(after stating the facts.) The principal question in this case arises from the contention of the appellee, and the decision of the chancellor, that the statute digested as sections 1842 and 1843, and commonly known as the “Anti-Prize-Fighting Baw,” is invalid. The argument by which it has been sought to be shown to be invalid is this: The original act entitled “An act to punish and prevent prize fighting in Arkansas” approved March 31, 1891, was invalid as to its second section ; and that renders the corresponding section of the act of April 13, 1893, also invalid, the latter being but an amendment of the former; and, if the former be invalid, the latter cannot be valid, since there was nothing to amend to, when the amendment was made in 1893.
The history of the act may be briefly stated as follows : During the session of the general assembly in 1891, a bill was introduced and passed in the senate, entitled a bill for an “Act to punish and prevent prizefighting in the state of Arkansas.” It contained but two sections, — one, the declaratory section', denouncing prize-fighting with or .without gloves as an offense; and the other simply fixing the grade of the crime as a felony, and the punishment accordingly. The bill thus went to the house of representatives, and was there regularly amended and passed, the yeas and nays being called and entered in the journal as amended, and returned in that shape to the senate. The amendments by the house were three in number. Only one of them (the second) it is necessary to notice particularly. The second amendment changed the grade of the offense, as fixed in the original bill, so as to make it a misdemeanor, instead of a felony, and fixed the punishment accordingly different, that is, by fine and imprisonment in the county jail. When the senate received back for its consideration the bill as amended, it declined to concur in any of the three amendments adopted by the house, and requested the appointment of a committee of conference, appointing and naming at the same time its members of such committee, and the matter was then referred again to the house, which acceded to the request of the senate, and named the members of the conference committee to act on its part; and so the matter was by both houses referred to this conference committee, which some time afterwards reported to the two houses unanimously recommending that the senate adopt amendments numbers 1 and 3 of the house, and that the house recede from number 2. This report was received and adopted in the house, and presumably in the senate, as no question is raised as to its disposition there.
The constitutional provision which, it is contended by the petitioner, was not observed in the recession of the house from its amendment number 2, is section 22, article 5 of the constitution, and is as follows, to-wit: “Every bill shall be read at length, on three different days, in each house, unless the rules be suspended by two-thirds of the house, when the same may be read a second or third time on the same day; and no bill shall become a law unless, on its final passage, the vote be taken by yeas and nays ; the names of the persons voting for and against the same be entered on the journal; and a majority of each house be recorded thereon as voting in its favor.” The only objection seriously made to this procedure is that, in its recession from the second amendment, the house did not vote by yeas and nays, as required to be done on the final passage of every bill.
Adhering to the doctrine laid down by this court, notably in Vinsant v. Knox, 27 Ark. 279 and Smithee, v. Garth, 33 Ark. 17, we hold that the provision of the constitution referred to is mandatory, and we would emphasize the doctrine with all the force that language can give. This, as we understand it, is all that the petitioner contends for, and all that the chancellor found necessary for a basis for his opinion.
, But, while the provision is thus mandatory, it must be confined in its application to cases and.phases of cases plainly .within the scope of its meaning. It is not expected, nor desired, that a constitution should enter into details, or to provide for every contingency and exigency that may arise in the course and progress of legislation. A fundamental law must, of necessity, be more or less a general law, and, in construing any of its provisions, we are never to lose sight of the manifest object of the same, whether that be in the shape of a permission or prohibition. Although learned jurists, authors, statesmen, politicians and courts have attributed to like provisions almost countless objects, yet the common meaning of it is that it is a precaution against mistake in the number of votes for and against the bill, and, secondarily, that it places a personal responsibility on each voter in the body, so that his constituency may know how he voted on the particular measure.
If, in the details of legislation, it becomes impossible, or even inconvenient, to rigidly adhere to the letter, and yet accomplish the desired end, by acting in the spirit of the constitution, the latter is preferable, because, while the letter killeth, the spirit maketh alive.
Narrowed down, the question is, is the disposition of amendments, either by vote of adoption, rejection or recession, a voting on the final passage of the bill? And, to reduce it down to the last analysis, is the vote on the appointment of a conference committee, or on the adoption of its report, a vote on the final passage of the bill? The more important of these two votes is the one agreeing to the appointment of the committee, for a conference committee is a sort of legalized arbitrator to whom is committed the function of settling differences between the two houses, each house, by its vote appointing the committee, agreeing that the legislation forming the ■subject-matter of the bill is of more importance than adherence to any differences ; and, when this committee ■can agree and recommend a course of action, it is practically adopted as a matter of course. There is no •question as to the majority vote, nor as to how anyone may have voted, for all are voting now on the propriety •of yielding something, rather than needful legislation ■should fail. These instances of voting are generally held as not . coming within the constitutional provision on the subject of voting on the final passage of bills.
To illustrate this point, we will take the case of Hull v. Miller, 4 Neb. 503, referred to by counsel, wherein a similar constitutional provision was construed. The supreme court of Nebraska in that case said :■ “It is disclosed that the bill for the act in question originated in the senate, where it was passed by the constitutional majority, the yeas and nays being duly •called, and entered on the journal. In the house, the bill was amended, and then duly passed. Upon its return to the senate, all that the journal discloses with respect to it is that the amendments of the house were adopted, but by what majority, or in what manner the vote was taken, the journal of the senate is silent. It is contended by counsel for the plaintiff in error, that the constitution requires the observance of the same formality in the vote by which the amendments of the house were concurred in, as was required on the final passage of the bill before it left the senate, and that the journal of that body should show an observance of this requirement. As to the final passage of the bill, in either house, the position of counsel is clearly correct. Section 11, article 2, of the constitution of 1867, declares that ‘On the passage of every bill in either house, the vote shall be taken by yeas and nays, and entered on the journal; and no law shall be passed in either house without the concurrence of a majority of all the members elected thereto.’ This provision is most clearly mandatory, and its non-observance in the passage of any bill would render the act absolutely void.” * * * But it will be observed that the provision of the constitution above quoted refers only to the vote on the passage of bills. There are numerous other votes necessary during the progress of a bill to its third reading, to which it has no sort of reference whatever. These are left to the control of the house, under its usual parliamentary rules.” The law was sustained, notwithstanding .the concurrence of the senate in the house amendments did not appear to have been obtained by a yea and nay vote.
To the same effect is the decision of McCulloch v. State, 11 Ind. 424, where the precise question was under consideration.
In the case of People v. Supervisors, 8 N. Y. 317, also cited in argument, the identical question presented in the case at bar was under consideration in the court of appeals of New York. The constitution of that state, adopted in 1846, and under which the case arose, contained this provision : “No bill shall be passed unless by the assent of a majority of all the members to each branch of the legislature, and the question upon the final passage shall be taken immediately upon its last reading, and the ayes and nays entered on the journal.” That case is thus stated and disposed of by that court: “On looking into the senate journal of 1851, it appears that the bill in question originated in that body, and that on its final passage the yeas and nays were taken and entered in the journal, and were 21 to % The assembly (the house) returned the bill to the senate with divers amendments. The senate had these amendments under consideration, and proposed certain amendments thereto, and then agreed to the amendments as amended by a vote of 23 to 1, the yeas and nays being taken and entered in the journal. The amendments thus amended were returned by the senate to the house. The latter body non-concurred in the amendments of the senate, and a joint committee of conference ■ was appointed, which recommended that the senate should recede from two of its amendments, and that the house should adopt the residue. This was agreed to by the house by a unanimous vote, eighty-sis voting by yeas and nays, which are entered in their journal. The senate receded from the two amendments as recommended by the joint committee, without a vote by yeas and nays, and without entering the names of those, voting in the journal. The omission to call the yeas and nays, on receding from these amendments, and recording the names of those voting, is the only fact objected to as a departure from the constitution.
“I think the requirement of the constitution was fully satisfied by the senate on the final passage of the bill before it was sent to the house, and on the final passage of the amendments. The course and practice of the legislature did not require that the whole bill should be again read on receding from the two amendments recommended to be abandoned by the joint committee of conference. There is nothing in the constitution which requires the yeas and nays to be taken in receding from an amendment which the senate had once adopted by the required vote and in the prescribed form. "In point of fact, every part of the law as it stands has received the requisite majority in both houses, the yeas and nays in both were taken on its-final passage and entered on the journal. The law, therefore, was passed without violating any of the forms of the constitution.
“Again ; the provision of the constitution requiring the question upon final passage of a bill to be taken immediately upon its last reading, and the yeas and nays to be entered on the journal, is only directory to the legislature.”
This last statement, it is contended by counsel for the petitioner, destroys the force of the decision as an authority with us, as we hold the provision to be mandatory, and not directory merely. This contention of counsel is, however, not well founded, for it will be observed that the argument preceding is to the effect that the constitutional provision was not violated, but that all its required formalities were observed, and, besides, the word “again,” as an introductory word in the statement, simply means that, even if what has already been said' be not sound and conclusive, the act is good anyway, since the constitutional provision is only directory.
As to the application of the strict mandatory rule regulating the method of voting on the final passage of bills to the methods of dealing with amendments, this court has spoken in no uncertain language.
The case of Chicot County v. Davies, 40 Ark. 200, presented this state of facts : An original bill, in the house, for an act to authorize county subscriptions for stock in railroads provided that the county court, upon application of the president and directors of the company, and one hundred of the voters of the county, should submit the question to a popular vote. The house journal showed that the bill was amended in that body by substituting the word “or” for “and,” so as to authorize the county court to'submit the question on the application of either the said company officers, or of the one hundred voters. The bill passed the house as amended, and was transmitted to the senate, and there passed, and sent to the governor, and by him approved. The enrolled bill, so approved by the governor, however, contained the word .“and,” as did the original bill, instead of the word “or,” as did the bill when amended by the house and sent to the senate. Then arose the contention that the bill enrolled and signed by the governor was not the same bill passed by the house and senate. Certainly it it was not the same as was passed by the house, for the change made by the substitution of “and” for “or” was-a marked and radical one. There was no affirmative showing in the journal of the senate that the' change had been made by a yea and nay vote, nor in fact was there any showing whatever as to the manner in which the change was made. This court, in effect, held that the strict mandatory rule did not apply to such a case, saying: “Now the constitution of 1868 (the same as the present constitution as to this subject) did not require amendments to bill to be entered on the journal; consequently, in order to uphold the act, we will presume that the house receded from its amendment substituting “or” for “and.” Citing Blessing v. Galveston, 42 Tex. 641; Miller v. State, 3 Ohio St. 475; McCulloch v. Stale, 11 Ind. 424; Supervisors v. People, 25 Ill. 182; Commissioners v. Higginbotham, 17 Kas. 62. In that case there was an entire absence of recitals in the journal as to any vote being taken upon the recession by the house. In the case at bar there is a recital, in effect, that the vote on the recession was had, but a failure to state how, although inferentially we conclude that it was taken in the usual method of adopting agreements made by conference committees. This makes little difference, for the contention is that the journal should affirmatively show a vote by yeas and nays, and the names of those voting for and against to be entered in the journal. This showing was not made. The court’s ruling was that it was not necessary, for it might be presumed that the house did not really recede from its amendment. The principle of that case is not materially different from the one involved in this case, so far as we are able to see.
Section 12, article 5 of the constitution provides that “ each house shall have the power to determine the rules of its proceedings.” Now, just at what point the strict mandatory rule of section 22, same article, may cease to be applicable in any given case, for reasons of systematic and convenient procedure, and at what point the parliamentary rules each house is empowered to make, by constitutional provision, may begin to be applied, is often a question of much difficulty of solution; and something doubtless may be properly left to the wisdom and sound discretion of the law-making department, to determine such a question as it may arise in each case. We are favored with no proof on the subject, but according to common knowledge and the authorities, these parliamentary rules seem to have much to do with the procedure through committees.
After all, the proposition before us is not that there is doubt as to the validity of the section of the statute thus called in question, but rather that the same is void beyond a reasonable doubt, for we are now proceeding under thé familiar, yet none the less rigid and inflexible, rule that all doubts must be resolved in favor of the legislative action. Entertaining the views above expressed, we are unwilling to say the section is invalid.
validity of amendatory act
There is another theory upon which the validity of J L J the statute should be maintained. The first or deciaratory section of the original act of 1891 was admitted to be valid. Admitting, then, for the sake of argument, that the second section, or the section grading the offence and fixing the punishment, was void as contended, the question arises, how does that affect the whole act of 1893 ?
The declaratory part of the original act, or that part denouncing certain acts as a crime, truly expresses the legislative will in so far. Now, in anticipation(that, peradventure, at some time some bill might be passed, in which by oversight, neglect or ignorance, no punishment was fixed for the crime, the legislature at the outset enacted that, when just such a state of things should at any time exist, then rather than that legislation should fail altogether of its purpose, the punishment should be as at common law, with certain limitations. See sections 601, 2293 and 2294 of the digest. Thus the act was a valid law on the statute books, with declaratory part undisputed, and punitive or enforcing part derived from the general statutes, and thus remained until amended in 1893.
When the legislature in 1893 undertook to amend the prize-fighting law, it evidently regarded the act of 1891 as valid in its entirety, and therefore denominated the amendment made then as an amendment of the second section, the one now called in question. This amendment, it is contended, is void for- the reason that, the original section being void, there was therefore nothing to amend to. Such is a rule applicable to pleadings in court, but by what authority we are compelled to apply it to the law-making department in enacting laws we are not advised. ‘The rule for the guidance of the courts is to ascertain the intention of the legislature, and not the mistakes of the legislature, either of law or fact. Now, the manifest intention of the legislature was to change the law as it appeared on the statute books by simply making prize-fighting a misdemeanor, instead of a felony, and to change the punishment for a violation of the law accordingly. The amendment, which in fact is a substitution for the original second section, and not an amendment, properly speaking, was properly passed, with all proper reference to the whole act, as matter of identification.
Again, if it be true that the original second section was void, and the rule that an amendment of a void thing is also void should be considered as in any way affecting the legislative action, that still does not extend so far as to make void the amendment. By reference to the amendatory act of 1893, which is now the law on the subject, we see that it is entitled “An act to amend section 2 of ‘An act to punish and prevent prizefighting in the state of Arkansas,’ approved March 31st, 1891.” If the title had been to amend the act of 1891, instead of the second section, there would have been no objection to the act as amended. We are thus called upon to declare a law void, because, by mistake, neglect or ignorance, the legislature has identified and named its action by wrong • words and inappropriate language ; that it has done a vain thing. Sutherland on Statutory Construction, sec. 331.
The rule adopted by all the courts, so far as we know, is : “Any act which manifests a design that any particular provision shall be the law is a sufficient enactment.” Wood v. Wood, 54 Ark. 172; Postmaster General v. Early, 12 Wheaton, 136 ; fi}nd. Int. of Statutes, secs. 372-76; State v. Miller, 23 Wis. 634. And when the legislature has power to enact a law, and its intention is manifest, effect will be given to the intention, rather than to a mere failure of its language to express or describe what was intended.
We are of the opinion that the statutes in question are valid laws of the state, and, as the supposed invalidity of those statutes seem to have been the sole ground upon which the proceedings of the chancellor were had, the writ of habeas corpus is quashed, the proceedings thereunder annulled, and the respondent sheriff will proceed to execute his warrant, as the law directs and his duty may require.