Summary
refusing writ of mandamus to alter legislative journal entry regarding the date of passage of a bill, stating "The legislature and this court are co-ordinate branches of our state government, and we cannot interfere with the legislature in its legislative processes, but are limited to a consideration of the constitutionality and interpretation of its acts."
Summary of this case from State ex Rel. Holmes v. ClawgesOpinion
No. 31735.
March 27, 1951.
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW — PERSONS ENTITLED TO RAISE CONSTITUTIONAL QUESTIONS — TIME FOR REFERENDUM. In an action in mandamus to compel the officers of the state senate and house of representatives to affix the true date of passage upon a bill, in which the relators allege that the records of both houses erroneously show that the bill was passed the sixtieth day of the session, whereas it was actually passed the sixty-first day thereof, and they further allege that the time wherein they might take a referendum on the bill was thereby shortened, the relators will be held not to have been injured by the change of date complained of, as they could not institute a referendum until after the bill had been signed by the governor and he acted upon it within the constitutional time limit provided in Const. Art. III, § 12.
SAME — DISTRIBUTION OF GOVERNMENTAL POWERS — ENCROACHMENT ON LEGISLATURE — INQUIRY INTO LEGISLATIVE PROCESSES. The legislature and the supreme court are co-ordinate branches of the state government; and the supreme court cannot interfere with the legislature in its legislative processes but is limited to a consideration of the constitutionality and interpretation of its acts.
See 50 Am. Jur. 511 et seq.
Application filed in the supreme court March 13, 1951, for a writ of mandate to compel the officers of the state senate and house of representatives to affix the true date of passage upon a bill. Denied.
John Caughlan and C.T. Hatten, for relators.
The Attorney General and Lyle L. Iversen, Assistant, for respondents.
Relators ask for a writ of mandate against the respondents directing them to affix the true date of passage upon a bill, and true dates upon the proceedings of the legislature relative thereto.
It is relators' contention that senate bill No. 379, now referred to as chapter 251 of the Session Laws of 1951, came before the Senate for final passage March 9, 1951, which was the sixty-first day of the session, and that the records of the Senate erroneously show that such bill was passed March 8, 1951, and the records of both houses show that the bill was enrolled on that date, and that by such false entries the time wherein a referendum might be taken by relators was shortened. See Washington state constitution, Art. II, § 1, as amended by the seventh amendment.
Had the bill been passed and enrolled on the 8th day of March, the governor would have had until March 20th to act upon it. Washington state constitution, Art. III, § 12. He vetoed certain sections and approved the remainder on March 19th.
The relators have raised certain issues which lead directly into a serious question as to the validity and constitutionality of measures passed after the sixtieth day of the legislative session, which question it is not necessary to here pass upon.
[1] The relators, who allege that they seek a referendum on chapter 251 of the Laws of 1951, have not been injured by the change of date complained of, as they could not institute a referendum until after the bill in question had been signed by the governor, and he acted upon the measure within the constitutional time limit. [2] There is still another reason why the writ should not issue. The legislature and this court are co-ordinate branches of our state government, and we cannot interfere with the legislature in its legislative processes, but are limited to a consideration of the constitutionality and interpretation of its acts.
Writ denied.