Wiggins v. Kerby

38 P.2d 315, 44 Ariz. 418, 1934 Ariz. LEXIS 203
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1934
DocketCivil No. 3476.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 P.2d 315 (Wiggins v. Kerby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiggins v. Kerby, 38 P.2d 315, 44 Ariz. 418, 1934 Ariz. LEXIS 203 (Ark. 1934).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

A petition praying for the issuance by this court of a writ of mandamus directing James H. Kerby, Secretary of State, to cause to be printed and distributed the acts of the Regular and the First and Second Special Sessions of the Eleventh Legislature was filed in this court by V. C. Wiggins, a member of that body, and in the exercise of its original jurisdiction in matters of this character the court ordered the alternative writ issued.

The petition alleges in substance • that the petitioner is a duly elected member of the House of Representatives of the state of Arizona and that the respondent is the duly elected and acting Secretary of State of the state of Arizona; that section 23 of the Revised Code of 1928 makes it the duty of the latter to, “deliver to the printer, at the earliest day practicable after the final adjournment of each ses *420 sion of the legislature, copies of all laws, resolutions and journals, kept, passed, or adopted at such session, superintend the printing thereof, and have proof sheets of the same compared with the originals and corrected”; that section 24 of the Revised Code of 1928 makes it the further duty of the Secretary of State, immediately after publication of the laws, to supply one copy thereof to certain officials designated therein, among whom are the members of the legislature; that the Regular Session of the Eleventh Legislature enacted the general appropriation bill in which it made appropriations for the various de-. partments of the state government for the two fiscal years, beginning July 1, 1933, and ending June 30, 1935, designated respectively as the twenty-second and twenty-third fiscal year, and piovided therein as follows for the office of the Secretary of State:

For the For the
“Subdivision 45. Secretary of State 22nd Fiscal 23rd Fiscal
Year Year
For salaries and wages; for printing session laws; for operation; for initiative and referendum expense:
Total Appropriation ......................$20,404.00 $24,054.00”;

that by reason of this appropriation there are ample funds ■ available to the respondent with which to pay the expenses of printing and distributing the session laws, and that the performance of this act is enjoined upon him as a duty resulting from his office as Secretary of State but that he has arbitrarily and unlawfully failed and refused to perform it.

In response to the alternative writ the Secretary of State interposed a general demurrer to the'petition and answered further by alleging in substance, first, that the legislature did not appropriate sufficient funds for the purpose of printing and distributing the session laws and taking care of the other ex *421 penses of his office and, second, that notwithstanding its failure to do this, he had complied with the law requiring him to perform this act by causing copies of the session laws to be typewritten, mimeographed and distributed to those to whom the law directs him to send them. Following a motion to strike a large portion of the answer, the petitioner demurred to it upon the ground that its denials and allegations do not constitute a defense to the petition. A determination of the sufficiency of this pleading will be decisive of the issues presented.

The petition- discloses that the Eleventh Legislature made an appropriation- to cover the expenses of printing and distributing the session laws, and that the respondent has unlawfully and arbitrarily refused to cause this to be done. These two allegations, when considered in connection with sections 23 and 24, Revised Code of 1928, which prescribe ■ the duties of the respondent incident to the matter of printing and distributing the session laws and subdivision 45 of section 1 of the general appropriation bill, approved March 18, 1933, which sets aside the funds to pay for this work, state a cause of action and render the petition invulnerable to the demurrer interposed to it by the respondent.

We pass to the .sufficiency of the answer which is attacked by a general demurrer. Its first material allegation is that the legislature did not provide the funds with which to print the session laws, and this statement, if sustained by the record, would justify the respondent’s refusal to have them printed, since an officer upon whom a duty has been imposed by law may not be held responsible for failure- to discharge it unless the funds with which to do it, where they are necessary, are provided therefor. Does the record sustain this allegation?

*422 It will be observed that tbe appropriation for the office of Secretary of State for the two fiscal years, July 1, 1933, to June 30, 1935, is $20,404 for the first and $24,054 for the second, a total of $44,458 for the biennium, and that this snm is to be used for the four following purposes:

“For salaries and wages; for printing session laws; for operation; for initiative and referendum expenses. ’ ’

Instead of assigning a definite part of this appropriation to each of these four purposes, the legislature thought best to appropriate a lump sum for the entire expense of the office and leave the detail of apportioning it to these several purposes to the head of the office, a method of appropriating funds that obtains throughout the general appropriation bill of that year, though in the case of some of the departments, institutions and offices, a definite sum is allotted to each of the purposes enumerated. By making the appropriation in tins manner, “the Legislature,” to use the language of the court in State Board of Health v. Frohmiller, 42 Ariz. 231, 23 Pac. (2d) 941, 942, “has confided to these heads the duty and obligation of maintaining their respective institutions, departments, or offices with the funds assigned them, in the proportions indicated, rather than itself fixing the number of employees and their salaries, or segregating operation into different items, etc., leaving this detail to the institution, department, or office.”

While an appropriation for an office or department made in the way this one was leaves with the head of that office or department the detail of apportioning to each of the purposes for which the appropriation is given a definite sum, yet it was the purpose of the legislature that he should use it in a way that would *423 enable bim to discharge the duties of the office as the law requires. When there are charges fixed by general law against an appropriation of this kind, such, for instance, as the salary of the head of an office or department, they should be deducted from the total and the balance used to pay the legal and necessary obligations of the office as they arise until the appropriation is exhausted.

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Related

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238 P.2d 111 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
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Bluebook (online)
38 P.2d 315, 44 Ariz. 418, 1934 Ariz. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiggins-v-kerby-ariz-1934.