Winebrenner v. Salmon

142 A. 723, 155 Md. 563, 1928 Md. LEXIS 148
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 16, 1928
Docket[No. 51, April Term, 1928.]
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 142 A. 723 (Winebrenner v. Salmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winebrenner v. Salmon, 142 A. 723, 155 Md. 563, 1928 Md. LEXIS 148 (Md. 1928).

Opinion

*565 Adkiks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By Article 16 of the Constitution of Maryland, known as “The Referendum,” the people reserved to themselves power by petition to have submitted to the registered voters of tho state, to approve or reject at the polls, any act or part of any act of the General Assembly, if approved by the Governor, or, if passed by the General Assembly over the veto of the Governor. The method of accomplishing this is by a petition signed by the designated number of votes, or percentage (depending upon whether the act to be submitted is a general or a local law), the petition to be filed before the first day of June following the passage of the act. The time fox filing may under certain conditions he extended to the thirtieth day of June.

Certain measures, however, are excepted from the referendum, it being provided, among other exceptions, that:

“No law making any appropriation for maintaining the state government, or for maintaining or aiding any public institution, not exceeding the next previous appropriation for the same purpose, shall be subject to rejection or repeal under this section. The increase in any such appropriation for maintaining or aiding any public institution shall only take effect as in the case of other laws, and such increase or any part thereof specified in the petition, may be referred to a vote of the people upon petition.”

At its January session in the year 1921, the General Assembly of Maryland enacted chapter 118 of the Acts of said session, which was approved by the Governor March 23rd, 1927. It was designated as an emergency law. It was entitled:

“An act to add lour new sections to article 56 of the Annotated Code of Maryland, Edition of 1924, title ‘License/ sub-title ‘Gasoline Tax/ said new sections to follow section 212 of said article, and to be known as sections 212-B, 212-0, 212-D and 212-E, to provide for the imposition, the disposition of the proceeds for the construction of lateral roads and to Baltimore City and the partial refund in certain cases of an addi *566 tional license tax of one and one-half cents per gallon, in respect of motor vehicle fuels.”

The act provided for an increase, after April 1st, 1927, of the license tax; in respect of motor vehicle fuels of one and one-half cents per gallon; that the State Treasurer should create a special fund of the receipts from said additional tax (to be designated as the “lateral road gasoline tax fund”) and to disburse the same monthly (less such sum to be retained by the Comptroller as, in his judgment, should be sufficient to enable him to pay promptly all claims for refunds), oneffifth (less refund exemptions provided for) to the State Roads Commission for the construction and maintenance of the streets and highways of Baltimore City, and the balance to the State Roads Commission to be used in the construction of lateral roads; that from and after October 1st, 1927, the entire cost of the construction of lateral roads built by the State Roads Commission should be paid by the State out of the revenue derived from the additional tax imposed by the act, and that the counties in which such roads were respectively located should be relieved of their obligation, under the provisions of any existing law, of providing funds to defray oneffialf of the cost of construction of such roads; that such county’s proportionate part of the revenue derived from such additional tax should be determined by using the same ratio which the public road mileage of that county bears to the entire public road mileage in the counties of the state; that the commission be authorized and directed to ask for bids and make contracts for the construction of such lateral roads as it and the county commissioners might from time to time determine to construct, said contracts to1 be made in the name of the State Roads Commission and to contain and be subject to the same provisions required by existing law for contracts for the construction of public roads; that the term “lateral road” should include1 bridges. The act provides for refunding the cost per gallon to persons who use motor vehicles for commercial purposes solely within the limits of incorporated cities or towns.

*567 On. May 31st, 1927, appellees, taxpayers and severally residing in Baltimore City and in certain counties of the state, filed a petition in due form and with the required number of signatures with appellant, the Secretary of State, for a referendum upon said act, and requested and directed him to place the question involved in said petition upon the official ballot to be voted at the next general election. Appellant, on being advised by the Attorney General of Maryland that the act was not within the class of laws referable to the people, notified counsel who presented the petition that he would not place said act on the ballot. On March 21st, 1928, appellees filed a petition for mandamus in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County. This appeal is from the order of said court that the mandamus issue as prayed.

Appellees contend that chapter 118 of the Acts of 1927 is not within the exception above mentioned because: 1. It is not an appropriation act. 2. If an appropriation act, the appropriation is not for maintaining'1 the State government. 3. If an appropriation for maintaining or aiding a public institution, it is dearly referable-, “because the whole tax laid by the act is an additional tax and, therefore, a tax exceeding the- next previous tax appropriation for the same purpose.”

Our conclusion is:

(1) That it is an appropriation act. Indeed, except that it was passed before the- Legislature had disposed of the budget bill, it fulfills iu itself all the requirements, of a supplemental appropriation act authorized by the- budget amendment. Whether the requirement as to the time of consideration of such supplemental appropriation bill is mandatory or directory only, we shall not stop to consider. Assuming that it is not sufficient in itself to authorize the withdrawal from the treasury of the State of the money collected under its provisions, it was at least a direction to the Governor to mako the disbursement in the budget to be prepared by him; and the Governor accepted it as such. That act and the budget act are in pan materia, and must be- construed together as though they constituted one act. State v. Howell, 106 Wash. *568 542; Sales v. Barber Asphalt Paving Co., 166 Mo. 671; Town of Highgate v. State, 59 Vt. 39; People v. Chicago & Northwestern R. R. Co., 249 Ill. 170; People v. Brooks, 16 Cal. 11.

(2) That the appropriation was for maintaining the State government. In construing the referendum amendment with reference to this exception, it is -important to consider the underlying idea in the mind of the Legislature in making the exception. Beall v. State, 121 Md. 669. It is apparent that the purpose was to provide against the possibility of the government being embarrassed in the performance of its various functions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 A. 723, 155 Md. 563, 1928 Md. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winebrenner-v-salmon-md-1928.