Pederson v. Patterson

In Banc. This suit, prosecuted to determine the validity of Chapter 322, General Laws of Oregon, 1927, was submitted with the case ofEastern Western Lumber Co. et al. v. Patterson et al., post, p. 112 (258 P. 193). For a full statement of the facts and the law, see that case. AFFIRMED. The plaintiff in the instant case is an injured employee, subject to the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Law of the State of Oregon. He avers that the statute in question violates the Constitution of Oregon in a number of particulars, and especially in that it is in conflict with that part of Article XI, Section 7, reading:

"The Legislative Assembly shall not * * in any manner create any debt or liabilities which shall singly or in the aggregate with previous debts or liabilities exceed the sum of $50,000. * *"

A legislative enactment directing the violation of a mandate of the Constitution is void. The statute in question provides for the investment in an office building for this state of the industrial accident fund created under the provisions of the Workmen's Compensation Law. It provides for the payment of a specified rate of interest on such funds, and appropriates $60,000 per annum from the general fund of the state for the repayment to the industrial accident fund of the principal and interest.

That the several state departments representing various state activities should be housed in an office building, the property of the state, is a popular idea. With the wisdom or the expediency of the idea, we have no controversy. But the validity of the act has been challenged as being opposed to the fundamental law. Our single duty, then, is to determine the sufficiency *Page 108 of the ground of challenge. We have seen that the act provides for the investment of not more than $600,000, belonging to the state industrial accident fund. We have seen that it further provides for the appropriation, from the general fund of the state, of $60,000 annually, for the next 13 1/2 years, for the purpose of repaying the sums of money thus diverted from the industrial accident fund. Under this state of facts, we are asked to say that this act creates neither a debt nor a liability in excess of $50,000. The phrase "debt or liability" will have to take on a new and elastic meaning before we can follow such optimistic reasoning.

Neither does the subsequent enactment of Chapter 383, General Laws of Oregon, 1927, providing for the rental of the building, validate the act assailed. This is so for a number of reasons. First of all, the enactment directing the construction of the office building from borrowed funds is unconstitutional. An unconstitutional act is not law. In the case of Norton v.Shelby County, 118 U.S. 425 (30 L. Ed. 178,6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 1121), Mr. Justice FIELD, speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States, made the following concise summation of the term "unconstitutional act":

"It confers no rights; it imposes no duties; it affords no protection; it creates no office; it is, in legal contemplation, as inoperative as though it had never been passed."

In this connection, note the following from 1 Cooley's Constitutional Limitations (8 ed.), page 382:

"When a statute is adjudged to be unconstitutional, it is as if it had never been. Rights cannot be built up under it; contracts which depend upon it for *Page 109 their consideration are void; it constitutes a protection to no one who has acted under it, and no one can be punished for having refused obedience to it before the decision was made."

To the same effect, see 6 R.C.L. (Constitutional Law), page 117.

Concerning the validation of unconstitutional statutes, 6 R.C.L., page 120, lays down the following:

"While it has been broadly stated that an unconstitutional act cannot be validated by the legislature, it seems that it may be amended into a constitutional one so far as its future operation is concerned, by removing its objectionable provisions, or supplying others, to conform it to the requirements of the constitution. The distinction seems to be that, where a statute is invalid by reason of an absence of power in the legislature, in the first instance, under the constitution, to enact the law, it is not possible for that body to confirm or render the same valid by amendment; but where the obnoxious features of the statute may be removed or essential ones supplied by a proper amendment, so that had the law been primarily thus framed it would have been free from the objections existing against it, then the statute may be rendered valid by amendment, so far as its future operation may extend."

The provisions of Chapter 383 do not pretend to re-enact the statute in question. Hence that statute was not validated by the enactment of Chapter 383.

The statute involved in this litigation was "smitten by the Constitution at its birth." A judicial decision is only for the purpose of declaring a pre-existing fact: Boales v. Ferguson,55 Neb. 568 (76 N.W. 18). After a careful and deliberate examination of the act, and believing beyond a reasonable doubt that the statute assailed creates a debt in excess of the limitation *Page 110 placed by the Constitution, it becomes our solemn duty to hold it invalid.

This case should be affirmed. It is so ordered.

AFFIRMED.

BURNETT, C.J., and RAND and BEAN, JJ., concur.