
    State of Nebraska, ex rel. Cyrus E. Watson, Deputy Labor Commissioner, v. Laurence N. Eskew, Assessor.
    Filed May 8, 1902.
    No. 12,614.
    Commissioner’s opinion, Department' No. 1.
    1. Assessors: Additional Duties: Compensation: Validity of Statute. It is no objection to the validity of a statute, imposing an additional duty on assessors, that no special provision for their compensation is made.
    3. Deputy Labor Commissioner: Constitutionality of Law. The act of 1887, imposing the duties of labor commissioner on the g'overnor of the state, and providing- for the appointment of a special deputy to assist in discharging them, 'is not in violation of section 36, article 5 of the state constitution.
    3. Labor Statistics: Constitutionality of Law. The amendatory act of 1897 to sections 3066 and 3068 of Cobbey’s Consolidated Statutes, requiring- assessors to procure certain labor statistics, is germane to the provisions of the original act, and to the requirement of the original section 3066, that the deputy commissioner collect statistics, and is not in violation of section 11, article 3 of the state constitution.
    Original application for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondent, as assessor, to collect certain statistics.
    
      Writ allowed.
    
    
      Frank N. Prout, Attorney General, Norris Brown, and William B. Rose, for relator.
    
      F. A. Boehmer, contra.
    
   Hastings, C.

This is a mandamus to compel the collection of certain statistics by the assessor of Lancaster precinct of Lancaster county. By the act of April 13, 1897, entitled “An act to amend sections 2066 and 2068, and to create a new section to be numbered 2071, of Cobbey’s Consolidated statutes of Nebraska, 1893, and to repeal sections 2066 and 2068 as they now stand” (Session Laws, 1897, p. 247), township and precinct assessors are required to enroll all persons over twenty-one years of age in their respective precincts, together with their occupation. Assessors are also required to return the products of farms or manufactories during the previous year, and the wages received by wage workers. The respondent refuses to perform this duty for the reason that the act in question is, as he claims,' unconsitútional and void. The grounds of this claim are that the original act of 1887 was and is unconstitutional and void because contrary to section 26 of article 5 of the state constitution, in that it creates an executive office, contrary to the inhibition of that article. It is further claimed that the amendatory act of 1897 is void for the reason that it not only attempts to amend a void act, but is not germane to the provisions sought to be amended, and hence its subject is not expressed in its title. It is further objected that the act of 1897 is void, because no compensation is provided for the assessor’s work.

This latter claim is not well founded. The compensation attached by law to an office is payment for all the services required of the incumbent. State v. Meserve, 58 Nebr., 451. Moreover, the compensation provided for assessors is a per-diem. The act of 1897 did not change the number of hours in a day any more than it did the length of the hours. No reason is perceived why $3 per day is not just as adequate compensation for- taking industrial statistics as it is for taking enumerations of property. If more days are required, the bill of the assessor will doubtless be that much larger. He would hardly need the encouragement of a special provision for compensation to induce hiffi to claim it.

To the proposition that the act of 1887 established the office of labor commissioner in violation of section 26, article 5 of the constitution, the cases of State v. Poynter, 59 Nebr., 417, State v. Burlington & M. R. R. Co., 60 Nebr., 741, and State v. Fremont, E. & M. V. R. Co., 60 Nebr., 749, are cited, together with Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S., 466, 171 U. S., 361. The first of the above cases,—State v: Poynter, —holds chapter 47 of the Session Laws of 1899 to be unconstitutional for the reason that it provides, with reference to insurance companies, for a mode of taxation not in harmony with the state constitution. It holds that these provisions were the inducement to the passage of the rest of the bill, and therefore that the entire act falls with the provision relating to taxation. A somewhat careful examination of the opinion fails to disclose any suggestion that the act in question was void because providing for an insurance commissioner, and so in conflict with section 26 of article 5 of the state constitution. State v. Burlington & M. R. R. Co., supra, finds that chapter 60 of the Session Laws of 1887 is void, because in the form in which it was finally enrolled and signed it was never passed by either branch of the legislature. The MJchorn Case is simply a reaffirmance of the preceding one. The applicability of Smyth v. Ames to the case under consideration is not perceived. The only conclusion in it which seems to have relation to the matter in hand is the proposition that an unconstitutional act is void.

The form of the act of 1887, “to provide and continue a bureau of labor and industrial statistics and define the duties of its officers” (Session Laws, 1887, ch. 17), was unquestionably adopted to avoid the provisions of the state constitution (section 26, article 5) that no other executive state office should be continued or created, and that the duties devolving upon officers not provided for by the constitution should be performed by the officers therein created. The objection to the act is that it authorizes the governor, who is named as commissioner, to perform his duties, as set forth in the act, by deputy. It amounts to a contention that the authorization of deputies for the state officers, named in the constitution, is prohibited. The statement of the proposition seems to carry with it its own refutation. The practice of employing deputies in such offices has not arisen since the adoption of our constitution of 1875. It was certainly well known to the distinguished men who drafted that instrument, as well as to the voters to whom it was submitted. If they had" meant to forbid any such practice, they would have done so in direct terms. The objection that the act is unconstitutional because the duties provided in it may be performed by deputies, can not be sustained.

The other objection raised is to the constitutionality of the amendatory act. The basis of the objection is that it is not germane to the sections proposed to be amended, and therefore its subject is not indicated in its title, and that it is consequently a violation of section 11, article 3 of the state constitution.- The title of the amendatory act is given above. It purports to amend two sections and add another to Cobbey’s Consplidated Statutes of 1893. and to repeal the two sections as they then stood. The chapter in which these sections occur in-Cobbey’s Statutes is headed “Labor” and consists of the act of 1887, before discussed, with some other provisions. The amendment to section 2066 consists in the insertion bodily into this section of a provision for the posting up in factories and workshops of the laws and regulations with reference to child labor, hours of labor, and provisions for health and safety of the employees, and the establishment of a penalty for destroying such notices, which had previously formed section 2068. For-section 2068 was substituted the provisions for collecting statistics on the part of the assessors as above stated, and a provision that these should be returned to the county clerk, who should forward summaries of them to the deputy commissioner. These statistics are to be compthed by the deputy commissioner in his biennial report to the governor. Of course, if these new provisions are germane to the matters contained in the original sections, they are sufficiently covered by their title as an amendatory act. Dogge v. State, 17 Nebr., 140; State v. Berka, 20 Nebr., 375. In Miller v. Hurford, 11 Nebr., 377, 381, cited by respondent, a section of the revenue law, which originally provided that taxes upon real property should be a perpetual lien, was under tonsideration. It was held that any amendment in relation to the lien or its enforcement would be valid, In this case the original section 2066 provided for the gathering of facts and statistics by the deputy commissioner. The new act provided for the furnishing him with such facts and statistics through county clerks and assessors. Section 4 of the original act contained extensive provisions as to the collection, collation and publication of such facts. The requirement that these precinct officers should assist in this process seems entirely germane, not only to the other provisions of this act, but to the especial one of original section 2066 as to the gathering of statistics by the deputy commissioner, and seems to be covered by the comprehensive title of the original act, “To provide and to continue a bureau of labor and industrial statistics.” No act of the legislature should be held unconstitutional unless such holding is clearly requisite to a fair and full application of constitutional requirements to such legislation. In this case it does not seem necessary.. To maintain a bureau of statistics, it is clearly necessary that some one gather them; and to a provision that a deputy labor commissioner shall do so it seems that an amending provision that it shall be the duty of assessors is germane.

We do not find the original act or the amendment void for any of the reasons urged, and it is recommended that the peremptory writ of mandamus prayed for in this case be allowed.

Day and Kirkpatrick, CC., concur.

By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the peremptory writ prayed for in this case is allowed.

Writ allowed.  