Weill v. Kenfield

54 Cal. 111
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
DocketNo. 6,929
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 54 Cal. 111 (Weill v. Kenfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weill v. Kenfield, 54 Cal. 111 (Cal. 1880).

Opinion

In bank, McKinstry, J.:

In the view we take of this application* it becomes unnecessary to decide that this Court has or has not original jurisdiction to issue the writ of mandamus.

The important question presented is, whether every bill introduced into either House of the Legislature, (unless the requirement in that regard of § 15, art. 4, of the Constitution is dispensed with by a two-thirds vote duly recorded) must be read three times; or whether the requirement has been complied with by reading the title and a portion of a bill twice, and reading the whole once. The section reads as follows:

“ No law shall be passed except by bill. Nor shall any bill be put upon its final passage until the same, with the amendments thereto, shall have been printed for the use of the members ; nor shall any bill become a law unless the same be read on three several days in each House, unless, in case of urgency, two-tliirds of the House, where such bill may be pending, shall, by a vote of yeas and nays, dispense with this provision. Any bill may originate in either House, but may be amended or rejected by the other; and on the final passage of all bills they shall be read at length, and the vote shall be by yeas and nays upon each bill separately, and shall be entered on the Journal; and no bill shall become a law without the concurrence of a majority of the members elected to each House.”

It is claimed by petitioner that the words “ be read ” in the clause “ nor shall any bill become a law unless the same be read [113]*113on three several days,” etc., should receive an interpretation “ technical ” and special. It is admitted that all bills—unless the provision is dispensed with—must be read on three several days, but it is insisted that the framers of the Constitution, and the people who ratified that instrument, must have intended that all bills should be read in the manner, and to the extent only, that it had been the legislative practice to read them prior to the adoption of the Constitution.

When, however, a word is found in a section of the Constitution or of a statute, such as is sometimes employed in a sense specially appropriate to a science, art, or business, and which differs from its popular signification, the courts will accord to it its popular meaning, unless the very nature of the subject indicates or the context suggests that it is employed in its technical sense. And this presumption, that language is used with the meaning ordinarily attached to it, is perhaps strengthened in the present case, where the admitted purpose was to regulate, in the organic law, the mode of proceeding in respect to the passage of bills through the two Houses of the Legislature, and to correct abuses which had grown up under the practice previously existing. It cannot be presumed, at least, that the members of the Constitutional Convention, whose duty it was to prepare an instrument to be submitted to the people, and who liad, therefore, received the direction “ loquendum ut vztlgus,” intended to employ words, (the commonly received meaning of which is indisputable) in a sense peculiar to Cushing’s Manual, or in a sense (if there be such) in which they constitute a portion of the technology of the science of parliamentary law.

It cannot be maintained that the verb to read,” in all its moods and tenses, when applied to bills for acts pending before legislative bodies, has acquired a purely technical signification which absolutely excludes its ordinary meaning. The authority upon parliamentary law cited by counsel, Mr. Cushing, does not so declare. That writer, (in his Law and Practice of Legislative Assemblies) after describing the practice, including the reading in full, which at one period prevailed in the House of Lords and the Commons, adds: “ In modern times no essential difference has taken place, except that bills are not now accom[114]*114panied by breviates, and it is not the custom to read any bill at length. -The necessity for reading is superseded by printing; and the rule which requires a bill to be read is now satisfied by reading the title and a few of the first words.” (§ 2141.) In the next section of the same work he says: “ As the contents of a bill cannot regularly be lenovm to the House until it is read, it is not usual,” etc.; and in the section following he states that the “ ancient practice ” was substantially adopted by the House of Representatives of Congress in 1789. Jeremy Bent-ham, in his Essay on Political Tactics, declares that, in his day, the three readings were “purely nominal”; the clerk confined himself to reading the title and the first words.

Both the writers above mentioned refer to this nominal reading, or reading which “ satisfies the rule,” as a substitute for the reading itself. But even if it shall be found that this nominal reading is sometimes spoken of as the “ reading of the bill,” the actual reading is also designated in the same manner. It is - enough for our purpose to ascertain that when a bill is really read it always is said to be read. Even if it be admitted that the reading of the title has been spoken of as the reading' of a bill, it is quite certain that in legislative parlance the “ reading ” includes the actual reading.

As to the context. It was not claimed at the argument that other sections of the Constitution cast any light upon the question we are considering, but it was urged by counsel that the subsequent clause in the same section—“ on the final passage of all bills, they shall be read at length,” clearly indicates that tlie first and second readings may be of a portion only. But this attaches more consequence to the words “ at length ” than we think is their due. The language is given effect and its sufficient purpose discharged when it is construed as requiring every bill to be read before its final passage, notwithstanding the reading may have been twice dispensed with by a vote of two-thirds of the House. On the final passage it is to be read at length, and this, of course, in its then condition, i. e., with all of the amendments. And here we may remark, (in reference to any suggestion, that the framers of the Constitution must be presumed to have been familiar with the former mode of doing [115]*115business in the Legislature, and could not have intended so vain an act as the reading of a bill throughout when they must have known that the legislators would have printed copies of the bills before them) that it is perfectly apparent it was intended, before any bill should be put upon its final passage, that it should be both printed with its amendments and read at length, because § 15 of art. 4 commands the printing and the reading also.

It was also claimed -at the argument, that the clause “ unless, in case of urgency, two-thirds of the House where such bill may be pending shall by a vote of yeas and mays dispense with this provision,” relates only to the reading of bills on separate days, and not to the manner of the reading. But the obligation imposed to read on three several days is one, and it cannot be doubted that the power to dispense may be employed with reference to each and every portion of this obligation. The section as distinctly requires all bills to be read as it requires them to be read on separate days.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Cal. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weill-v-kenfield-cal-1880.