delivered the opinion op the court.
The questions in this case are of supreme importance. Thé President of the State Board of Managers of the "World’s Columbian Exposition presented a proper order to the appellant, the State Auditor, for a warrant upon
The Auditor, acting no doubt from a conscientious desire to properly discharge his duty, and under the advice •of the Attorney-General, who is by law his legal adviser in such matters, refused it, and this is an action for a mandamus to compel him to give it.
It is said, in limine, that he has no personal interest in the matter; and being a ministerial officer can not refuse to issue it upon the ground that the Legislature could not constitutionally make the appropriation, or that the ■act was not constitutionally passed. In short, that his only duty was obedience, and that he has no standing in •court.
It is a general rule that a court will not listen to one who says a legislative act is unconstitutional, unless his rights are involved, or he has a right to question it. Section 230 of our new Constitution,however, says: “No money shall be drawn from the State Treasury except in pursuance of appropriations made by law;” and our statute forbids the issue by the Auditor of a warrant upon the. Treasury “ unless the money to pay the same has been appropriated by law.” (Gen. Stat., chap. 6, art. 1, sec. 6.) If the act of the Legislature be void for want of power to pass it, or because it was not passed in the manner required by the Constitution, then it is not law; and the Auditor is vested with such power and occupies such ' a position that it is not only his right, but his duty, whenever he is called upon to order the payment of money out of the Treasury, to inquire whether it is being done
The right to the mandamus is denied by him, first, upon the ground that the Legislature had no power to make-file appropriation. It is urged that it is not for a public or governmental purpose. Our Constitution says: “ Taxes, shall be levied and collected for public purposes only.” (Section 171.) It is often difficult to draw the line which bounds constitutional taxation, or to determine whether the purpose is one in aid of which the taxing power may be invoked, or the money thus raised expended. If it be doubtful, and the Legislature has seen proper to exercise the power, the judiciary should not interfere. The-doubt is then to be solved in favor of the legislative action. The object in this instance, however, is to exhibit the resources and progress of the State. It is not to promote the interest of one or a few individuals, and perhaps, incidentally, that of the public; but the purpose is. public in character and calculated and intended to benefit the entire State. Our Legislature has repeatedly heretofore, and running through many years, appropriated money for like purposes, and its power to do so is now for the first time questioned. It was done in 1876 for the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia, and later for the one at New Orleans. This was well known to the framers of our present Constitution, adopted in 1891, and had it been intended to forbid the exercise of the power by the Legislature for such purposes, it would no doubt have been done in unmistakable terms. In our opinion it con
Section 46 of our Constitution provides: “No bill shall become a law unless, on its final passage, it receives the votes of at least two-fiffchs of the members elected to 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.” The act originated in the Senate, and passed that body upon a yea and nay vote,, entered upon its journal, by the required majority. It then went to the .other House, where, after being amended, it passed upon a like vote, entered upon its journal, by a like majority. It then came back to the Senate, where the amendments were concurred in without a yea and nay vote, and without the vote of a majority of the members elected.
It is conceded by the counsel for the appellees, and seems plain, that this mode of proceeding did not conform to the Constitution. It complied with it in neither letter nor spirit. The object of the section above cited was to
It is true it has been held that the “ final passage ” of a bill means when it first passes the body, and not when it returns to it, after amendment, for adoption; and it is said that the constitutional provision as to the number of votes, and the entry of the yea and nay vote on the journal,
The first view is the English one, where there is no written Constitution. It has been followed by our Supreme Court, and by at least nine of the Supreme Courts of the States. The weight of authority in this country, as declared in perhaps as many as nineteen States, is, however, the other way. All agree that the enrolled and approved bill can not be impeached bjr loose papers or parol evidence. Public policy forbids it. Too much mischief would result. A review or citation of the numerous cases is unnecessary. They have been examined. The most, if not all of them, will be found cited in the notes on page 135 of Cooley’s Con. Limitations, and to the case of Field v. Clark, 143 U. S., 661. It is not necessary, however, to a proper determination of this case to decide this question. It would, at most, be settling a mere rule of evidence, not prescribed by constitution or statute, and subject to exception and modification by the courts. If it had heretofore been prescribed, it would not control this case. Here no property rights have become fixed, no interests vested; but two parties, each the agent of the State, are contending for the control of a fund, and we must consider this case as it is presented. The court is asked to exercise its power and compel the Auditor to comply with an act of the Legislature which the Constitution required should be passed in a certain way. If the
The answer of the Auditor, however, sets out the steps connected with the passage of the act. It states what was done and what was not done. It avers the facts connected with its passage and files as a part of it a copy made by the Public Printer of the journal of the Senate relating to it. These facts, as to the manner of its passage, were admitted by a general demurrer. They show the act when it came back to the Senate, after amendment, was not voted for by a majority of all the Senators, and that a yea and nay vote was not taken. It-was not, therefore, constitutionally, passed; and yet the court is asked by the appellees' to use its power to enforce it by mandamus when, by their demurrer to the answer and failure to plead, they are to be regarded as agreeing that this is true.
A court, when asked to exercise its power by means of mandamus, should regard the substance and not the shadow. Its use is confined to those cases where the law
The provision of the Constitution is mandatory; and when this court is called upon to exercise a power, respect for a co-ordinate department of the Government can not be suffered to override the fundamental law by virtue of which both act and exist. A constitutional rule is not only for the Legislature, but this and all other courts.
Our personal wishes in the matter can not be consulted. If the people desire this appropriation made,- the Legislature will doubtless do so; but nothing connected with the matter is more important to all than that it shall be done according to law. It is manifest the answer can not be truthfully denied; this was in substance admitted, upon the argument of the cause, by the appellees’ counsel.
Under this state of case it is proper to reverse the judgment, with directions to dismiss the petition, and it is so ordered.