Camron v. Weil
Camron v. Weil
Opinion of the Court
The petition alleges that there is in the State treasury a sum of money “ collected, received, and paid into the State treasury to the credit of certain funds designated in said act (the Act of April 23d, 1880, entitled ‘An Act to promote drainage ’) ; as, the ‘ State Drainage Construction Fund,’ and ‘ Construction Fund of Drainage District No. 1.’ ” Because—as claimed by petitioner—the Act of the Legislature is invalid, we are asked, by writ of mandate, to compel the State Treasurer forthwith to credit the sum aforesaid to the General Fund.
Section 454 of the Political Code provides: “ The General Fund consists of moneys received into the treasury, and not specially appropriated.” The money which the petitioner asks to have transferred to the General Fund was received by the Treasurer in his official capacity, and he is responsible for its safe keeping. He may refuse to pay any portion of it out upon a demand based upon a statute, good in form, but invalid because unconstitutional. But it by no means follows that because the Treasurer is not authorized to pay out moneys collected under an invalid statute, for the purposes mentioned in
If the “ act to promote drainage ” constituted part of the legislation of this State prior to the adoption of the Political Code, or had been enacted at the same time, it would seem very clear that § 454 of the Code did not require that the moneys collected under the drainage act should be placed to the credit of the General Fund. In the case supposed, § 454 w'ould be read as if it had declared—“ The General Fund consists of moneys received into the treasury, and not specially appropriated by the act ‘ to promote drainage,’ ” etc. In arriving at the intention of the Legislature sought to be expressed in the section, the circumstance that the drainage act was unconstitutional would not, in such case, be material. The purpose of the Legislature to exclude from the General Fund the moneys collected under the drainage act would be equally apparent, whether the latter act was or was not a constitutional or valid statute. The drainage act, so called, was not passed until after the Political Code, but § 454 evidently contemplates the exclusion from the General Fund of moneys specially appropriated by subsequent acts of°the Legislature. The Legislature, by formal act, did specially appropriate the moneys collected under the “ act to promote drainage. ” The drainage-act may be invalid, but this does not change the intention expressed in § 454 of the Political Code, which is to include in the General Fund only the moneys which may not be specially appropriated by the declaration of the Legislature. If the drainage act is void, the moneys collected under it must remain in the treasury until appropriated by an act of the Legislature requiring that they be returned to the tax payers, or otherwise appropriating them. It may be admitted that the Legislature has the power to appropriate to the payment of the general expenditures of the Government moneys collected and attempted to be appropriated under a statute absolutely void, and yet every principle of sound construction requires of us to hold that such was not the intention of the legislative body, unless the language employed clearly demands that such intention be imputed. In our opinion, the language of § 454 does not make necessary a construction such as must presuppose a certain
Writ denied, and proceeding dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W. W. CAMRON v. JOHN WEIL
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- General Fund—Special Appropriation—Drainage Act—Treasurer of State—Construction of Statute.—Money received by the State Treasurer, although collected and specially appropriated under an invalid act, should not be paid into the General Fund. Accordingly, application refused for mandamus to compel the State Treasurer to pay into the General Fund money collected under the drainage act.