Opinion
11083
December 29, 1922.
Before MAULDIN, J., Kershaw, November, 1922. Affirmed.
Action by R.E. Stevenson and others against H.G. Carrison, Jr., as Mayor, and the Aldermen of Camden. Judgment for defendants, and plaintiff appeals.
The decree of Judge Mauldin was as follows:
This action was commenced by the plaintiffs, taxpayers and citizens, of the city of Camden, S.C. in their own behalf and that of all the taxpayers of said city, wherein it is sought to obtain a perpetual injunction against said city and its council, to enjoin a bond issue to the amount of $115,000; the city having heretofore issued and sold $85,000 of bonds, being a part of a $200,000 issue petitioned for by the freeholders, and thereafter voted for by a majority of the qualified voters of said city. The $85,000 of bonds already sold are not involved in this proceeding. The city council of Camden, desiring to issue said bonds for street improvement, submitted to the qualified voters the question of whether said bonds should be issued. The result of the election thereon was declared in favor of the issue. Some question arose as to the validity of such bond issue, and this action was instituted to determine that question. The plaintiffs contended that the proposed bond issue would be invalid in so far as it undertakes to exempt said city from the limitations of indebtedness, based on the assessed value of the taxable property in said city, provided for by Section 7, Article 8, and Section 5, Article 10, of the Constitution; that the amendment to Section 7, Article 8, exempting the city from the limitations of said sections of the Constitution, was not passed in accordance with the requirements of Section 1, Article 16, of the Constitution, which requires all Joint Resolutions proposing constitutional amendments to be passed by a yea and nay vote; as appears by the Senate and House Journals of 1910, the proposed amendment was referred to a conference committee for report. The amendment to the Joint Resolution, as proposed by the conference committee, involved only the question of the form in which said constitutional amendment should be submitted to the voters. The report of the conference committee was adopted by the Senate without a yea and nay vote. As to whether the proposed bond issue would increase the bonded indebtedness of the city of Camden in violation of Section 7, Article 8, and Section 5, Article 10, of the Constitution, depends wholly upon the validity of the constitutional amendment, proposed by the Joint Resolution, and amendment thereto passed by the General Assembly at the 1910 session, which constitutional amendment undertook to exempt said city from the limitation of both sections.
It will be observed that the conference committee report submitted an amendment to the Joint Resolutions relating only to the method of submission of the question to the voters of the State, and contained no provision affecting the main purpose of the Joint Resolution. It would therefore be a sacrifice of substance to form to hold that a yea and nay vote was necessary upon the consideration of the amendment proposed by the conference committee.
With respect to the contention by plaintiffs that at the third reading in the House of the amended Joint Resolution same was read under its original title referring only to the town of Clinton, and that the city of Camden was not named in the title or body of the Act, as required by Section 1, Article 16, of the Constitution, the plaintiff offered in evidence all entries in the House and Senate Journals of 1910 relating to the passage of said Joint Resolution; upon objection to the evidence as a whole, the objection was sustained under authority of the case of Lucas v. Barringer, Mayor, et al., reported in Southeastern Reporter Advance Sheets of date August 26, 1922, for the reason that the Joint Resolution was entered at least once upon the House and Senate Journals with a yea and nay vote thereon; that the original Joint Resolution proposing the said conference committee amendment, referring only to the town of Clinton, was regularly passed by the required two-thirds yea and nay vote, and so entered in the Senate Journal; that said Joint Resolution, on the second reading in the House, was by the necessary two-thirds yea and nay amended, by adding the city of Camden and so entered in the House Journal.
I hold that such entries fulfill the Constitutional requirements, and, the Joint Resolution having been duly ratified, signed by the President of the Senate and Speaker of the House, approved by the Governor, with the great seal of the State impressed thereon, this Court cannot inquire as to what the Journals of the two Houses may show as to the successive steps that may have been taken in the passage of the original Joint Resolution.
It is conceded and the evidence shows that all proceedings subsequent to the ratification of the Constitutional amendment by the General Assembly, exempting the city of Camden from the limitations imposed by Section 7, Article 8, and Section 5, Article 10, of the Constitution are regular and comply with all requirements of the law applicable thereto as to said bond issue.
For the foregoing reasons it is ordered that the complaint be dismissed, and the injunction sought be refused.
Mr. E.D. Blakeney, for appellants, cites: Joint Resolution (House J. 1910, p. 669) did not properly exempt Camden from tax limitations: Const. 1895, Art. 8, Sec. 7, Id. Art. 3, Sec. 17; Id. Art 16, Sec. 1.
Mr. L.A. Wittkowsky, for respondents, cites: Joint Resolution of 1910 properly passed: 39 S.C. 307; 114 S.C. 419.
December 29, 1922. The opinion of the Court was delivered by
For the reasons assigned by his Honor Judge Mauldin, it is the judgment of this Court that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.