delivered the following dissenting opinion:
On the 9th of February, 1892, and during the present legislative session, a bill was introduced in the Senate, ■entitled “A bill to provide for the collection and exhibition of the resources and evidences of the progress of the State of Kentucky at the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893.” The bill contained an appropriation of one hundred thousand dollars for that purpose, and placed that sum under the control of a Board of *556Managers, who were required to execute a bond for the-faithful discharge of their duties, and to draw the money from the Treasury of the State upon the warrant of the Auditor on proper vouchers, first approved by the Governor, &c. The bill passed the Senate in the manner required by the Constitution, and that fact having been announced to the House, that body considered and passed the bill in like manner, with an amendment, and then returned the bill to the Senate where it originated, when that body suspended the rules and concurred in • the amendment, but on the amendment no vote was taken by a call of the yeas and nays, and, in so far as appears from the Senate journal, without a majority voting for the bill as amended. The fortieth section of the Constitution pi’ovides: “Each House of the General Assembly shall keep and publish daily a journal of its proceedings, and the yeas and nays of the members on any questioxx shall, at the desire of any two of the members elected, be entered on the journal.” The forty-sixth section provides: “ No bill shall be considered for final passage unless the same has been reported by a committee and printed for the use of the members. Every bill shall be read at length on three different days in each Hoxxse; but the second and third readings may be dispensed with by a majority of all the members elected to the House in which the bill is pending. But whexxever a committee refuses or fails to report a bill submitted to it in a reasonable time, the same may be called up by any member, and be considered in the same manner it would have been considered if it had been reported. No bill shall become a law unless, on its final passage, it receives the votes of at least two-fifths of the members elected to *557•each House, and a majority of the members voting, the vote to be taken by yeas and nays and entered in the journal: Provided, Any act or resolution for the appropriation of money or the creation of debt shall, on its final passage, receive the votes of a majority of all the members elected to each House.” It appears, therefore, that the bill, as it originated in the Senate, was passed by the constitutional vote and in the manner prescribed by the Constitution; and when sent to the House the bill, as amended, passed that body as required by the Constitution, but on its return to the Senate, as amended, there was no "call of the yeas and nays by that body, but a concurrence only in the amendment, and what the vote was does not appear. Section 56 of the Constitution provides: “No bill shall become a law until the same •shall have been signed by the presiding officer of each of the two Houses in open session; and before such officer shall have affixed his signature to any bill, he shall suspend all other business, declare that such bill will now be read, and that he will sign the same to the end that it may become a law. The bill shall then be read at length and compared; and, if correctly enrolled, he shall, in the presence of the House, in open session, and before any other business is entertained, affix his signature, which fact shall be noted in the journal, and the bill immediately sent to. the other House. "When it reaches the other House, the presiding officer thereof shall immediately suspend all other business, announce the reception of the bill, and the same proceeding shall thereupon be observed in every respect as in the House in which it was first signed. And thereupon the clerk of the latter House shall immediately present the same to the G-over-*558nor for Ms signature and approval.” The Governor, on the presentation of a bill to Mm, after it has received the signature of each Speaker, either approves the bill or returns it, with his objections, to the House in which it originated, or if he fails to return the bill within ten days (Sundays excepted) it becomes a law, unless a legislative adjournment prevents it, and in that event he must disapprove it within ten days after the adjournment by having his veto spread upon the register kept by the-Secretary of State. The bill in question was approved by the Governor and has been deposited in the archives, of State as the enrolled bill and as the law of the land. I have been thus careful in setting forth these various provisions of the Constitution, as from them originates this litigation between the Auditor and the Board of Managers of this fund appropriated. It is insisted by the one side that by section 46 of the Constitution just quoted, the final passage of a hill means the vote on the-bill after it has been perfected by amendments or otherwise and in a condition to become a law; that is, final passage means the last vote on the hill. On the other hand it is maintained that when a bill has passed either House by a two-fifths vote, or by a majority vote of all the members when money is appropriated, it must be regarded as the final passage of the bill; that is, there can only be one passage of a bill, and that is its final passage, and subsequent amendments, whether formal or substantial, can be adopted by the vote of a majority of a quorum.
The board by its president, H. ~W. Dulaney, in accordance with the provisions of the- bill, presented to the Auditor his vouchers properly approved by the Governor, and demanded a part of the sum appropriated to defray *559expenditures connected with Kentucky’s exhibit at the World’s Pair, and the Auditor refused payment on the ground that the bill was unconstitutional for two reasons : First, The bill having been amended by the House, a mere concurrence in the amendment by the Senate, without a call of the yeas and nays, showing that a majority of the Senate voted for the bill as amended, is in violation of section 46 of. the Constitution. Second, The Legislature had no power, even by a majority vote, to make such an appropriation. The Auditor having challenged in this manner the validity of the bill, the Board of Managers instituted these proceedings in the Franklin Circuit Court for a mandamus requiring him to issue his warrant on the Treasury for the sums specified in the vouchers presented to him. The answer filed by the Auditor sets forth in detail the legislative proceedings as to the manner in which the bill was passed; that the journal of the Senate fails to show the yea and nay vote on the bill as amended by the House, or that a majority of the Senators voted for the bill as amended. A demurrer was sustained to the answer, and the case comes to this court with the admission made by the demurrer, and also, as a matter of fact, that the journals will show that no vote was taken in the Senate by a call of the yeas and nays, on the bill as amended by the House, and nothing on the face of the Senate Journal showing that a majority of the Senate voted for the amendment. It was argued that the Auditor, being a ministerial officer, could not raise the constitutional question as to the manner in which the act passed. It is true that he nor his bondsmen would have been liable if payment had been made, and the act held, as it has been, unconstitutional, but I think it *560equally clear, under numerous decisions of this court, that it is not only his right but his duty to contest every claim ■in regard to which he is required to draw his warrant on -the Treasury when, in his opinion, it is not properly verified, or has not been allowed or appropriated according .to law. He is the trustee of the State’s funds, and to .such an extent that not one cent can be drawn from the Treasury without his warrant; and his persistency in -refusing to pay this claim not only attests his fidelity and efficiency as an official, but his defense, in which he is •sustained by my associates, has saved to the State an expenditure from the Treasury, under a void constitutional enactment,, of the sum of one hundred thousand -dollars.
I do not believe his defense in response to the petition for a mandamus is available, and shall proceed to give my reasons for dissenting from the principal opinion. I .shall assume without any discussion, as the entire questions have been considered in consultation, that the Legislature had the power under the Constitution to pass the hill, and the only objection to its validity as a law is, that the bill was not passed in the manner provided by the Con•stitution. It is contended by my associates that the ■ demurrer, as well as the agreed facts, admit the bill was --not passed in conformity to the Constitution, and by this .admission the appellees have in some manner deprived ■themselves of the right to a mandamus. In other words, "that a party may come into court, and in a litigation involving the construction of constitutional provisions, by admitting that a bill was not read for the first time or that the yeas and nays were not called as provided by the •Constitution, he admits the unconstitutionality of the act, *561and will not be heard to say that the journals of either House showing that fact are no evidence as against the enrolled bill.
The appellees only admitted the truth, and if a denial had been made as to what the journals would show in that particular, it would have been false, for they do show that the yeas and nays were not called when the amendment in the House was concurred in by the Senate; therefore the question is, can the journals be introduced as evidence to contradict or to nullify the enrolled bill. It is plain that the constitutionality of an act can not be -determined by the admission of a party, and when brought in question where evidence is offered to show the act to be void the highest and best evidence must be adduced, and if the journal of the Senate is incompetent for that purpose, the admission that they are competent would not make them so. Mr. Justice Cooley says the court will not act upon the admission of parties that an act was not passed in accordance with the Constitution. Const. Limit. (6 ed.) page 163 (note). See also Legg v. Mayor of Annapolis, 42 Md., 203, for a discussion of this question.
If the issue had been made by a denial, the Auditor would have offered to introduce the journals, and upon the objection by the appellees as to the competency of the-testimony, the identical question would have been made that was raised by the demurrer. If the appellees had not filed a demurrer nor replied to the answer of the Auditor and submitted the case in that condition, the court would have been compelled to hold that the answer constituted no defense. The appellees have done nothing to waive their legal rights. They come into court with a *562clear legal right to demand, of the Auditor this money,, and it is the Auditor setting up a defense based upon incompetent testimony, which is- taken hold of by my associates as evidencing such an unconscientious claim as to justify them in denying a remedy for the enforcement of a clear legal right; and to do this they go back, not at the instance of the appellees, but at the instance of the Auditor, to see whether the journals establish the truth of the facts alleged by the defense — facts the appelleesadmit to exist, and admitting the truth in regard to a matter over which they had no control, and that is incompetent testimony for any purpose on this issue, they are denied a remedy to which they would have been entitled but for this incompetent testimony. This is based on the idea that the appellees have no interest in this controversy, and if this bo true they have no standing in court, and the case should be dismissed on that ground. I can see nothing in the argument sustaining this view, and it is at last a decision in effect that you may declare a law invalid by reason of the Legislature failing to pass a law in the manner required by the Constitution.- And the question arises, is the validity of the act to be determined by the enrolled bill, or by the journals of the Senate showing the manner of its passage ? It is contended on the one hand that where the journals show that the Constitution has not been complied with on the passage of a bill the bill is a nullity, and on the other it is argued that the manner of passing bills is exclusively within the province of the Legislature in the exercise of the power conferred by the Constitution, and that when a bill is authenticated in the manner provided by section 56 of the Constitution and promulgated as the law, it is conclusive *563evidence of its existence as a law, although the requirements of the Constitution as^to the manner of its passage may not have been complied with. It is not claimed that the.two Speakers can sign a bill either in or out of session and have it approved by the Governor, and thaiTthis makes it a law, although it may never have been introduced. To do this you must impute corruption and fraud to both Speakers and the executive, a case that would never arise, and too futile in its suggestions to deserve notice in an opinion. •
Shall the courts, when a bill has been signed by the Speaker of each House, and declared a law in the presence of the members of each body, approved by the Governor and filed in the archives of State as the law of the land, look to this enrolled bill as conclusive of the fact that the bill was properly passed, and leave the co-ordinate branch of the government, whose duty it is to pass laws, when acting within the scope of its power, responsible to its constituency for the manner of its exercise. The case of the Auditor v. Ilaycraft, 14 Bush, 284, is relied on by each party as sustaining the view they respectively present. The writer of this dissent wrote the opinion of the court in that case. The pleadings in that case raise no such question, and all the court said was, that. “ no inquiry will or can be instituted, as the ease is presented, for the purpose of ascertaining the manner in which the enactment was passed. There has been no pleading filed by the State or Auditor presenting any such issue, and we must, therefore, adjudge it was constitutionally enacted, and can not take judicial notice at the mere suggestion of counsel as to the votes cast for or against the measure on its final *564passage. •* * * If a bill of this character did not receive the vote of a majority of the members, the only mode of reaching the question is by an allegation of fact in an appropriate pleading, and the journals offered as evidence to sustain the defense.” This was not done in that case, nor the journals offered so as an objection might be made to them as evidence, and from a casual reading of the opinion it will be seen the question was not decided or discussed. The importance of this question can not be overestimated, and this court is now urged, for the first time in the judicial proceedings of the State by appropriate pleadings, to adjudge an act unconstitutional by reference to the legislative journals, when we have before us the enrolled bill authenticated as the constitution requires. If the validity of the bill was assailed for the want of power on the part of the Legislature to enact it, a judicial question would at once arise, and I would not feel that I was invading the domain of a co-ordinate branch of the government as supreme in its jurisdiction as the judiciary when determining the extent of legislative power. It is manifest that there is a marked distinction between determining a law to be in violation of the Constitution and in adjudging that it has not been passed in the mode required by that instrument.
In defining the powers of government the Constitution gives to the Legislature, the sole power to make the laws and to judge of their expediency, and upon the judicial department devolves the duty of interpreting those laws when made; and I can perceive but little necessity for a distribution of the powers of government if the judiciary can be called on to determine, in the *565first place, whether an act was passed in accordance with the mode prescribed by the Constitution, and then determine the power of the Legislature to enact the law. This bill has been promulgated by the Legislature with its validity as a law attested by the signature of the Speaker of each House and its approval by the Governor. It may be properly said that judicial opinions from able lawyers and courts as to the power of a court to go behind an enrolled bill, in order to determine the manner of its passage, are such as to cause a doubt as to any conclusion the judicial mind may render on the question; but when the cases decided are carefully analyzed, it will be found the decided weight of authority is, that an enrolled bill, attested as in this case in the manner provided by the Constitution, becomes a j)erfect law, and its validity can not be questioned, except on the ground the Legislature had no power to enact it. The cases opposed to this view are based, some of them, on the idea that certain provisions of their State constitutions are mandatory and others not, many of them following the earlier cases rendered by the Supreme Court of New York, that have been overruled, and the cases from the Supreme Court of Illinois, that by its recent utterances intimates strongly that the enrolled bill is the best evidence of what is the statute law of the State.
It is difficult to perceive why every provision of a Constitution is not mandatory and to be so applied, unless it is made directory in express terms, and if left open to judicial interpretation as ordinary legislative enactments, then the provision in question becomes either mandatory or directory as it may appear to the mind of the judge called upon to interpret it, and with *566such uncertainty there would be no uniformity in the construction of constitutional provisions. Mr. Justice Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations says: “But the courts tread upon very dangerous ground when they venture to apply the rules which distinguish directory and mandatory statutes to the provisions of a Constitution. It is the province of an instrument of this solemn and permanent character to establish those fundamental maxims, and fix those unvarying rules by which all departments of the government must at all times shape their conduct, and if it descends to prescribe mere rules of order in unessential matters, it is lowering the proper dignity of such an instrument, and usurping the proper province of ordinary legislation.” Regarding, therefore, every provision of a Constitution mandatory, it furnishes no reason for holding that the journals of either House are the best evidence to the courts and the people of the validity of the bill. Some test, however, must be had, and the citizen, who is presumed to know the law, must have the means of knowing when a law has been enacted; and while no case reported or unreported in this State is to be found deciding that question, there has in effect been a practical construction as to what constitutes the evidence of the passage of laws, by the manner in which our statutes are published and verified by the enrolled bill. Our statute laws have been embodied for years in what is known as the Revised and General Statutes, and published Acts of the Legislature. When the law, as found in the statute book, is claimed not to be the law enacted by the Legislature, resort is had to the enrolled bill, and I venture the assertion that the able revisers of our statutes and codes of practice never at any time con-*567•suited, the legislative journals with a view of ascertaining whether the enactments they were publishing as laws to guide the people had been constitutionally passed, and for the reason, the enrolled bill was the best evidence of that fact; and although there has been no decision on. the question this raises a strong presumption as to the manner in which such constitutional provisions have been interpreted. What is the evidence upon which this •court is asked to pronounce this law unconstitutional? ■Section 40 of the Constitution provides: “Each House ■of the General Assembly shall keep and publish daily a journal of its proceedings, and the yeas and nays of the members on any question shall, at the desire of any two of the members elected, be entered on the journal.” This journal is kept by the clerk or his assistant; is not signed or required to be signed by any one; its second and third reading dispensed with in almost every instance when a motion is made; it is not required to be attested in any manner whatever. Can it be that the framers of the Constitution contemplated that journals kept in this way are to be regarded as records containing such absolute verity as to be looked into by the courts for the purpose of nullifying a legislative enactment that has been ■attested and approved in the mode prescribed by section 56 of the organic law ? This bill was signed by the presiding officer of each House in open session, and before the Speaker signed the bill he suspended all other business; declared that such bill will now be read and he will sign the same to the end that it may become a law; it is then read and compared and found to be correct; he affixes his signature in the presence of the House in open session; and when this is done, to say that such solemn *568acts, after the bill has been filed with, the Secretary of' State as the law, are to be disregarded by reason of entries in the legislative journals, “would shake,” as Chief Justice Beasley said in deciding a similar question, “ the stability of all written law to its very foundations.” (Pangborn v. Young, 32 N. J. Law, 37.)
If a court can leave the enrolled bill and search for evidence in the journals to nullify it, this rule of evidence would apply not only to the passage of laws enacted since the present Constitution was adopted, but the manner of passing every statute since the Constitution of 1849 would be subjectedto judicial investigation; and, whether involving the right of property, or enacted for the punishment of crime, with an issue raised as to the manner of its passage, the court would be compelled to look into the journals of either House, or allow the litigant to do so, for the purpose of determining whether or not the enactment was passed in .the mode prescribed by the organic law. The Constitution of 1849 contains this provision: “ No bill shall have the force of a law until, on three several days it be read over in each House of the General Assembly, and free discussion allowed thereon, unless, in cases of emergency, four-fifths of the House where the bill shall bo depending may deem it expedient to dispense with this rule.” If, therefore, the journals of the Legislature, under the Constitution of 1849-1850, fail to show that the bill was not read three several days, and the reading had not been dispensed with, it is not a law; or, if the journals show affirmatively that the bill was only read two days and the third reading not dispensed with, the same disastrous results must follow; and, according to the majority opinion, if, under the present Constitution, the Governor *569and the House had coincided with the views of the Senate, all the bills where the yeas and nays had not been called on the original bills, or the bills as amended, would necessarily, when assailed, be adjudged null and void, although authenticated as the Constitution required. The published laws are verified by them, and every statutory right becomes endangered when you permit other evidence to show that an enrolled bill is not the law.
The fear of the consequences resulting from such a rule does, not alone' induce me to regard the enrolled bill conclusive as to the valid passage of a bill. It is because it is a certain and fixed test, and is the highest evidence of what the Legislature has done. The laws embodied in our statutes come from the enrolled bills. All the rights of the citizen derived under statutory enactments depend on the verity of the enrolled bills. Many of the decisions on this question evidence great ability, and with provisions in their Constitutions in many respects similar to ours, they hold, in discussing the right to go back to the journals of either House, that the enrolled bill is conclusive. In the case of Pangborn v. Young, 82 N. J. Law, 37, the court, in speaking of the journals as evidence, said: “ In the nature of things they must be constructed out of loose and hasty memoranda, made in the pressure of business and amid the distractions of a numerous assembly. There is required not a single guaranty to their accuracy or to their truth. No one need vouch for them, and is not enjoined that they should be either approved, copied or recorded.” Again: “ The Legislature has -.-.c * * adopted a method of certifying its own acts in an authentic form. * * * To the correctness of the present bill, for example, we have the signature of the presid*570ing officer of eaeh.TIo-u.se. In its present form it was exhibited to the Governor as the bill which had been enacted, and met his approval. It was then' made public by being filed in the office of the Secretary of State. These are the sanctions the Legislature has provided for the authentication of its own acts, both to the public and to the judicial tribunals, and the question is therefore presented, whether such authentication must not be deemed conclusive. This question, in my opinion, must be answered in the affirmative. TIow can it be otherwise ? The body that passes a law must of necessity promulgate it in some form.” And, continuing, the court said: “In the frame of our State Government the recipients and organs of this threefold power are the legislative, the executive and the judiciary. They are co-ordinate — -in all things equal and independent. Each, within its sphere, is the trusted agent of the public. With what propriety, then, is it claimed that the judicial branch can erect itself into the custodian of the good faith of the legislative department? The proposition is whether, when the Legislature has certified to a more matter of fact relating to its own conduct and within its own cognizance, the courts of the State are at liberty to inquire into or dispute the veracity of that certificate. I can discover nothing in the pro's isions of the Constitution, or in the general principles of government, which will justify the assumption of such superior authority.”
In the case of State v. Swift, reported in 21 American Reports, 721, from the State of Nevada, where a provision of the State Constitution is analogous to ours, providing “ that the reading of a bill by sections on its final passage shall in no case be dispensed with, and the vote *571on the final passage of every bill shall be,taken' by yeas and nays, to be entered on the journals of each House,” etc., the court held that the official copy of a statute duly enrolled and authenticated is conclusive evidence of the law, and the court can not resort to the journals of the Legislature, nor to any other extrinsic evidence to ascertain whether the statute was duly enacted. That court in response to the argument in favor of receiving the journals as evidence said : “The hope of doing good by the course suggested (that is, by correcting mistakes in enrolled bills by the journals) is more than overbalanced by the danger of doing harm, and therefore presents no equivalent for the incalculable disadvantage of reducing the statute law from a state of certainty to one of everlasting doubt.” To the same effect is the case of the People v. Devlin, reported in 33 N. Y., 269.
In an opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Harlan of the Supreme Court, and concurred iu by his associates, the case of Field v. Clark, reported in 143 U. S., 649, many of the cases on this question were referred to, and in an able and exhaustive discussion of the point involved in that case, the coui’t held: “The signing by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and by the President of the Senate in open session of an enrolled bill, is an official attestation by the two Houses of such bill as one that has passed Congress. It is a declaration by the two Houses, through their presiding officers, to the President, that the bill thus attested has received in due form the sanction of the legislative branch of the Government, and that it is delivered to him in obedience to the constitutional requirement that all bills which pass Congress shall be presented to him. And when a bill thus attested receives his approval and *572is deposited in the public archives, its authentication as a bill that has passed Congress should be deemed complete and unimpeachable.'”
In response to the argument that was made in that case,- and also urged before us, that some supervision was necessary, otherwise the officers of the respective houses and the members might purposely defeat the popular will, the court said: “ But this possibility is too remote to be seriously considered in the present inquiry. * * * Judicial action based upon such a suggestion is forbidden by the respect due to a co-ordinate branch of the Government. The evils that may result from the recognition of the principle that an enrolled act in the custody of the Secretary of State, attested by the signatures of the presiding officers of the two Houses of Congress and the approval of the President, is conclusive evidence that it was passed by Congress according to the forms of the Constitution, would be far less than those that would certainly result from a rule making the validity of congressional enactments depend on the manner in which the journals of the respective Houses are kept by the subordinate officers charged with" the duty of keeping them.” The court also said, in regard to certain matters expressly required by the Constitution to be entered on the journal: “ To what extent the validity of legislative action may be affected by the failure to have those matters entered on the journal, we need not inquire. No such question is presented for determination.” It is therefore argued that the precise question presented here was not before the court in Field v. Clark, still it is evident the court was not inclined to recognize the doctrine found in the Illinois and other cases as sound. The provision of the Consti*573tution of Illinois is “ that all bills before they can become laws shall be 'read three several times in each House and shall be passed by a vote of a majority of all the members elect.” The Supreme Court of that State, in People v. Starne, 35 111., 121, said: “ According to the theory of our Legislature, when a bill has become a law, there must be record evidence of every material requirement, from its introduction until it becomes a law, and this evidence is found upon the journals of the two Houses” — the court further saying: “We are not however prepared to say that a different rule might not have subserved the public interest equally well, leaving the Legislature and the executive to guard the public interest in this regard, or to become responsible for its neglect.” Mr. Justice Harlan, in reviewing the various decisions on this subject, quoted the language of the Illinois court, in which the soundness of the rule established in that State is questioned, and approved the docfrine of the State courts making the enrolled bill conclusive evidence of the law. The case from the Mississippi Supreme Court of Ex parte Wren, ■63 Miss., 512, is also referred to in the case of Eield v. Clark, in which Mr. Justice Campbell said, after reviewing the adjudged cases: “Every other view subordinates the Legislature and disregards that co-equal position in one system of the three departments of government. If the validity of every act published as law is to be tested by examining its history, as shown by the journals of the two Houses of the Legislature, there will be an amount of litigation, difficulty and painful uncertainty appalling in its contemplation, and multiplying a hundred fold the uncertainty of the law. * * * If the court may go beyond the enrolled bill andtryits validity by the record contained *574iii the journals it must .perform this task as often as called on, and every court must do it. A justice of the peace must do it, and we will have the spectacle of examination of journals by justices of the peace, and statutes declared not to be law as the result of their journalistic history. Let the courts accept as statutes duly enacted, such bills as are declared by the Legislature as their acts, authenticated as such in the prescribed mode.”
In Weeks v. Smith, 81 Maine, 547, it was said: “No-man should be required to hunt through the journals of a Legislature to determine whether a statute, properly certified by the Speaker of the House and the President of the Senate, and approved by the Governor, is a statute or not.”
It is insisted that sec. 46 of the Constitution, containing the provision that “ no bill shall become a law unless, on its final passage, it receives the votes of at least two-fifths of the members elected to each House, the vote to be taken by the yeas and nays on the journals, and a majority of all these members, when an appropriation of money is made,” opens the door to an investigation of the journals by the courts. I see no distinction between a provision of a Constitution requiring a call of the yeas, and nays by the legislative body upon the final passage of a bill and the provision to the effect that the first reading shall not be dispensed with. They are all mandatory provisions regulating the mode in which the Legislature shall enact laws, the construction of which belongs to the two Houses and the Executive, and not the courts; and especially when the Constitution contains a provision directing the mode of authentication by which the courts and the people are to be governed.
*575By the statute of our State, to make the deed of a married woman effectual the clerk is required to examine her separately and apart from her husband, and although he may have examined her in the presence of her husband, the courts, by reason of an express statute, will not allow the clerk or the married woman to show that he did not comply with the law when he has certified that he did, in the absence of fraud on the part of the grantee, and for the reason that such a rule of evidence would make the title to land too uncertain; and while the statute as to the clerk is mandatory, just as the provisions of the Constitution in regard to the enactment of laws is mandatory to the Legislature, when the bill is certified or authenticated in the mode required, you can not go behind it. The enrolled bill should be held conclusive. The building may be defective in its construction, but when received from the hands of the architect will be allowed to stand.
Section 56 of the Constitution is plain and unmistakable as to the manner in which a bill is to be authenticated and promulgated as the law, and affords the means for every one ascertaining what the law is. When we find an act filed with the Secretary of State, authenticated by the signatures of the Speakers and the approval of the Governor, every citizen can rely on its efficacy, if within the power of the Legislature to enact it, and no evidence of any character assailing its validity should be listened to. It will be found that courts entertaining opposite views on this question are constantly perplexed in their efforts to sustain the validity of laws with a view of preserving rights acquired under statutes, where the mode of passing them was not as prescribed by the Constitution. In the cases of Hall v. Steele, 82 Ala., 562; Glidewell v. Martin, 51 *576Ark., 559; State v. Allgood, 87 Term., 163; State v. Hastings, 24 Minn., 78, and in the courts of Kansas and Colorado, it lias been held that the journals may be looked into with a view of assailing the enrolled bill. But when they are silent on the question as to the manner of passing the bill, the court will presume that they were passed in accordance with the Constitution; and in some of the State courts,jin order to avoid the disastrous consequences resulting from contradicting the enrolled bill, a legislative estoppel, in some cases, has been applied, to the effect that subsequent legislation in the nature of amendments could avoid legislative enactment.
The highest authority adverse to the rule here recognized is Mr. Justice Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations, following the decisions of the courts of his own State. The Supremo Court of that State has gone so far as to hold that where there is no entry on the journals,' and no resolution authorizing such entry, an entry found in the bound volume of the House journal will be presumed to have been properly made; two of the judges, Long and Grant, dissenting. (Common Council v. Board of Assessors (Mich.), 51 Northwestern Reporter, 787.)
I can not assent to such a doctrine.
Nor should the bill before us be held unconstitutional upon the idea that no one is injured by a reversal ■of this case; that it is only one agent of the State government trying to keep the money in the Treasury and another trying to get it out. It is either a law or not a law. If a law, the appellees have the legal right to the money and to compel the Auditor to pay it. 'There can be no exception to the rule. It is true they are the agents to disburse this fund, but the ears *577of the court are not closed to the fact that the' managers have been engaged in preparing the exhibits for the World’s Pair. They have doubtless expended their own means in making such preparations as were necessary for that purpose. They had the right to act under the law, and the approval by the Governor of their vouchers for twenty-five thousand dollars raises a strong presumption that they have made expenditures. The executive was right in approving the vouchers, because he knew the Board of Managers had acted in good faith. Still, from the majority opinion, if expenditures have been made, as the act was void, it affords them no protection. Can this be ? Are the courts of this State to search the journals to find out whether or not statutory rights can be enforced? Such a rule not only makes the forms of legislation but all legislative expediency the subject of judicial approval. It invites the judge from the bench that he may become a partisan to the passage or rejection of bills, where partisan influence and excitement prevail. It is an encroachment upon the exercise of legislative power. Its effect will be to sweep from the statute bills of the highest importance passed during this legislative session, and open the doors to an assault on all past legislation. It is a legal' dynamite hidden from the public view, ready when the occasion requires to be used in the destruction of any statute. In the language of a great judge (Judge Black), in an opinion given on a similar question, “I fear to turn loose a principle which might devour the whole statute book.” (Attorney-General Opinions.)
While I do not differ from my associates as to what is the final passage of a bill, it is a question that was *578not debated by counsel, and, from my view of this case, the opinion at best would only be advisory in its character, and given to a representative body that has-not sought it. I again repeat that this court is only determining what evidence we will look to in order to ascertain whether the act in question is or is not a law. It is one entirely distinct from the legislative power in passing bills, or that of the Governor in pointing out defects and constitutional omissions in the attempt to pass them. I feel the importance ' of a court of last resort concurring on all constitutional questions, but the magnitude of the question involved and the danger, as I conceive, flowing from the construction given the Constitution by my associates, compel me to dissent from their views on the main question involved.