Court Opinion

ID: 5168549
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-02 04:50:53.492388+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:25:58.481342
License: Public Domain

QUARLES, J.
— On October 26, 1897, an agreed case, without action, under the statute, was filed in the court below, in which, statement is contained a transcript of House and Senate journals of the legislature relating to the passage of that certain act of March 8, 1895, entitled “An act to amend chapter 6 of title 13 of the Eeviscd Statutes of Idaho,” and a statement of various-steps taken by the defendants, who constitute the board of county commissioners of Owyhee county, in their efforts to fund $61,000 of outstanding warrant indebtedness of said county; and attached to said statement as exhibit “A,” made a part thereof, is a transcript of the records of said board of county commissioners relating to the matter in question. The points submitted to the court for decision we quote from the agreed case, as follows, to wit: “1. Can the court go behind the enrolled bill, and to the journal of the two houses of the legislature, when inquiring into the question as to whether or not the constitutional requirements were complied with in the passage of a legislative enactment, and for the purpose of passing upon the vafidity of the bill? 2. If the court can go to the journals of the legislature,' and behind the properly enrolled bill, is the act in. question void by reason of the failure of the journals and records of the legislature to show a compliance with the requirements of the constitution of the state of Idaho in the passage of the bill *596when the same was under consideration? 8. Is said act oí the legislative assembly approved March 8, 1895, a valid act, and existing statute of law of this state? 4. If said act of the legislature approved March 8, 1895, is not a valid act and existing statute of law of this state, have said board of county commissioners, by their proceedings as shown in exhibit A complied with any existing and valid law of the state of Idaho authorizing the issuance of said bonds, and can said board deliver said bonds to a purchaser as valid and existing obligations of said county of Owyhee?” The trial court held said act of Maxeh 8, 1895, void, because not passed in the manner required by the constitution, and rendered judgment enjoining the defendants, as county commissioners, from delivering the proposed bonds to the bidder therefor whose bid had been accepted. From said judgment the defendants appealed to this court.
It appears from the record that all of the steps required by the said act of March 8, 1895, in order to fund the outstanding indebtedness sought to be funded were taken by the defendants. But the facts as to the time and manner of creating said indebtedness do not appear in the record; consequently, the validity of the original indebtedness sought to be funded is not in question, and is not decidid in this case. During the pendency of this appeal the legislature has, by act approved February 7, 1899, re-enacted the said act of March 8, 1895, with a sufficient title, viz., “An act providing for the issuance of negotiable coupon bonds for the funding and refunding of county indebtedness: amending chapter 6, title 13, -Revised Statutes of Idaho.” (See Acts 1899, p. 136.) And by act approved March 6, 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 368), it is'provided that all bonds theretofore issued under the said act of March 8, 1895, are and shall be held valid, notwithstanding the manner of the passage of said act. The legislature had authority to pass said validating act. The re-enactment of the act of March 8, 1895, and the enactment of said validating act, renders it immaterial whether the act of March 8, 1895, was originally valid or not, and for that reason we decline to pass upon the constitutionality of the passage of said act, or the sufficiency of the title as originally passed. All that we do decide is that the defendants took those steps required by *597the statute to fund the indebtedness in question, and no good reason is shown in the record why the said proposed bonds should not be delivered to the purchaser thereof. The judgment appealed from is reversed, without costs to either party, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the district court to dismiss the case.
Huston, C. J., and Sullivan, J., concur.