of, a government whose sovereignty and general policies are outlined and controlled by a written constitution, framed in language necessarily general, if it were found requisite, in constitutional construction, to hold that the terms of the organic law should on all occasions be accepted and applied in their literal sense, or that there are not certain matters incidental and necessary to every well-governed state and its subjects as to which the Constitution is silent, in so far as express language is concerned, and as to which legislation looking to the highest welfare of the governed is absolutely necessary. A written constitution, like a statute, cannot so deal with particulars as to meet or provide for every case or contingency which may arise and of which legislative cognizance is allowable if necessary to the complete enjoyment of those privileges, immunities, and rights which are of the essence, and, indeed, the primary and foremost objects of a government in which, like ours, ultimate sovereignty is in the people themselves. By this we do not mean to say that the limitations or barriers contained in the Constitution against the exercise of legislative power may be set aside or disregarded, or that the intent of the organic law, as it is to be gathered from the instrument itself, shall not in all cases prevail. Nor do we intend thus to imply that the courts, in the construction of a written constitution, may be governed by a change in public sentiment as to any subject to which express attention is given and as to which limitations are fixed by the Constitution. But what we do maintain is that, since a written constitution is intended as and is the mere framework according to whose general outlines specific legislation must be framed and modeled, and is therefore, as stated and as is essentially true, necessarily couched in general terms or language, it is not to be interpreted according to narrow or super-technical principles, but liberally and on broad general lines, so that it may accomplish in full measure *664 the objects of its establishment and so carry out the great principles of government.

The Constitution of the United States involves a grant and limitation of powers.

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Bluebook (online)
168 P. 595, 34 Cal. App. 660, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 216, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-chambers-calctapp-1917.