People ex rel. Scearce v. County of Glenn
People ex rel. Scearce v. County of Glenn
Opinion of the Court
On March 11, 1891, an act of the legislature was approved, entitled “An act to create the county of Glenn, to establish the boundaries thereof, and to provide for its organization” (Stats, of 1891, p. 96); and defendant claims that in pursuance of the
The only point presented by appellants at the oral argument, and the main one made in their brief, is that said act providing for the creation of Glenn county was not, before its passage by the state senate, “ read on three several days” in that branch of the legislature, in accordance with the provision of section 15 of article IV of the state constitution; that such provision was not dispensed with by a two-thirds vote of the senate, as may be done under that section; and that, therefore, said act is unconstitutional and void.
The complaint avers that said act—which had been regularly passed in the assembly, and was designated as Assembly Bill No. 185—was not read on three several days before its passage in that body. But the complaint also shows that before its passage in the senate, a resolution was there adopted by a two-thirds vote, by which it was resolved that said act—Assembly Bill No. 185—and also a number of other bills, “ present cases of urgency as that term is used in section 15 of article IV of the constitution, and the provision of that section requiring that the bills shall be read on three several days in each house is hereby dispensed with, and it is ordered,” etc.
The case of Bloom v. Xenia, 32 Ohio St. 461, cited and relied on by appellants, is not authority for them, but is authority against them. The case involved the validity of an ordinance of a municipal corporation; and the facts -were that the rules were suspended generally, without special mention of the ordinance in question, and then, after a certain other ordinance had been passed, the ordinance in question was passed without any further suspension of the rules. But the court elaborately shows the distinction "between a municipal corporation with granted and limited powers and the legislature of a state with powers unlimited except by prohibition of the constitution. The court say: “ The efforts of courts are to sustain acts of the legislature; they will not be declared unconstitional unless clearly so.....By the terms of the organic law, the legislative power of the state is declared to be'vested in the
There are other points made by appellants in their brief which we do not deem necessary to be largely discussed. They are in great part answered by the decision of this court in People v. McFadden, 81 Cal. 489, 15 Am. St. Rep. 66, which involved the validity of the act creating the county of Orange. It must be remembered that, as held in the case just cited, an act creating and providing for the original organization of a new county is not within the prohibitions of the constitution against special and local legislation; and this consideration parries most of the additional thrusts made in the brief at the validity of the Glenn County Act. Many of the provisions of an act creating a new county are intended to be only preliminary and temporary, and are necessary to put the new political subdivision on its feet, so that at the expiration of time limited for the existence of the temporary expedients, the county may, in due course, take its place under the general law for the government of organized counties. And, as there is no limitation upon the means which may be employed for this preliminary organization of a county, it is. not fatal to the Glenn County Bill that it does not itself provide for the division of the proposed county into supervisor districts, but allows five supervisors to be, in the first instance, elected at large, who have power under the general law to divide the county into districts. Neither do we see anything in the objection to the manner in which the election, at which the voters of the proposed new county expressed their will, was held. It was held in accord
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
De Haven, J., and Fitzgerald, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE PEOPLE ex rel. SCEARCE v. COUNTY OF GLENN
- Cited By
- 14 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Constitutional Law—Passage op Statutes—Third Reading—Dispensing Resolution.—Under section 15 of article IV of the state constitution, providing that no bill shall “become a law unless the same be read on three separate days in each house, unless, in case of urgency, two-thirds of the house where such bill may be pending shall, by a vote of yeas or nays, dispense with this provision,” a dispensing resolution adopted by a two-thirds vote of the senate, declaring that a number of specified bills “present cases of urgency”; and that the provision of the constitution “requiring that the bill be read on three separate days in each house is hereby dispensed with,” is not objectionable upon the ground that it includes other bills as well as the one brought in question. Id.—Extent oe Legislative Power.—The constitution does not expressly or impliedly prohibit the senate from exercising its dispensing power with respect to two or more bills by one declaration of its purpose; and the legislature may exercise all legislative power not prohibited to it by the constitution. Id.-—Consistency of Votes of Senators.—The fact that several of the senators who voted to declare a bill a case of urgency afterwards voted against the bill on its final passage is immaterial, and cannot be considered as indicating that such senators may have voted in the first instance through improper motives. Id.—Motives of Legislators.—The motives which induce legislative action are not a subject of judicial inquiry, and the legislative act cannot be declared unconstitutional because, in the opinion of a court, it was or might have been the result of improper considerations. Id.—Act Creating New County—Special Legislation.—An act creating and providing for the organization of a new county is not within the prohibition of the constitution against special and local legislation; and there is no limitation upon the means which may be employed for its preliminary organization. Id.—Creation of Supervisor Districts.—It is not fatal to an act creating a new county, that it does not itself provide for the division of the proposed county into supervisor districts, but allows five supervisors to be, in the first instance, elected at large, who have power under the general law to divide the counties into districts. Id.—Special Law Regulating Elections.—Under subdivision 11 of section 25 of article IV of the constitution there may be a special law for holding and conducting an election “on the organization of new counties.” Id.—Fraud at Election—Pleading.—Attempted allegations of fraud at such an election, which state no facts sufficient to constitute such fraud, are only of conclusions of law, and a special demurrer to such allegations is properly sustained.