
    198 La. 507
    GRAHAM et al. v. JONES et al. In re TUGWELL, State Treasurer, et al.
    No. 36159.
    Supreme Court of Louisiana.
    June 30, 1941.
    Rehearing Denied July 18, 1941.
    
      Eugene Stanley, Atty. Gen., W. D. Goff and Cicero C. Sessions, Asst. Attys. Gen., G. T. Owen, Jr., Executive Counsel to the Governor, of Baton Rouge (James J. Morrison, of New Orleans, of counsel), for relators.
    Kemble K. Kennedy, of Baton Rouge, for respondents.
    James Smitherman, of Shreveport, George Wilson, of New Orleans, John B. Smullin, of Baton Rouge, James I. Smith, of Winnfield, Arthur Hammond, of New Orleans, Samuel M. Robertson, of Shreveport, William B. Clarke, of Monroe, William J. Blass, of Rayville, and Charles J. Rivet, C. Ellis Henican, Thomas E. Fur-low, and L. F. Wingerter, all of New Orleans, for various amici curiae.
   ROGERS, Justice.

Six residents and taxpayers of the Parish of East Baton Rouge brought suit attacking the constitutionality of Act 384 of 1940 and seeking injunctive relief against the Governor and other state officials. Exceptions and an answer were filed by the defendants. After a hearing on the rule nisi, the trial judge overruled the exceptions and granted plaintiffs a preliminary injunction against the defendants, A. P. Tugwell, State Treasurer, and L. B. Bay-nard, State Auditor, plaintiffs having abandoned their suit against the defendants, Sam H. Jones, Governor, and Jerome Hayes, Budget Officer.

The trial judge dismissed plaintiffs’ suit against Grady C. Durham, who had superseded Jerome Hayes as Budget Officer.

Under the terms of the preliminary injunction, the State Treasurer and the State Auditor are prohibited “from accepting, honoring, and acting upon notice or notices from Grady C. Durham, or any other individual claiming authority to exercise the duties as 'Budget Officer,’ to transfer funds appropriated to various state agencie's named in Act 44 of 1940, to the agencies listed under Act 384 of 1940, upon the plaintiff furnishing bond, according to law, in the sum of Five Hundred ($500.00) Dollars.”

Upon the application of the State Treasurer and the State Auditor, this Court ordered that the record be brought here for the purpose of reviewing the judgment of the trial judge, and, pending such review, that all further proceedings in the suit be suspended. On April 28, 1941, the return day fixed in our order, the matter was submitted on the record and the briefs filed by the parties as provided in section 4 of Rule XI of this Court.

While the case was under consideration by the Court, the Attorney General filed a motion on behalf of the relators requesting that we suspend our rule and permit the case to be reopened and orally argued, because of the importance of the issues involved therein. In view of the public interest in the matter, we granted the motion of the Attorney General and assigned the case for oral argument on June 2, 1941. On the day fixed, the case was extensively argued by counsel representing the parties, after which it was resubmitted to the Court for decision.

In the brief filed on the original s.ubr mission of the case, counsel for the rela-tors suggested that because of the necessity for a prompt determination of the constitutional questions involved, the Court should pretermit any discussion of the exceptions filed by relators and limit its review only to those questions involved on the merits of the case. But in their oral argument and in their supplemental brief filed in connection therewith, counsel for relators, disregarding their previous suggestion, insisted that the Court should dispose of relators’ exceptions, which they exhaustively discussed. This change of position on the , part of counsel for relators necessarily requires the Court to pass upon the exceptions interposed by relators to the respondents’ suit.

In the district court, the following exceptions were filed on behalf of relators and overruled by the trial judge, to-wit: (1) An exception to the jurisdiction of the court ratione materiae; (2) an exception to the jurisdiction of the court ratione personae; (3) an exception of no cause of action; and (4) an exception of no right of action and want of interest in the plaintiffs. We shall dispose of the exceptions in the order of their statement.

(1) In support of,the exception to the jurisdiction ratione materiae, the rela-tors argue that the courts are without right to pass upon the constitutionality of an amendment to an existing constitution; that the question is a political one over which the courts have no control. The argument is not sound.

The question of the validity of the adoption of an amendment to the constitution is a judicial and not a political question. The general rule governing the jurisdiction of the courts in such cases is stated in American Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law, Volume 11, section 33, page 639, as follows:

“Since amendments to Constitutions derive their force from the people, it is generally recognized that judicial tribunals have no right to question the wisdom or expedience of changes made in the fundamental law. Nevertheless, the power to ascertain the validity of changes in the Constitution resides in the courts, and they have, with practical uniformity, exercised the authority to determine the validity of proposal, submission, or ratification of change in the organic law. Consequently, the judicial department of the government invariably has the right to consider whether the legislative department and its agencies have observed constitutional requirements in attempting to amend the Constitution and may set aside-their acts in case they have not done so. When a constitutional amendment has been submitted, the single inquiry for the courts is whether the fundamental law has been complied with and whether the amendment has received the sanction of the popular approval in the prescribed manner.”-

See, to the same' effect, 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, §§ 7 and 146, where the question is discussed at length.

In Volume 6, page 908, Second Edition of the American and English Encyclopedia of Law, it is said: “The courts have full power to declare that an amendment to the constitution has not been properly adopted, even though it has been so declared by the political department of the state.” Numerous authorities are cited in support of the statement.

The editors of the Lawyers’ Reports Annotated, in the note appended to the case of Miller v. Johnson, 15 L.R.A. 524, declared that the question of lawful adoption of an amendment to the constitution is a judicial question.

In State ex rel. Morris v. Mason, Secretary of State, 43 La.Ann. 590, 9 So. 776, this Court, as well as the district court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, entertained jurisdiction of a case where the question involved required a judicial interpretation of Article 256 of the Constitution of 1879. The constitutional article in the Mason case was similar to, if not identical with, Article 21 of the Constitution of 1921, prescribing the method by which that Constitution may be amended.

Counsel for relators, in support of their contention, have cited many old cases, including State ex rel. Oliver v. Warmouth, 22 La.Ann. 1, 2 Am.Rep. 712, and State ex rel. Mississippi Valley Navigation Company v. Warmouth, 24 La.Ann. 351, 13 Am.Rep. 126, with respect to writs of mandamus and injunction against the Governor or other executive officers. But an examination of the decision of this Court in State ex rel. Brenner v. Noe, 186 La. 102, 171 So. 708, shows that those cases were expressly overruled.

Counsel for relators also have cited a number of cases from this and other jurisdictions which have no bearing on the issue presently before the Court, and we shall therefore not discuss them.

(2)The exception to the jurisdiction of the court ratione personae is predicated on the failure or omission of counsel for respondents to allege that the relators, the State Auditor and the State Treasurer, have their offices and domiciles in the Parish of East Baton Rouge, where the suit was originally filed.

The relators do not deny that L. B. Bay-nard, the State Auditor, and A. P. Tugwell, the State Treasurer, reside and maintain their offices in the Parish of East Baton Rouge. As shown by the prayer of the petition, Mr. Tugwell and Mr. Baypard were sued in their official capacities only. The trial judge was of the opinion that the defect, if any, was cured by the allegations contained in the prayer of the petition. Moreover, the trial judge took judicial notice of the fact that the domiciles of the State Auditor and the State Treasurer are in the Parish of East Baton Rouge.

The cases of State ex rel. Navo v. Baynard, State Auditor, 176 La. 520, 146 So. 41, and State ex rel. Violet Trapping Co., Inc., v. Grace, Register of the State Land Office, 182 La. 405, 162 So. 26, support the proposition that the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge was vested with original jurisdiction of this case.

We find no error in the ruling of the trial judge.

(3) The exception of no cause of action involves the question of the constitutionality of Act 384 of 1940, which was considered by the trial judge in connection with the hearing on the merits of the rule to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue. We shall discuss the question in reviewing the action of the trial judge in granting the preliminary injunction.

(4) Under the exception of no right of action and want of interest in the respondents, counsel for relators challenge the right of respondents, as mere taxpayers, to attack the constitutionality of Act 384 of 1940. We can not assent to the proposition that those who pay the taxes are without right to question the manner in which the taxes are expended by public officials.

Whatever may have been the effect of the former jurisprudence of this State, as reflected in Moss v. Hall, 133 La. 351, 63 So. 45, and Sutton v. Buie, 136 La. 234, 66 So. 956, L.R.A.1915D, 178, in denying a taxpayer the right to enjoin a state official from disposing of state funds under an unconstitutional act, it is now well settled that a taxpayer does have that right.

In Donaldson v. Police Jury, 161 La. 471, 109 So. 34, this Court, on rehearing, expressly decided that a taxpayer might resort to judicial authority to restrain public servants from transcending their lawful powers or violating their legal duty in any unauthorized mode which would increase the burden of taxation or otherwise unjustly affect the taxpayer or his property. The fact that the taxpayer’s interest might be small and not susceptible of accurate determination is not sufficient to deprive him of the right. The action is regarded as having a public character, and as being a proceeding in which the public complains.

In the case of Borden v. Louisiana Board of Education, 168 La. 1005, 123 So. 655, 67 A.L.R. 1183, this Court, affirming the holding in the Donaldson case, recognized the right of a taxpayer to sue to prevent the alleged illegal expenditure of public funds. The decision in the Borden case, in effect, overrules the jurisprudence as expressed in the cases of Moss v. Hall and Sutton v. Buie.

The law as it is presently applied in this State is not unlike that of many other jurisdictions on this point, as will appear by reference to 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, § 80, where the textwriter has this to say: “A taxpayer may, generally, attack the validity of a statute which affects him injuriously. Thus he may attack a statute which authorizes the expenditure of public funds, or prescribes the legislative procedure for the enactment of appropriations, or exempts persons or property from taxation, or imposes on him in its enforcement an additional financial burden, however slight.”

In Hall v. Blan, State Treasurer, 227 Ala. 64, 148 So. 601, 607, the Court announced the rule in the following words: “A taxpayer may maintain a suit to enjoin the state treasurer from diverting public funds, or disbursing same for unlawful purposes. He has a direct interest in seeing that taxes paid are devoted to the ends provided by law. While early decisions in some states sought to differentiate between state and county officers in such suits, the great weight of authority now recognizes this remedy. See extended note reviewing authorities in 58 A.L.R. page 589. A later case is found in Borden et al. v. Louisiana State Board of Education et al., 168 La. 1005, 123 So. 655, 67 A.L.R. 1183.”

The original petition filed by respondents in the district court sets forth that petitioners possess certain rights, privileges and immunities guaranteed by the State and Federal Constitutions; that they can not be deprived of those rights and privileges except by due process of law; and that they have instituted this suit distinctly and solely in the quality and capacity of citizens and taxpayers to contest the expenditure of funds of the State under the alleged unconstitutional proposition, submitted to the voters on November 5, 1940, as the proposed constitutional amendment No. 3, Act 384 of 1940. Petitioners allege that unless the proposition is declared unconstitutional, they will suffer irreparable injury, and they set forth the sature and extent of the alleged injury.

It is asserted in one of the many briefs filed on behalf of the relators that this suit is brought by persons who are neither citizens nor taxpayers of this State, in fact, by persons who are aliens, and therefore who can suffer no injury and no damage either in their persons or in their property, regardless of whether the reorganization amendment is constitutional or unconstitutional. We are at a loss to follow the reasoning underlying this assertion.

The respondents, in the beginning of their original petition, allege that they are residents of the Parish of East Baton Rouge, are qualified electors of that parish, and own both real and personal property in this State. Relators filed a number of exceptions to the petition without objecting to respondents’ capacity to file this suit and stand in judgment. On the trial of the rule nisi for a preliminary injunction in the district court, certificates of the deputy assessor and the deputy sheriff and tax collector were filed in the record and the testimony of those officials was taken in connection with their certificates. The certificates and the accompanying testimony show beyond contradiction that all the plaintiffs are property owners and taxpayers of the Parish of East Baton Rouge. Therefore, it sufficiently appears that respondents are citizens and taxpayers of this State. There is nothing in the record which justifies the characterization of respondents either as nonresidents or as aliens, who pay no taxes in this State.

The exception of no right of action and want of interest in the respondents is not well founded and was properly overruled by the trial judge.

We shall now proceed to dispose of the case on the merits and on the exception of no cause of action which is involved in the merits.

Act 384 of 1940 consists of a joint resolution adopted by the Legislature proposing to amend the Constitution of this State in a number of important particulars. The legislative resolution was submitted to the voters of the State at an election held on November 5, 1940, as the proposed constitutional amendment No. 3, or Act 384 of 1940. According to the returns of the election, 274,419 votes were cast on the proposition. Of this number 140,543 votes were reported as approving the proposition and 133,876 votes were reported as disapproving the proposition, or a majority of 6,667 in its favor.

Plaintiffs allege in their petition that Act 384 of 1940 is unconstitutional’ on the following grounds:

(1) That the statute is violative of the fundamental principles of a republican form of government as provided by the Constitution of this State and by section 4 of Article 4 of the Constitution of the United States, “because it is arbitrary, undemocratic, and denies and limits petitioners’ voice in the election of public officials directly responsible to the electorate and places unlimited centralized power in the Governor of Louisiana without due process of law.”

(2) That the statute is violative of the requirement of section 1 of Article 21 of the Constitution of this State reading as follows: “The Legislature shall designate the election at which the said amendment or amendments shall be submitted to the electors for their approval or rejection.”

(3) That the statute is violative of the requirement of section 1 of Article 21 of the Constitution of this State reading as follows: “When more than one amendment shall be submitted at the same election, they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately.”

The first ground of objection is not argued by counsel for respondents. For our own part, we are unable to see any merit in the contention. According to the authorities, the enforcement of the provisions of the Federal Constitution guaranteeing every state a republican form of government is of a political character over which the courts have no jurisdiction. Luther v. Borden, 7 How. 1, 48 U.S. 1, 12 L.Ed. 581; Pacific States Telephone & Telegraph Company v. Oregon, 223 U.S. 118, 32 S.Ct. 224, 56 L.Ed. 377; and Coleman v. Miller, 307 U.S. 433, 59 S.Ct. 972, 83 L.Ed. 1385, 122 A.L.R. 695. We shall therefore pretermit any further discussion of the question. In so doing, however, we deem it pertinent to refer to a statement of Chief Justice Fuller in Duncan v. McCall, 139 U.S. 449, 11 S.Ct. 573, 577, 35 L.Ed. 219. The statement follows :

“By the constitution, a republican form of government is guarantied to every state in the Union, and the distinguishing feature of that form is the right of the people to choose their own officers for governmental administration, and pass their own laws in virtud of the legislative power reposed in representative bodies, whose legitimate acts may be said to be those of the people themselves; but, while the people are thus the source of political power, their governments, national and state, have been limited by written constitutions, and they have themselves thereby set bounds to their own power, as against the sudden impulses of mere majorities.”

Taking up the second ground of objection, we find from an examination of the text of Act 384 of 1940 that the Legislature failed to designate the election at which the proposed amendment should be submitted to the voters for their approval or disapproval. Act 384 of 1940 was the only one of a group of twenty-eight constitutional amendments proposed by the session of 1940 in which the Legislature failed to fix the date for voting on the amendment as required by section 1 of Article 21 of the State Constitution.

The Secretary of State, who was called as a witness by respondents, testified that the Legislature did not designate the date of the election, but that Act 384 of 1940 came to his office, together with the other twenty-seven amendments; that as required by the Constitution, he caused to be published all the proposed amendments, and that the publication showed that the proposed amendments “would be voted upon at the general election to be held on November 5, 1940.”

In these circumstances, respondents contend that the Secretary of State and not the Legislature fixed the date of the election at which .the electors voted for and against the proposed amendment embodied in Act 384 of 1940.

The constitutional article provides that the Legislature “shall designate the election at which the * * * amendment * * * shall be submitted to the electors for their approval or rejection.” Respondents argue that the language quoted is mandatory and not directory. Respondents say that when the Legislature in proposing Act 384 of 1940, failed to designate an election at which the proposal was to be acted upon, the effect of the omission was to invalidate the proposed amendment, since neither the Secretary of State nor any other officer was vested with the authority to cause the proposed amendment to be submitted to the voters at the election held on November 5, 1940, or at any other election.

The relators do not dispute, and can not dispute, the correctness of respondents’ contention that the Legislature did not designate the election at which the proposals contained in Act 384 of 1940 should be submitted to the voters for their approval or rejection. In defense of the omission of this constitutional requirement, relators argue that the duty imposed upon the Legislature by the Constitution to designate the election at which proposals for its amendment should be submitted to the voters relates to a matter of form and not of substance; that although no formal words directing the submission of the amendment to the voters are found in the legislative act, nevertheless it must be presumed that the Legislature intended to do its duty and to submit the amendment to the voters at the election of November S, 1940; that it was the ministerial duty of the Secretary of State to advertise and submit the proposal at the ensuing election for representatives, and, finally, that the voters approved the proposal and thereby cured all its defects.

The argument of relators seems to be self-contradictory. They admit that it was the duty of the Legislature to designate the election at which the proposal should be submitted, and yet they urge the Court to assume that the duty was performed, because the Legislature must be presumed to intend to do its duty. We fail to see how the presumption invoked by re-lators can be accepted in -view of the fact that the Legislature in twenty-seven other proposed amendments, in obedience to the constitutional requirement, expressly designated the date of the election at which the proposals were to be submitted to the people, while in the case of this particular amendment — apparently the most important of all the proposed amendments — in utter disregard of the constitutional requirement, the date of the election was entirely omitted. Why this was done is left purely to conjecture, since the record is silent on the point. But whether the omission was intentional or accidental, the fact remains that the Legislature, in submitting its proposal, failed to follow one of the mandatory requirements of the Constitution.

Relators’ suggestion that the nonperformance of the legislative duty was immaterial, because it relates only to a matter of form, is not impressive. The defect is substantial. It results from the failure of the Legislature to observe one of the requirements demanded by the Constitution itself.

Relators say that it was the ministerial duty of the Secretary of State to submit the proposal to the voters at the election on November 5, 1940. However, they do not attempt to explain why the constitutional provision, which they say is binding on the Secretary of State, is less binding on the Legislature. Nor can we understand upon what theory, either of law or logic, they can maintain a proposition which leads to the absurd conclusion that where the Constitution imposes certain duties upon two distinct agencies, one of these agencies may take upon itself the duty of performing an act which the Constitution expressly'places upon the other.

The obligation of designating the election at which the proposed amendment to the Constitution shall be submitted to the voters is specifically and clearly imposed upon the Legislature by the Constitution itself, thus making the obligation a purely legislative function. The argument that the Secretary of State, an officer of the Executive Department, may validly usurp the functions belonging exclusively to the Legislative Department ignores the prohibition embraced in section 2 of Article 2 of the Constitution that no officer in the Executive Department shall exercise any power properly belonging to the Legislative Department.

Article 21 of the Constitution does not expressly or impliedly authorize the Secretary of State to designate or choose the date of the election at which amendments shall be submitted to the voters. This article prescribes no duty whatever with respect to placing the proposal upon the ballot, either by the Secretary of State or any one else. The only reference to the Secretary of State in the entire article appears in these words: “ * * * the Secretary of State shall cause the same [the proposal] to be published, in one newspaper in each parish of the State in which a newspaper is published, twice within not less than thirty nor more than sixty days preceding an election for Representative in the Legislature or in Congress.” Then follows these words: “The Legislature shall designate the election at which said amendment or amendments shall be submitted to the electors for their approval or rejection.”

It requires no extensive argument to support the proposition that if it were the intention of the framers of the Constitution to permit the Secretary of State to choose the date of the election, or to require that the election should be held at a subsequent election for representatives in the Legislature or in Congress, they would have so provided. But they did not do this. After prescribing the duty of the Secretary of State with respect to the publication of the proposed amendment, they specifically provided that the Legislature itself should designate the election at which the amendment or amendments should be submitted to the voters. In discharging its obligation to designate the election, the Legislature is not restricted to the subsequent, or to any other election for representatives in the Legislature or in Congress, but it is vested with full discretion to select the date which, in its wisdom, seems the most convenient and appropriate for that purpose.

There is no merit in relators’ contention that, under the mandatory provisions of the Constitution, the Secretary of State is bound and obligated to advertise and place upon the ballot the proposed amendment at the ensuing election for representatives, which was the election held on November 5, 1940. On the contrary, under the mandatory provisions of the Constitution, the Legislature itself was obligated to designate the date of the election at which the proposed amendment should be submitted to the voters, and, having failed to comply with this obligation, no officer in the Executive Department, nor any other person could constitutionally usurp the power delegated by the people to the Legislature alone, by substituting himself for the chosen representative of the people.

It is well settled that regulatory provisions as to the time for submission of proposed constitutional amendments are mandatory and must be complied with. The general rule is set forth in 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, § 9(2), page 42, in these words:

“Generally, the time of submission of proposed amendments is fixed by legislative or constitutional provisions; and a provision to the effect that amendments may be submitted only at certain times, or at certain elections, are [sic] mandatory and must be complied with, and a failure to do so serves to invalidate the amendment.”

In Johnson v. Craft, 205 Ala. 386, 87 So. 375, the Supreme Court of Alabama had before it a case in which the Legislature in proposing a constitutional amendment undertook to delegate to the Govenior the power to fix the date on which the election should be held, although the constitution itself provided that the Legislature should order elections upon proposed constitutional amendments to be held either at the general election next succeeding the session of the Legislature at which the amendment is proposed, or upon another day appointed by the Legislature not less than three months after the final adjournment of the legislative session. The Court held that this could not be done; that the Legislature was without power to delegate the fixing of the date of the election to the Governor of the State. The Court, in holding that the proposed constitutional amendment was invalid because the Legislature had failed to fix the date of the election as required by the constitution, also expressly held that such failure was not cured by the lapse of time, by the favorable vote of those participating in the election, or by any action taken under the proposed amendment. Incidentally, a taxpayer was the plaintiff in the case. The Court reaffirmed the doctrine of Collier v. Frierson, 24 Ala. 100, which appears to be the most frequently cited case in American jurisprudence on this particular point of constitutional law.

In disposing of the issue, Justice McClellan, speaking for the Supreme Court of Alabama, remarked [205 Ala. 386, 87 So. 380] :

“Upwards of 60 years ago this court had occasion to consider and to pronounce constitutional principles referable to the change by amendment of the organic law. The opinion then delivered by Justice Gold-thwaite established Collier v. Frierson, 24 Ala. 100, as a leading authority in our country on the subject under consideration. Many courts of the highest repute, as well as text-writers, have accorded the doctrine there announced the unreserved acceptance its obvious soundness deserves, and have given that pronouncement its own great place in the constitutional jurisprudence of the republic.”

Justice McClellan quoted approvingly from the decision in Collier v. Frierson as follows:

“We entertain no doubt, that, to change the constitution in any other mode than by a convention, every requisition which is demanded by the instrument itself must be observed, and the omission of any one is fatal to the amendment. We scarcely deem any argument necessary to enforce this proposition. The Constitution is the supreme and paramount law. The mode by which amendments are to be made under it is clearly defined. It has been said that certain acts are to be done, certain requisitions are to be observed, before a change can be effected. But to what purpose are these acts required, or these requisitions enjoined, if the Legislature, or any other department of the government, can dispense with them. To do so would be to violate the instrument which they are sworn to support, and every principle of public law and sound constitutional policy requires the courts to pronounce against every amendment, which is shown not to have been made in accordance with the rules prescribed by the fundamental law.”

The decision in Johnson v. Craft contains a complete review and analysis of the constitutional question involved.

In the later case of Hooper v. State, 206 Ala. 371, 89 So. 593, the legal principles announced in Johnson v. Craft were approved and adopted. In the Hooper case, a constitutional amendment proposing to exempt soldiers and sailors from the payment of poll taxes was declared invalid because the Legislature, instead of appointing the day on which the election should be held as required by the Constitution, delegated that duty to the Governor. The Court held this was so, notwithstanding the amendment had received a favorable vote at the election called by the Governor and that the soldiers and sailors had actually received the benefit of the exemption voted.

In the case of State v. State Board of Equalization, 107 Okl. 118, 230 P. 743, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma held that an election in which a proposed amendment to the constitution had been approved by a majority of the voters had no legal force and effect, because it had not been properly ordered in accordance with the provision of the constitution. It appears that, under the constitution of Oklahoma, if an amendment to the constitution is agreed to by a majority of the members of the Legislature, the amendment, with the yeas and nays thereon, should be entered in the legislative journals and referred by the Secretary of State to the people for their approval or rejection, at the next regular general election, except when the Legislature, by a two-thirds vote of each house, shall order a special election for that purpose. It was held that under this provision, although a majority of the members elected to each house of the Legislature agreed to the amendment, two-thirds of the membership had not ordered the amendment submitted' at a special election. It being conceded that the election at which the amendment was submitted was a special election, the Court held there was no authority of law for submitting the amendment at the election and that the affirmative vote of the people thereon did not cure the defect.

Counsel for the relators, in support of their argument on this ground of objection to the constitutionality of Act 384 of 1940, cite the case of Saunders v. Board of Liquidation of City Debt, 110 La. 313, 314, 34 So. 457. But that case is not authority for the proposition presently under discussion. An examination of the decision shows that the Legislature in proposing the constitutional amendment (Act 4 of 1899, Ex. Sess.), which was under consideration in that case, expressly provided that it should be submitted “to the electors of the State at the next general election for representatives in the Legislature, to be holden on the Tuesday next following the third Monday in April, A. D., 1900 * * *.”

Counsel for relators also cite four cases decided by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, to-wit: Armstrong v. King, 281 Pa. 207, 126 A. 263; Hollinger v. King, 282 Pa. 157, 127 A. 462; Taylor v. King, 284 Pa. 235, 130 A. 407, 408; and Ruler v. York County, 290 Pa. 427, 139 A. 136, 138.

Counsel for relators, in their brief, repeat certain language contained in the decision in Taylor v. King which is excerpted from the case of Armstrong v. King, to the effect that, although there may be a technical error in the manner in which a proposed amendment is adopted or advertised, yet if the amendment, unobjected to, be approved by the electors, it becomes a part of the constitution.

We have carefully read the cases cited. In using the language referred to by relators the authors of the opinions in both cases were merely indulging in a generality that had no actual bearing on the issues involved. The statements were pure obiter.

In Armstrong v. King [281 Pa. 207, 126 A. 264], the court had under consideration a proposed amendment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania which was attacked on the ground that it violated a portion of that constitution providing that “no amendment or amendments shall be submitted oftener than once in five years.” The court enjoined the secretary of the commonwealth from advertising the amendment for submission to the voters on the ground that it was violative of the quoted provision of the constitution. The court held that there was no doubt whatever as to the usual meaning of the constitutional prohibition and that contemporaneous and long-continued uniform interpretation of the provision by the Legislature and the state officials could not be invoked to give it a different meaning.

Taylor v. King is authority for the proposition that where the Legislature, after complying with constitutional requirements, proposed an amendment to the Constitution, it was the constitutional duty of the Secretary of State to advertise the proposal, and if he improperly refused to do so through the result of a misunderstanding as to his duty, the courts would require by mandamus that the duty be performed though it should be necessary, because of delay, to hold another election at a time later than that designated by the Legislature.

In Hollinger v. King, plaintiff filed a bill in equity to enjoin a certain state agency from purchasing part of a large bond issue, which the Governor proposed to sell under the provisions of a certain legislative act. The suit was to have the act declared invalid as a violation of Article 9, section 5, of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, P.S., and also to have the amendment to section 4 of Article 9 of the Constitution, P.S., under the provisions of which the bond issue was proposed to be made, declared illegal and void. The court enjoined the issuance of the bonds because no act of the Legislature had been passed authorizing the borrowing of the money and specifying the purpose for which it was to be used as required by section 5 of Article 9 of the Constitution. Incidentally, the court sustained the validity of the amendment to section 4 of Article 9 of the Constitution, which apparently'was attacked on the ground that it was submitted in a year, 1923, when such actions were forbidden by the organic law. Just what this prohibition was is not explained in the opinion.

In Ruler v. York County, a taxpayer of York County challenged the right of the county to issue the necessary bonds to raise its share of the money required to build an intercounty bridge across the Susquehanna River between the counties of Lancaster and York. There were three grounds of challenge, neither one of which involved a question as to the date of the election at which the voters approved the project of building the bridge.

There are a number of other cases cited in the briefs filed on behalf of the relators, but none of them have any bearing on the proposition we are now discussing.

This brings us to the consideration of the third ground of objection urged by respondents to Act 384 of 1940, that the statute violates the requirement of section 1 of Article 21 of the Constitution providing that: “When more than one amendment shall be submitted at the same election, they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately.”

Relators argue that there is no force in respondents’ objection, because Act 384 of 1940 represents a comprehensive plan for reorganizing the Executive Department of the State government, and therefore its submission as a single amendment was in full compliance with the constitutional requirement.

It requires no argument, nor citation of authorities to support the proposition that if the changes contained in the proposed amendment may be logically viewed as parts of a single plan then their submission as one amendment meets the constitutional requirement. But does Act 384 of 1940 fall within this well recognized rule? That is the question presented for decision. A proper understanding of the question can only be had by examining the provisions of the proposed amendment in the light of the constitutional provision which respondents claim its submission, in its present form, violates.

In State ex rel. Morris v. Mason, Secretary of State, 43 La.Ann. 590, 9 So. 776, it was held, as shown by paragraph seven of the syllabus by the Court, that: “Whether a proposed amendment contains provisions which cannot be submitted as one amendment must be construed and determined by a comparison thereof with the one-object article of the Constitution,” which was the article in the Constitution of 1879 providing that every law enacted by the Legislature shall express but one object.

In submitting Act 384 of 1940 to this test, we are first confronted with its title, which specifically points out the plural character of the proposed changes in the fundamental law. The title of the statute reads in part: “Proposing amendments to the Constitution of Louisiana, relative to the form of organization of the Executive Department of the State government and a unified and comprehensive system of financial administration, by articles and sections as follows: * * *.”

It will be readily observed that according to the title of Act 384 of 1940, the text thereof is to embrace proposed amendments and not merely one proposed amendment to the Constitution. The title of the statute also discloses that the object of the proposed amendments is to change not only the form of the State government, but also to establish a new system of financial administration.

It is true that, unlike a legislative act, it is not required that a title should precede a proposed amendment to the Constitution, nevertheless, there is no legal reason why it should not be given a title for identification and verification for the purpose of legislative action. It was so held in Saunders v. Board of Liquidation, 110 La. 313, at page 331, 34 So. 457, at page 464, in which case, the Court set forth its holding as follows:

“It is said that a title to an article amending a Constitution is a thing neither recognized nor required by law; that a title to an amendment would be entirely out of place. This may be true as to the form in which it should be submitted to the people for their vote at the polls, and also as to the form in which it should be made to appear when adopted; but no good reason can be assigned why the General Assembly should not, for the purposes of its own action or legislation, attach some designation to a bill or joint resolution proposing an amendment for the purposes of identification and reference. While a title might not be required, there is no reason why, if attached, it should not be utilized in connection with the proposition for an amendment for the purposes of the General Assembly itself.”

In Townsend v. Smith, 144 Ga. 792, 87 S.E. 1039, the Supreme Court of Georgia held that while a proposal by the Legislature of an amendment to the Constitution does not require a title, yet when the proposal is in the form of an act having a caption, it is legitimate to look to the caption as a means of construing the proposed amendment.

In State v. O’Connor, 81 Minn. 79, 83 N. W. 498, the Supreme Court of Minnesota held that although a title to an act of the Legislature proposing an amendment to the Constitution is not necessary to the validity of the act, nevertheless the title may be looked to when construing and interpreting the section of the Constitution to which it relates. In so holding, the Court stated that this was the universal rule and that the rule applies where no title is required. A number of authorities are cited by the court in support of its statement.

In view of these considerations and since the Legislature, although not required to do so, saw fit to attach a title to Act 384 of 1940, we see no reason why the title may not be referred to in order to ascertain generally the scope and object of the proposed changes in the Constitution.

The wording of the title is not only in the plural, but the wording appearing on the official ballot concerning Amendment No. 3 is also in the plural. The wording is as follows:

“For the proposed amendment to Article III, V, VI, VI-A, X, and XVI-A relative to the form of organization of the Executive Department of State government, and a unified and comprehensive system of financial administration.
“Against the proposed amendment to Article III, V, VI, VI-A, X, and XVI-A relative to the form of organization of the Executive Department of State government, and a unified comprehensive system of financial administration.”

While the form of the ballot does not limit the extent of a proposed constitutional amendment, it is significant that the form of the ballot prescribed in the proposed Amendment No. 3 (Act 384 of 1940), in line with the express language of the title of the Act, shows that the proposed amendment embraces more than one object. The proposed amendment itself indicates that it was intended to provide, and it does’ provide, in the language of relators, for the adoption of an Administrative Code (Act 47 of 1940) and a Fiscal Code (Act 48 of 1940).

In order to ascertain whether the provisions contained in the body of Act 384 of 1940 violate the constitutional prohibition against submitting more than one amendment in the same proposal, necessarily the entire text of the statute must be considered.

After analyzing the holdings in a number of earlier cases, Judge Lockwood, speaking for the Supreme Court of Arizona, in the case of Kerby v. Luhrs, 44 Ariz. 208, 36 P.2d 549, 554, 94 A.L.R. 1502, lays down the rule to be applied whether one or more than one constitutional amendment is covered by a proposition submitted, as follows:

“If the different changes contained in the proposed amendment all cover matters necessary to be dealt with in some manner, in order that the Constitution, as amended, shall constitute a consistent and workable whole on the general topic embraced in that part which is amended, and if, logically speaking, they should stand or fall as a whole, then there is but one amendment submitted. But, if any one of the propositions, although not directly contradicting the others, does not refer to such matters, or if it is not such that the voter supporting it would reasonably be expected to support the principle of the others, then there are in reality two or more amendments to be submitted, and the proposed amendment falls within the constitutional prohibition. Nor does the rule as stated unduly hamper the adoption of legitimate amendments to the Constitution. Such a document was presumably adopted deliberately, after careful preparation, as a harmonious and complete system of government. Changes suggested thereto should represent the free and mature judgment of the electors, so submitted that they cannot be constrained to adopt measures of which in reality they disapprove, in order to secure the enactment of others they earnestly desire.”

The rule, as stated by Judge Lockwood, represents a clarification of the test laid down in the case of State v. Timme, 54 Wis. 318, 11 N.W. 785, which is referred to in State v. Mason, supra, and is strongly relied on by relators in this case

In Kerby v. Luhrs, a proposed constitutional amendment, although dealing with the general subject of taxation, was said to be logrolling of the worse type and to violate both the spirit and letter of the constitution, where it contained three distinct propositions, no two of which were necessarily required for the proper operation of the third, namely, a proposition in regard to the method in which copper mines should be taxed, a provision in regard to the method of taxing public utility corporations, and a provision establishing a tax commission as a constitutional body which, in fact, would be independent of the regular executive and legislative, and, perhaps, of the judicial branches of the State government.

One of the cases referred to in Kerby v. Luhrs is McBee v. Brady, 15 Idaho 761, 100 P. 97, 101. There the Supreme Court of Idaho, citing ample authority in support of the ruling, held that a constitutional provision requiring that where two or more amendments are proposed, they shall be submitted in such manner that the electors shall vote for or against each of them separately, is mandatory. The Court, in discussing the constitutional requirement and the duty of the Legislature to comply therewith, made the following pertinent observation :

“This provision of the Constitution is a wise one, and is intended to prevent several inconsistent and conflicting propositions from being submitted to the voters in the same amendment, and forcing the voter to approve or reject such amendment as a whole. In other words, it prevents burdening a meritorious proposition with a vicious one, and alike prevents a vicious proposition from having the support of a meritorious one, and gives to the voter the right to have each separate proposition submitted to him in order that he may express his will for or against each separately without being compelled to accept a provision to which he is opposed in order to have adopted a provision which meets his favor.”

The amendment under review in McBee v. Brady provided for the repeal of two, and the amendment of five, sections of the Constitution, submitting five propositions, namely, to abolish the probate Court and extend the jurisdiction of the district court to all matters of probate, to provide for the election and appointment of judges, to provide for the salaries of judges, to provide for the terms of the courts, and a system of districts. The Court held that the propositions could not be submitted constitutionally to the electors as one amendment.

In Jones v. McClaughry, 169 Iowa 281, 151 N.W. 210, 216, the Supreme Court of Iowa explained the purpose of a constitutional requirement that when more than one amendment shall be submitted at the same election, they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately. The Court stated that the purpose of such a constitutional requirement was “to exact the submission of each amendment upon its merits alone, and thereby secure the free and independent expression of the will of the people thereon. Incongruous matter and that having no connection with the main subject is excluded, and the evil of loading a meritorious proposition with another of doubtful propriety obviated. The elector in approving or rejecting cannot be put in a position where he may be compelled, in order to aid in carrying a proposition, also to vote for another which, if separately submitted, he would reject.”

Numerous cases from other jurisdictions are cited on behalf of relators in which the general rule has been laid down that a constitutional amendment embracing several subjects all of which are germane to the general subject of the amendment, under the requirement for separate submission where more than one amendment is proposed, may be submitted to people as a general proposition.

The question in this case is not whether the rule is sound, but whether it is applicable to the proposed amendment under review by the Court.

From our own jurisprudence, counsel for relators have selected as cases in point, State v. Mason, 43 La.Ann. 590, 9 So. 776; State v. Favre, 51 La.Ann. 434, 25 So. 93; and Guillory v. Jones, 197 La. 165, 1 So. 2d 65.

In the Mason case, a constitutional amendment having for its one object the extension of a lottery contract for a primary term of twenty-five years, the consideration therefor to be applied to various enumerated objects, was upheld as having a single object. The suit was for a mandamus to compel the secretary of state to publish the proposed amendment. In a court, composed of the Chief Justice and four Associate Justices, there were 'two concurring and two dissenting opinions. As pointed out in East Jefferson Waterworks District v. Caldwell & Co., 170 La. 326, 120 So. 739, the suit was filed and decided at a time of widespread political excitement in the State. In the Favre case the defendant, indicted for murder, attacked as illegal the Constitution of 1898, on the ground that the instrument framed by the Constitutional Convention of 1898 was a mere amendment to the Constitution of 1879, which had not been submitted to the people for ratification or rejection. The Court held that there was no basis for the attack on the Constitution of 1898; that in its opinion the instrument was exactly what it purports to be, the Constitution, and not an amendment to an existing constitution. In the Guillory case, the proposed changes referred only to a single section and a single article of the Constitution.

Neither in the Mason case nor in the Favre case, nor in the Guillory case, nor in any other case to which we have been referred, has this Court, or any other court, construed the constitutional provision requiring that “when more than one amendment shall be submitted at the same election, they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately,” to mean that the Legislature may submit to the people, under the guise of one amendment, a group of amendments bearing no relation to one another and proposing wholly different objects and purposes.

An analysis of the provisions of Act 384 of 1940 shows that the act embodies a plurality of objects and purposes. It affects six articles of the Constitution by repealing twenty sections, amending and rewriting eight sections, and adding seventeen new sections.

The twenty articles which the legislative act proposes to repeal are referred to merely by numbers, no indication whatever being given as to what the articles cover. Reference to the Constitution itself discloses that three of these sections are in Article III governing the Legislative Department; five of the sections are in Article VI covering Administrative Offices and Boards; one of the sections is Article VI-A relating to Gasoline Taxes and the Distribution of the Proceeds; and ten sections are in and constitute the whole of Article XVI-A relating to the reparation claims connected with the Caernarvon Levee Break in St. Barnard Parish; four of the proposed new sections are in Article III, the Legislative Department; nine are in Article V, relating to the Executive Department; and four are in Article VI-A. Of the rewritten sections, three are in Article V; three are in Article VI, one in Article VI-A and one is in Article X relating to Revenue and Taxation.

Generally speaking, Act 384 of 1940 proposes amendments relative to the form of organization of the executive Department and a unified and comprehensive system of financial administration, that is to say, it .provides for the adoption of an administrative and a financial code in violation of the constitutional provision embodied in section 18 of Article 3 against the Legislature adopting any code of laws by general reference to such code.

The proposal embraces an executive cabinet, military affairs, conservation, public works, public safety, public welfare, public service, public education, highways, health, hanking, labor, agriculture, occupational standards, state lands, state records, financing, accounting, taxation, state institutions, and other subjects.

Specifically speaking, it abolishes the Legislative Bureau, which is an aid to the Legislature and wholly disconnected with the operation of the Executive Department. It makes the Lieutenant Governor and the State Auditor members of the Legislative Department.

The first part of Act 384 of 1940 appearing in the printed volume of the Acts of 1940, on page 1431, and subsequent pages, up to and including the repeal of section 12 of Article VI-A on page 1440, deals exclusively with the reorganization of the Executive Department of the State, and the remaining part of Act 384 of 1940, appearing in the printed Acts of 1940 from page 1440 to the end of the act, deals exclusively with the State’s system of financial administration. That these propositions involve distinct objects is amply shown by the language used in the proposal itself.

It is significant that section 29, which is a new section added to Article V of the Constitution, provides for the ratification and validating of any law adopted at the legislative session to be held in 1940, the purpose or effect of which is to provide for the plan of reorganization as required by the proposal, and that section 18, which is a new section added to Article VI-A of the Constitution, provides for the ratification and validating of any law to be adopted at the legislative session of 1940 affecting the financial system of the State. Manifestly, if its framers considered that the proposal embraces but one subject, they would not have written into the proposal two articles providing for the ratification in advance of any legislative act relating to that subject when only one such provision would have accomplished that purpose. Furthermore, it required two separate and distinct acts of the Legislature to carry out the provisions of the proposed amendment. Act 47 of 1940, which in its first section, declares that it was to be known as, “the ‘Administrative Code of 1940,’ ” was enacted for the purpose of reorganizing the Executive Department of the State. Act 48 of 1940, which in its first section, declares that it shall be known as “The Fiscal Code of 1940,” provides for a unified and comprehensive system of financial administration. Nothing is said in Act 47 of 1940 about a unified and comprehensive system of financial administration. Nothing is said in Act 48 of 1940 about the reorganization of the Executive Department. Thus it is clearly shown that each proposition was distinct from the other and either could have been submitted to the people and voted upon without affecting the other.

Further examination of the provisions of Act 384 of 1940 shows, among other things, that the Act proposes to abolish the State Advisory Board and the State Board of Liquidation. The State Advisory Board was created by section 22 of Article VI of the Constitution. No attempt is made by Act 384 of 1940 to expressly repeal that article and section. The proposal provides merely that the State Advisory Board shall be abolished. The State Board of Liquidation was created by a legislative act and is abolished merely by name in the proposed amendment.

In addition to abolishing the Legislative Bureau and making the Lieutenant Governor, except when acting as Governor, and the State Auditor members of the Legislative Department, the proposed amendment in effect nullifies the right given by the Constitution to the Legislature to control appropriations necessary for carrying on the State government. The performance of this purely Legislative function is subordinated to the will of an agent of the Executive Department. As illustrative of this, we find from the testimony in the record that Mr. Jerome A. Hayes, while serving in the capacity of Acting Budget Officer under the authority of Act 48 of 1940, reduced certain appropriations which the Legislature had made directly to certain State agencies. Among the State agencies whose appropriations were reduced is the Charity Hospital at New Orleans. The Legislature, for the fiscal year of 1940-41, appropriated for the hospital the sum of $4,233,000. Hayes ordered the appropriation reduced to $3,-715,915.90, or a total reduction of $517,-084.10. From this it appears that although the Legislature, a department of government, independent of the Executive Department, exercising its constitutional right, appropriated a certain amount for the purpose of operating the Charity Hospital for a certain fiscal year, the Acting Budget Officer, created by one of the Legislative Acts adopted under the authority of the proposed constitutional amendment, took from the legislative appropriation an amount exceeding a half million dollars.

We might refer to other proposals contained in Act 384 of 1940 to show that they relate to more than one object, but, because of lack of time and space, we shall refrain from doing this, and shall end our discussion on this phase of the case with only one more apt illustration which shows that the proposals embrace at least two distinct and separate objects, not dependent upon nor connected with each other.

At the end of the proposed amendment immediately preceding the proposed section 8 relative to the official ballot to be used at the election for the approval or rejection of the amendment, appears the following: “Section 7. Article XVI-A, in its entirety, including the introductory clauses and Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, and 10, thereof, is hereby repealed.”

The proposal as written conveys no information whatever to the reader. A proper understanding of its meaning can be had by reference only to the Constitution itself. When the Constitution is referred to, it discloses that Article XVI-A appears under the caption “Caernarvon [Levee] Break — Reparation Claims.” This article became a part of the Constitution by the adoption of amendments in 1927 and 1928 to meet the emergency with which the City of New Orleans was confronted by reason of the unusual height attained by the waters of the Mississippi River. A section of the levee below the City of New Orleans was blown up so as to provide an additional outlet for the waters of the river and to lower the threatening stage of the waters at the City and thus save it from a disastrous flood. The result of this action is what became known as the Caernarvon Crevasse. The crevasse caused considerable damage to property situated in the parishes below the City of New Orleans and Article XVI-A was embodied in the Constitution for the purpose of setting up the machinery and method for compensating property owners for their losses. The constitutional amendment provided the conditions under which such payments should be made, established a reparations committee to consider and determine claims for reparations for damages arising from the creation of the Caernarvon artificial crevasse and authorized and directed the Orleans Levee Board to levy a special tax each year, beginning with the year 1928, in order to provide funds for the above purposes, to capitalize the tax, and to issue bonds, and dedicating the proceeds of the tax to the payment of the principal and interest of the bonds until all the bonds shall have been paid in full.

Under the authority and as directed by the constitutional article, the Orleans Levee Board issued bonds of the value of several millions of dollars and annually levied a tax on the property owners of the City of New Orleans for the purpose of paying the principal and interest due on the bonds. Apparently, due to the low-interest market, the Legislature, at the Third Extra Session of 1934, adopted Act 28, authorizing the Levee Board to refinance the bond issue in question. In December 1936, acting under the authority of this legislative act, the Orleans Levee Board refunded outstanding bonds to the amount of $3,387,000. The refunding operation resulted in a litigation that finally reached this Court. See Tonry v. Board of Levee Commissioners, 186 La. 159, 171 So. 836, 838.

The effect of the decree of this Court, affirming the judgment of the district court in the Tonry case, was to assure the holders of the refunding bonds that these bonds were as fully protected as were the original bonds by the guarantees of Article XVI-A of the Constitution, This Court, in a unanimous decision, quoted with approval the following language appearing in the opinion of the trial judge: “It is a substitution of the new bonds for the old bonds with the same obligations and the same liabilities and the same source provided by law for liquidating the debt.”

The Court, which, in the exercise of its proper judicial function, assured the holders of the municipality’s obligations that those obligations were constitutionally secured and protected, is now asked to declare that by the adoption of an amendment illegally submitted the obligors can repudiate their obligations by destroying “the source provided by law for liquidating the debt.” This the Court must decline to do.

Counsel for relators insist that the repeal of Article XVI-A was necessary, because it represented so much “dead wood” in the Executive Department, and it was “in complete accord with the unity of purpose of the Reorganization Amendment, and entirely fits into the scheme thereof.”

It is difficult to understand counsel’s insistence on this point. They concede, as they must concede, that Article XVI-A is in full force and effect to the extent that it directs that taxes must be levied annually for the purpose of paying the principal and interest of the bonds issued by the Orleans Levee Board and that such levy and collection of taxes must continue until the final liquidation of all the bonds, which will be many years hence. This concession destroys the force of their argument. Apart from this, it is plain that the repeal of Article XVI-A has no connection whatever with the establishment of an administrative code or a fiscal code, or with the abolishment of the Legislative Bureau, or the making of the Lieutenant Governor and the State Auditor members of the Legislative Department, or with any number of other provisions embraced in the proposed amendment.

Counsel for relators argue that a new section, which the amendment proposes to add to Article VI-A as section 17, embraces a saving clause which is sufficient to maintain Article XVI-A in effect. The argument is not sound.

Article VI-A, as it appears in the Constitution, refers to the general subject of Gasoline Taxes for Ports and Schools. Section 17, which it is proposed to add to Article VI-A, reads as follows:

“Section 17. Any law heretofore adopted, the purpose or effect of which is to prescribe uniform requirements or procedures with respect to any matter of financial administration as herein defined, and with respect to all agencies of the State without distinction, except any distinction made necessary by provisions of this Constitution, shall be given full force and effect, without any such exception or other restriction, any provision of this Constitution to the contrary notwithstanding.”

A mere reading of the proposed new section 17 discloses that it refers ex-, clusively to those laws which prescribe uniform requirements or procedures with respect to matters of financial administration. It has no bearing on the bonded in--debtedness of the State or of any of its subdivisions. By no stretch of the imagination can it be construed to save Article XVI-A, the repeal of which was so carefully provided by the framers of the proposed amendment. The proposal not only calls for the repeal of Article XVI-A in its entirety including its introductory clauses, but it meticulously provides for the repeal by number of each section of Article XVI-A, including section 9 which imposes the duty on the Orleans Levee Board to issue the Reparation Bonds and to levy annually a special tax for the payment of the principal and interest of the bonds, for which purpose the proceeds of the special tax are expressly dedicated.

Counsel for relators assume that respondents are questioning the validity of the bonds issued by the Orleans Levee Board, and they say this can not be done, since respondents’ suit was brought more than thirty days after the bonds were issued. The assumption is not warranted by the record. Respondents’ suit is calculated to preserve the integrity of the bonds and not to impair it, as is sought to be done by the proposed repeal of Article XVI-A. As we understand it, the purpose of respondents in directing attention to the proposed repeal of Article XVI-A is to demonstrate the merit of their contention that the proposed amendment violates the constitutional requirement for the separate submission of amendments to the electors. Article XVI-A constitutes independent legislation which was approved by the people, acting to avert a calamity with which they were threatened. The question of its repeal, if it is desired, which is unthinkable, should be submitted to the people as a separate and distinct proposition. It should not be confused with nor merged in any other proposition.

If this Court should hold that Act 384 of 1940 was constitutionally adopted, the serious result would be to revoke the authority of the Orleans Levee Board to annually levy a special tax and of the State Treasurer to use the avails of the tax for the establishment of a sinking fund and for the payment of the principal and interest of the obligations issued by the Levee Board under Article XVI-A. It is easy to visualize that such an undesirable result would seriously affect not only the credit of the Orleans Levee Board but also the credit of the state itself. We are satisfied that the voters of this State, in approving Act 384 of 1940, did not contemplate or intend to repeal Article XVI-A of the Constitution, thereby destroying, or attempting to destroy, the contract rights of numerous institutions and persons based thereon.

The answer of relators contains a plea of estoppel made in the alternative. The plea is founded on relators’ contention that respondents should have urged their complaint to the validity of the proposed amendment prior to the time of its submission, and not having done so, it is too late for them to complain after the amendment has become effective by the vote of the people. But respondents could not know in advance that the proposed amendment would be approved. If it had been rejected, the question of whether it was constitutional or not would have been unimportant. In submitting the amendment to the vote of the people, the Legislature violated two mandatory provisions of the Constitution itself. Therefore, the amendment was submitted and adopted in contravention of express constitutional prohibitions. An estoppel may not be invoked to validate a proceeding which is invalid per se. By merely remaining passive for a few months after its adoption and promulgation, respondents did not es-top themselves from maintaining an action to contest the validity of the proposed amendment.

A party is not estopped to insist upon his constitutional rights by waiting until a law is passed or a regulation is made. San Joaquin & K. R. C. & I. Co. v. Stanislaus County, 233 U.S. 454, 34 S.Ct. 652, 58 L.Ed. 1041. There are cases where a party may be estopped by reason of his failure to assert a right. Counsel for re-lators cite a number of these cases in which the courts have held that certain technical errors of procedure committed by the legislatures in presenting constitutional amendments were not sufficient to invalidate the amendments, if, unobjected to, they were approved by-the electors. But this is not such a case. Among the cases cited by re-lators are the Louisiana cases of Board of Liquidation v. Whitney-Central Trust & Savings Bank, 168 La. 560, 122 So. 850, and Saunders v. Board of Liquidation of City Debt, 110 La. 313, 314, 34 So. 457, 458.

In the Whitney Bank case, the sole question presented for decision, as shown by the opinion, was the complaint that the legislative proposal, as amended in the Senate, was not concurred in by two-thirds of the membership of the House. The Court found as a fact that there had been no true amendment of the proposal, since the so-called amendment related solely to diction, grammatical construction, and punctuation, which in no wise affected its substance.

It is significant to note that in the Saunders case Act 4 of 1899, Ex.Sess., which was under construction there, embraced only a single object and the Legislature expressly designated the date of the election at which the proposal was to be submitted to the electors for their approval or rejection. The only objection urged to the proposed amendment in that case was that there was not a reading in full of the proposed amendment on three separate days in each House, but only one full reading and two readings by title. This Court found that the wording of the constitutional requirement was “have been read,” and not “have been read in full,” and that according to the legislative practice, the reading complained of was sufficient. In passing upon the question involved, the author of the opinion expressed himself as follows: “The two important, vital elements in any constitutional amendment are the assent of two-thirds of the Legislature and a majority of the popular vote. Beyond these, other provisions are of mere machinery and forms. They may not be disregarded, because by them certainty as to essentials is secured. ’ But they are not themselves essentials.” Using these words as a basis for the statement, counsel for relators say: “The very least that can be said for the Amendment in question is that the assent of two-thirds of the Legislature and a majority of the popular vote having been obtained, the Amendment is valid and subsisting.”

As we have shown, the only question before the Court in the Saunders case was the construction to be given to the three words, “have been read,” in connection with the reading of the amendment in both houses. The Court did not have before it the question of the failure of the Legislature to obey the constitutional requirement that when more than one amendment is submitted at the same election, the amendment shall be submitted so as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately. Both requirements, the one providing for a two-thirds vote of the Legislature, and the other providing for the separate submission when more than one amendment is proposed, appear in section 1 of Article 21 of the Constitution. One is as essential as the other to the proper submission of the proposed amendment.

The correct view concerning' the constitutional requirement for the proposal and adoption of constitutional amendments was broadly expressed by this Court in State ex rel. Bahns v. City of New Orleans, 163 La. 777, 112 So. 718, 720: “The Constitution, by section 1, article 21, expressly points out when and how amendments to the Constitution may be proposed and considered by the Legislature, and adopted by a vote of the people, when so submitted. The manner of proposing and adopting amendments to the Constitution as thus provided is exclusive. The Constitution cannot be altered, changed, affected, or amended in any other manner, unless express and direct permission is given to the Legislature by the Constitution itself.”

According to section 1 of article 21 of the Constitution, five elements are indispensable to give validity to a proposed constitutional amendment. They are: The assent of two-thirds of the Legislature, the submission of only one amendment in each proposal, the designation by the Legislature of the date of the election at which the submission shall take place, the publication of the proposed amendment, and a majority of the popular vote. Each of these essentials is as important as the other. In the absence of any one of them, the proposed amendment is without legal effect.

The requirement, established in a number of states, that when more than one amendment is submitted to the electorate at the same election, such amendments must be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each separately, is one indication of a .recognition of the seriousness of the matter of making changes in the fundamental law. The purpose of such a constitutional provision is to prevent voters from being required to vote for something which they disapprove in order to register approval of the other propositions tied up therewith. 11 American Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law, sec. 31, p. 635.

This brings us to the consideration of the final, and apparently the most seriously relied on, argument made on behalf of the relators. The argument is, that the people themselves, by an overwhelming majority, have approved Act 384 of 1940, submitted to them as Amendment No. 3, and that if there are any defects in the submission and adoption of the amendment, those defects have been cured by such approval.

At the outset of the discussion arising upon this argument, it may be remarked that the majority in favor of Amendment No. 3 was not so overwhelming as counsel for relators would have it appear. According to the returns of the election, as reported by the commissioners, the majority in favor of the amendment was only 6,667 votes in a total of 274,419 votes cast on the amendment.

Mr. Cooley, the most eminent writer on Constitutions and the jurisprudence which makes them effective, has said:

“The theory of our political system is that the ultimate sovereignty is in the people, from whom springs all legitimate authority. The people of the Union created a national constitution, and conferred upon it powers of sovereignty over certain subjects, and the people of each State created a State government, to exercise the remaining powers of sovereignty so far as they were disposed to allow them to be exercised at all. By the constitution which they establish, they not only tie up the hands of their official agencies, but their ozvn hands as well; and neither the officers of the State, nor the whole people as an aggregate body, are at liberty to take action in opposition to this fundamental law.” Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 8th Edition, Vol. I, p. 81. (Writer’s italics.)

The general rule governing the restraints which the people have placed in their Constitution upon themselves, their officers, agents and representatives, is set forth in 16 C.J.S., Constitutional Law, § 7, in the following language :

“Provisions of a constitution regulating its own amendment, * * * are not merely directory, but are mandatory; and a strict observance of every substantial requirement is essential to the validity of the proposed amendment. These provisions are as binding on the people as on ihe legislature; and the former are powerless by their vote of acceptance to give legal sanction to an amendment the submission of which was made in disregard of the limitations contained in the constitution.” (Writer’s italics.)

The above rule has been announced and followed in a number of cases decided by both federal and state courts. Thus, in Duncan v. McCall, 139 U.S. 449, 11 S.Ct. 573, 576, 577, 35 L.Ed. 219, to which we have hereinabove referred, the Supreme Court of the United States, speaking through Chief Justice Fuller, declared that: “ * * * while the people are thus the source of political power, their governments, national and state, have been limited by written constitutions, and they have themselves thereby set the bounds to their own power, as against the sudden impulses of mere majorities.” (Writer’s italics.)

In disposing of the argument that a favorable vote by the electorate on a proposal to amend the constitution cures antecedent failures to observe the commands of the constitution with respect to the formulation or submission of such proposals, the Supreme Court of Alabama, in the case of Johnson v. Craft, 205 Ala. 386, 87 So. 375, 387, to which we have hereinabove referred, on rehearing, declared: “The people themselves are bound by the Constitution ; and, being so bound, are powerless, whatever their numbers, to change or thwart its mandates, except through the peaceful means of a constitutional convention, or of amendment according to the mode therein prescribed, or through the exertion of the original right of revolution. ‘The Constitution may be set aside by revolution, but it can only be amended in the way it provides,’ said Hobson, C. J., in McCreary v. Speer, 156 Ky. 783, 791, 162 S.W. 99, 103.”

The question under discussion was also considered by the Supreme Court of Iowa in Koehler v. Hill, 60 Iowa 543, 14 N.W. 738, 741, 15 N.W. 609. The court, in holding that a proposed constitutional amendment improperly submitted was not validated by the favorable vote of the electors, expressed itself in these words: “It matters not if not only every elector, but every adult person in the state, should desire and vote for an amendment to the constitution, it cannot be recognized as valid unless such vote was had in pursuance of, and in substantial accord with, the requirements of the constitution.” To the same effect, see Oakland Paving Co. v. Hilton, 69 Cal. 479, 11 P. 3, where the rule announced in the Koehler case was thoroughly discussed and approved by the Supreme Court of California.

We know of no textwriter on Constitutional Law, nor of any decision by the highest court of any of the states that questions the soundness of the above mentioned rule. On the contrary, every well-recognized authority and every decision on the subject concede, not only the soundness of, but the absolute necessity for, the rule that once the people have agreed on the method to be followed in effecting changes in their fundamental law, they are powerless to alter the terms of their agreement except in the manner provided in the agreement itself.

Jameson, in his work on Constitutional Conventions, which was approved by Cooley in his work on Constitutional Limitations, in discussing those clauses of the constitution which prohibit their amendment except in the ways and modes prescribed, after stating that, “restriction is really the policy and the law of the country,” also states: “The idea of the people thus restricting themselves in making changes in their Constitutions is original, and is one of the most signal evidences that amongst us liberty means, not the giving of rein to passion or to thoughtless impulse, but the exercise of power by the people for the general good, and, therefore, always under the restraints of law.”

It is asserted on behalf of relators that if this Court maintains respondents’ contentions, it will be the first time in its history the Court has held that a constitutional amendment, approved by the vote of the people, is unconstitutional. But everything must have a first time, as is forcibly illustrated by the fact that it is the first time a proposal, embracing such a drastic change in our fundamental law, as the one under review, has been submitted to the voters. It is also the first time that the Legislature, in submitting a proposed constitutional amendment, has failed to comply with two of the essential requirements of the Constitution itself.

While this Court never has had occasion to declare a constitutional amendment unconstitutional, it has had occasion to declare unconstitutional a clause embraced in a Constitution regularly adopted by a Convention called by the Legislature for that purpose, subject to certain restrictions set forth in the legislative act. The Constitution in question was the Constitution of this State adopted in the year 1913. Article 190 of the Constitution of 1913 amended and re-enacted Article 190 of the preceding Constitution of 1898.

Article 190 of the Constitution of 1913 was attacked as unconstitutional in the case of State v. American Sugar Refining Co., 137 La. 407, 68 So. 742. The suit was one instituted by the district attorney for the Parish of Orleans, acting under the instructions of the Governor of the State of Louisiana, against the American Sugar Refining Company, because of its alleged long and persistent violation of the anti-trust and anti-monopoly laws of the State of Louisiana and particularly of its conspiring to force down the price of raw sugar, an important agricultural product of the State, and to enhance the price of refined sugar for purely speculative purposes.

The ground of attack on the constitutional article was that it enlarged the duties of the district attorney in violation of the constitutional prohibition against changing the provisions of existing laws relating to or affecting the term of office, duties, or compensation of any existing officer. Notwithstanding it is a well settled rule of constitutional law that the authority of the constitutional convention is plenary, even though, as is held in many jurisdictions, the statute providing for it undertakes to limit its powers, this Court held that Article 190 of the Constitution of 1913 was invalid so far as it attempted to authorize the district attorney to institute the suit on the part of the state. The basis of the decision was that under the law as then existing, the district attorney had no authority to represent the State, except in criminal cases, and that neither the Governor nor the Attorney General, by directing him to institute the suit, could enlarge his powers.

Hall v. Godchaux, 149 La. 733, 90 So. 145, 150, presents a case where this Court, disregarding the majority vote of the electorate, refused to uphold the nomination of the democratic candidate to fill a vacancy on this Court. In that case, Judge Godchaux received a substantial majority of the votes cast, which, in the absence of a contest, would have made him the party nominee. However, his right to the nomination was challenged by one of his opponents, on the ground that he was not a qualified elector as required by the Constitution and laws of this State. Plaintiff alleged that Judge Godchaux was a resident of Pass Christian, Mississippi. Judge God-chaux, on the other hand, asserted that he only maintained a summer home at Pass Christian and that his legal domicile was in the City of New Orleans. While not holding that Judge Godchaux was a resident of Mississippi, this Court held that he was not a qualified elector of this State, and, therefore, he was “precluded from receiving the nomination for the place which he seeks.”

The Court, in passing upon defendant’s contention that plaintiff was without right to contest the nomination, expressed itself as follows: “We think it could hardly be said that one who was in no wise eligible, either because of his residence or of having in no sense otherwise complied with the law by filing his declaration, etc., but had induced the Secretary of State to print his name on the ticket at the last moment, would be immune to a suit of this character, even though he received a majority of the qualified votes." (Writer’s italics.)

If the vote of the people in that case was not sufficient to validate Judge Godchaux’s nomination, by the same token the vote of the people in this case was not sufficient to validate the proposed constitutional amendment.

Our apology for this lengthy opinion is to be found in the importance of the questions presented — questions which so vitally affect the organic law of this State and the relationship that exists among all the departments of the state government. The reluctance of the Court to declare an ordinary enactment of the Legislature void, because it is in conflict with the Constitution, is intensified in a situation like this which requires the Court to declare an attempted constitutional amendment invalid, because it was not proposed in conformity to the fundamental law. In the determination of the difficult and delicate questions presented, this Court is animated solely by the desire to discharge its solemn duty to enforce the Constitution as the paramount law — a law which is as binding on the Court as it is on the Executive Officers, the members of the Legislature, and the people themselves.

Our conclusion is that Act 384 of 1940 is without effect, because it was not constitutionally adopted, and therefore the trial judge was warranted in issuing the preliminary injunction under review here.

For the reasons assigned, the rule nisi issued herein is discharged, the stay order rendered in connection therewith is recalled, and relators’ application is dismissed.

O’NIELL, C. J., and ODOM, J., dissenting.

O’NIELL, Chief Justice

(dissenting).

After a constitutional amendment has been proposed and submitted to the people by a vote of not less than two-thirds of the members elected to each house of the Legislature, and after the amendment has been adopted by a majority of the people voting in a general election held throughout the State, no court of justice should have authority to annul the amendment on the ground that there was an error or omission in the procedure preceding the submission of the amendment to the people, or on the ground that the amendment should have been proposed and adopted in the form of two or more amendments, instead of being proposed and adopted as one amendment.

The constitutional amendment which is being annulled by this decision — and which was introduced in the Legislature as House Bill No. 968, and became Act No. 384 of 1940 — received not only the required two-thirds vote but almost a unanimous vote in both the Senate and the House of Representatives. The House calendar on pages 408 and 409 shows that the vote in the House of Representatives, on final passage of this proposed constitutional amendment, was 90 yeas to no nays. And the Senate calendar on pages 466 and 467 shows that the vote in the Senate, on final passage of the bill as amended, was 35 yeas to 3 nays. And when the bill as amended came back to the House it was adopted unanimously —by a vote of 79 yeas to no nays. This proposed amendment, with twenty-seven other proposed amendments which were adopted at the same session of the Legislature, was published by the Secretary of State in sixty-four local newspapers throughout the State, with the announcement that the proposed amendment would be submitted to the voters for their approval or rejection at the election to be held on November 5, 1940. The publication was made twice within the period not less than thirty days nor more than sixty days previous to the election; and the publication appeared in the sixty-four local newspapers published, respectively, in each and every one of the sixty-four parishes in the State, as provided in Article 21 of the Constitution. Every voter in the State, therefore, knew or had every possible opportunity to know that this proposed constitutional amendment, with the twenty-seven other proposed amendments, would be submitted to the voters for their approval or rejection at the general election to be held on November 5, 1940.

My understanding of Article 21 of the Constitution is that proposed constitutional amendments cannot be submitted to the electors for their approval or rejection at any other election except “an election for Representative in the Legislature or in Congress.” That seems quite certain from the requirement that the publication of all proposed ’ constitutional amendments in every parish in which a newspaper is published shall be made twice within not less than thirty days nor more than sixty days “preceding an election for Representative in the Legislature or in Congress.” The inference from this is that if the Legislature does not designate some other general state election or general congressional election, the constitutional amendment shall be submitted at the next general election after the Legislature adjourns, whether that election be an election for Representatives in the Legislature or an election for Representatives in Congress. There would be no reason for requiring that a constitutional amendment shall be published not less than thirty days nor more than sixty days preceding a general state election or congressional election unless the requirement means that the publication shall be made not less than thirty days nor more than sixty days preceding the general state election or congressional election at which the amendment is to be submitted to the electors for their approval or rejection. The session at which the Legislature adopted the joint resolution proposing the constitutional amendment which we are now considering adjourned on July 11, 1940. The next election for representatives in the Legislature or in Congress was the presidential election held on November 5, 1940. If the constitutional amendments which were proposed in the session of the Legislature of 1940 had not been submitted to the electors at that election, the amendments could not have been submitted for a period of two years thereafter; that is, until the congressional election to be held in November, 1942.

The Secretary of State therefore knew —just as everybody else knew — -that the election at which all of the twenty-eight proposed constitutional amendments were to be submitted to the people for their adoption or rejection was the congressional or presidential election to be held on November 5, 1940. That is why the Sec-retar y of State published all of the twenty-eight proposed amendments with the declaration that they would be submitted to the voters at the congressional election to be held on November 5, 1940.

If the Secretary of State had withheld this proposed amendment from the batch of twenty-eight proposed amendments, and had published to the world that this proposed amendment would be submitted to the voters at some other election than that at which the twenty-seven other amendments were to be submitted, the action of the Secretary of State, with regard to this amendment, would have been wrong, and subject to complaint, if not in fact fraudulent. But the Secretary of State submitted this amendment at the election which — no one can doubt — the Legislature would have designated if the Legislature had not neglected accidentally to designate the election. It is said in the prevailing opinion in this case that the reason why the date of the election was omitted by the Legislature “is left purely to conjecture, since the record is silent on the point”. I have no doubt whatever that the omission was an accident. It is not conceivable that this omission was made for the purpose of deceiving the electors, "or for the purpose of giving to some dissatisfied taxpayer a cause for enjoining the submission of the proposed amendment to a vote of the people, or for the purpose of giving the Secretary of State an excuse for refusing, if he should see fit to refuse, to submit this proposed amendment to the voters for their approval or rejection.

The record discloses — and it is conceded in the prevailing opinion in this case — that the total number of votes cast for or against this amendment was 274,-419, and that there was a majority of 6,667 votes cast in favor of the amendment; the vote being 140,543 for and 133,-876 against the amendment. The fact that the majority in favor of the amendment was comparatively small is a matter of no importance except perhaps to show that the voters manifested a keen interest in this amendment. The important fact is that the total number of votes cast for or against the amendment was far above the average total number of votes cast for or against all of the amendments that were adopted at that election. This amendment was No. 3 on the ballot. The average total number of votes cast for or against each amendment that was adopted on that day was 268,494; which was 5,925 votes less than the total number of votes cast for or against amendment No. 3. The total number of votes cast for or against amendment No. 3 was greater than the total number of votes cast for or against any other amendment adopted at that election, except three amendments, namely, No-. 1, No. 2 and No. 5. No 1 was the amendment which abolished the poll tax registration; No. 2 was the amendment adopting the Civil Service System; and No. 5 was the amendment reducing the license tax on motor vehicles from $15 to $3. The total number of votes cast for or against amendment No. 3 is highly important because it shows how unimportant was the omission of the Legislature to designate the date of the election in the amendment. Nobody would have observed the date in the amendment if it had been there. And it is certain that nobody was deprived of his right to vote for or against this amendment by the neglect of the Legislature to designate the date of the election in the amendment itself. For that reason the complaint of the six taxpayers in this case that the Legislature failed to designate the date of the election in this constitutional amendment would not be a sufficient cause of action even if the suit had been brought to enjoin the submission of the amendment.

The other ground on which the court is now annulling this constitutional amendment is the charge that the Legislature, in submitting the amendment, violated this provision in Article 21 of the Constitution, namely:

“When more than one amendment shall be submitted at the same election, they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately.”

That does not mean that each and every change that may be made in an amendment of the Constitution shall be the subject of a separate and distinct proposal, or separate joint resolution of the two Houses of the Legislature. It means, primarily, that, when two or more proposed amendments, or joint resolutions, appear on the same ballot, they must be arranged so that a voter can vote for or against any one of them separately. It is generally conceded by the courts that the spirit of this provision in the Constitution may be violated if two or more separate and independent changes are submitted in one proposal, or one joint resolution. And in such cases the courts may correct the error if it is complained of by way of an injunction to prevent the Secretary of State from printing the proposed amendment on the official ballot, as in the case of Kerby v. Luhrs, 44 Ariz. 208, 36 P.2d 549, 94 A.L.R. 1502, or if the Secretary of State makes the complaint in defense of a mandamus suit to compel him to print the proposed amendment on the official ballot, as in the case of State ex rel. Morris v. Mason, Secretary of State, 43 La.Ann. 590, 9 So. 776.

But the members of the Legislature, first of all, and necessarily, must exercise their judgment, when several changes in the provisions of the Constitution are proposed to be made at one time, and must decide whether the several proposed changes in the Constitution are so dependent upon each other that they ought to be submitted as one amendment, or are so independent and disconnected that they ought to be submitted as separate amendments. And when the Legislature has decided, in any given case, by the vote of two-thirds or more of the members of each House of the Legislature, that it is better that a proposed amendment should be submitted as only one amendment, and not as two or more separate amendments — and when a majority of the people by their votes have ratified and affirmed that decision — -no court of justice should have the right to question the wisdom of it.

We had that question before us less than four months ago, in the case of Isom J. Guillory v. Governor Jones, decided on the 3d day of March, and reported in 197 La. 165, 1 So.2d 65. Judge Guillory sued to annul a constitutional amendment which was adopted at the same election at which the amendment which is now being annulled was adopted. One of Judge Guillory’s complaints was the same as in this case; that is, that the amendment had several independent and disconnected objects, and wrought diverse changes in an article of the Constitution. But we held, unanimously, that the case was one of those instances where all of the proposed changes had to be embodied in one proposal, or one joint resolution. The doctrine of the decision is stated in the headnote, thus:

“The constitutional requirement that two or more constitutional amendments submitted at the same election [shall] be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment 'separately' means that each amendment or concurrent resolution shall be submitted as a separate amendment, so that the electors may vote for or against each amendment separately, but it does not mean that each and every change to be made in a section or an article of the Constitution shall be the subject of a separate and independent concurrent resolution.”

In the case which I have referred to, where John A. Morris brought a mandamus suit to compel L. F. Mason, Secretary of State, to publish and to print on the official ballot for the November election, in 1891, a proposed constitutional amendment, one of the reasons why the Secretary of State refused to publish or submit the proposed amendment was that it contained several separate and distinct objects. The several objects are indicated in the title given to the proposed amendment, in the joint resolution, thus [43 La.Ann. 590, 9 So. 777] :

“Article on levees, schools, charities, pensions, drainage, lotteries, and general fund.”

The court, after analyzing the proposed amendment, said:

“Disincumbered of its verbiage of statement, the foregoing is a fair analysis of the measure proposed. The question for solution is, does this proposition constitute and contain the substance of more than one amendment, and violate, either in terms or by fair implication, the following provision of article 256 of the constitution, viz.:
“ ‘When more than one amendment shall be submitted at the same time they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately?’ :¡¡ H= *
“We have been able to find and have been cited to but one case in which this question has been treated, and that is State v. Timme [54 Wis. 318], 11 N.W. 785, in which the court say:
“ ‘We think amendments to the- constitution, which the section above quoted requires shall be submitted separately, must be construed to mean amendments which have different objects and purposes in. view.’ ”

This court, therefore, in the case cited, held that the proposed amendment was valid because it had only one general purpose in view, notwithstanding it dealt with seven or more separate and distinct subjects and would have wrought diverse changes in the Constitution if the amendment had been adopted by the vote of the electors. As we well remember it was defeated. In that case the court had the right to inquire into the wisdom of the Legislature in submitting the several amendments as only one amendment, because the people had not adopted the amendment when the court decided the case. In the suit of Kerby v. Luhrs, which was brought to enjoin the Secretary of State from printing the proposed amendment on the official ballot, the Supreme Court of Arizona announced the general rule to be that when two or more amendments constitute a “workable whole” they should be submitted as one amendment.

The rule was recognized by this court long ago, in the case entitled Saunders v. Board of Liquidation, reported in 110 La. 313, 34 So. 457, 460, that, after an amendment of the Constitution has been proposed and submitted to the people by a vote of two-thirds or more of the members elected to each House of the Legislature, and has been approved and adopted by a majority vote of the people, the amendment becomes a part of the Constitution itself, and no one has a right then to sue to annul it. In the Saunders case, a taxpayer, like the six taxpayers in this case, sued to annul an amendment of the Constitution; and the defendants argued that the taxpayer was estopped by his failure to sue for an injunction before the amendment was finally adopted. The court, unanimously, sustained the plea that the taxpayer was estopped by his failure to sue before the amendment was voted upon by the people; and the court dismissed the taxpayer’s suit. Through Chief Justice Nicholls, the court said:

“As he [the taxpayer] was silent then, good conscience requires that he must keep silent now. It is perfectly evident that this estoppel will forever silence all taxpayers,” et cetera.

The court went on to say, in the Saunders case, that all of the proceedings prescribed by the Constitution for amending it were matters of procedure which lost their importance if and when the proposed amendment actually received the favorable votes of two-thirds or more of the members elected to each House of the Legislature and was actually approved and adopted by a majority vote of the people.

A similar ruling was made in the case of Board of Liquidation v. Whitney-Central Trust & Savings Bank, 168 La. 560, 563, 122 So. 850, 851, and in Middleton v. Police Jury, 169 La. 458, 125 So. 447. And the same doctrine has been maintained by other courts of last resort in the following cases: Taylor v. King, 284 Pa. 235, 130 A. 407; Armstrong v. King, 281 Pa. 207, 126 A. 263; Hollinger v. King, 282 Pa. 157, 127 A. 462; Ruler v. York County, 290 Pa. 427, 433, 139 A. 136, 138; West v. State, 50 Fla. 154, 39 So. 412; Collier v. Gray, 116 Fla. 845, 854, 157 So. 45; State ex rel. Landis, Attorney General, v. Thompson, 120 Fla. 860, 163 So. 270; and State v. Herried, 10 S.D. 109, 72 N.W. 93.

The rulings in the three Alabama cases cited in the prevailing opinion in this case are not at all persuasive. In Collier v. Frierson, 24 Ala. 100, the Constitution required that after a proposed constitutional amendment was adopted by the votes of the people it had to be ratified by a two-thirds majority of each House of the Assembly, or Legislature. The amendment in question was adopted by the people, but in the act of ratification by the Assembly this amendment “was entirely omitted” from the list of amendments which were ratified. The court held, of course, that the proposed amendment which was omitted from the list of amendments that were ratified was not ratified. In Johnson v. Craft, 205 Ala. 386, 87 So. 375, the Legislature attempted to delegate to the Governor, «the authority to set the date for the election at which the constitutional amendment would be voted on. The Constitution of Alabama required the Legislature to set the date of the election. By a vote of four to three the members of the Supreme Court of Alabama annulled the amendment. Each one of the three justices who dissented, namely, Justice Gardner, who is now Chief Justice, and Justices Thomas and Somerville, wrote a dissenting opinion. The case was decided in February 1921, and in July of that year the court decided the case of Hooper v. State ex rel. Fox, 206 Ala. 371, 89 So. 593, in which the facts and issues were exactly the same as in Johnson v. Craft. Two of the justices, namely, Justice Thomas and the present Chief Justice Gardner, again dissented. Justice Somerville said that he concurred in the decree on the ground of stare decisis, or merely because the decision was adverse to his opinion in Johnson v. Craft. I respectfully submit that the first of these Alabama cases is not appropriate and that the dissenting opinions in the two other cases are in harmony with the rule prevailing in Louisiana and in all other states in which the question has been decided. The majority opinion in these two cases is not only not controlling in this state but is contrary to the decisions of this court which I have cited, and particularly the decision in Saunders v. Board of Liquidation, 110 La. 313, 34 So. 457.

In the prevailing opinion in this case the court points out that in .the case of East Jefferson Waterworks District v. Caldwell, 170 La. 326, 127 So. 739, 742, the court said that the case of State ex rel. Morris v. Mason, Secretary of State, was filed and decided at a time of widespread political excitement in the State. Notwithstanding that statement in the East Jefferson Waterworks District case the court expressly approved the decision in State ex rel. Morris v. Mason, Secretary of State; and the court quoted with approval the concurring opinion delivered by Justice McEnery in State ex rel. Morris v. Mason, Secretary of State, thus:

“I think the various pretexts set up by defendant are the merest technicalities. If they are to be approved, there is a virtual denial of the sovereignty of the people. The people might at once abdicate their boasted power, and bestow it upon a chosen few.”

In the East Jefferson Waterworks District case the court had also this to say:

“In the Saunders-Board of Liquidation case, the organ of the court quotes, with apparent approval, from the opinion rendered by the Supreme Court of Kansas, in the case known as the ‘Constitutional Prohibitory Amendment/ [Prohibitory Amendment Cases], 24 Kan. 700, from which quotation we excerpt the following:
“ ‘The two important vital elements in any constitutional amendment are the assent of two-thirds of the legislature, and a majority of the popular vote. Beyond these, other provisions are mere machinery and forms. They may not be disregarded, because by them certainty as to the essentials is secured. But they are not themselves the essentials. * * *
“ ‘Again, in constitutional changes the popular voice is the paramount act. While to guard against undue haste and temporary excitement, to prevent * * '* frequent appeals for constitutional amendments, the assent of two-thirds of the legislature is prescribed as a condition precedent, yet, after all, that which determines constitutional changes is the popular will. This is a government by the people, and, whenever the clear voice of the people is heard, legislatures and courts must obey.’ ”

It is said in the prevailing opinion in this case that this constitutional amendment, which is being annulled, “provides for the adoption of an administrative and a financial code in violation of the constitutional provision embodied in section 18 of Article 3 against the Legislature adopting any code of laws by general reference to such code.” That pronouncement in the prevailing opinion in this case is not only unsound but out of place. The question of constitutionality of the so-called code of laws is not before us in this suit. But, if we were warranted in considering in this case the question whether this constitutional amendment is contrary to the prohibition in section 18 of Article 3 of the Constitution, we must not forget that this constitutional amendment is not a statute but a constitutional amendment.

I confess also that I do not see the relevancy of the reference, in the prevailing opinion in this case, to the fact that Mr. Jerome A. Hayes while acting Budget Officer reduced the appropriation for the Charity Hospital.

It is said in the prevailing opinion that the court is now asked to declare that the Orleans Levee Board can repudiate the bonds which it has issued by destroying “the source provided by law for liquidating the debt.” None of the attorneys for the defendants in this case contends or believes for one moment that the State or the Levee Board can repudiate or impair the obligation represented by the Levee Board’s bonds, by abolishing the tax which has been levied to pay the bonds. The repealing of Article XVI-A, which was only an emergency provision in the Constitution, and which has served its purpose, was in line with the general plan of this amendment, of abolishing all useless boards and commissions. The Reparation Commission had authority merely to adjust claims for damages resulting from the Caernarvon Crevasse. The commission had nothing whatever to do with the issuing of bonds or the levying of the tax to pay the bonds. That authority was vested in the Board of Commissioners of the Orleans Levee District; and the authority was carried out; and that board was not abolished or affected by the constitutional amendment which we are now considering.

In the case of State ex rel. Bahns et al. v. City of New Orleans, 163 La. 777, 112 So. 718, from which the court now quotes the method of adopting constitutional amendments, the statute which was in contest, and which was declared unconstitutional insofar as it provided for paying an increase in the salary of the city judges out of the judicial expense fund, was not a constitutional amendment at all, but was only a statute, increasing the salaries of the judges of the city court and providing that the increase should be paid out of the judicial expense fund. It was argued on behalf of the judges of the city court, who were the relators in the suit, that, inasmuch as the statute had received the favorable vote of two-thirds or more of the members elected to each House of the Legislature, the statute had the effect of a constitutional amendment, and therefore should prevail over the provision in section 95 of Article 7 of the Constitution directing the handling of the judicial expense fund. It was necessary that the statute should have the vote of two-thirds or more of the members of each House of the Legislature, because it is declared in section 34 of Article 3 of the Constitution that salaries of public officers, whether fixed in this Constitution or otherwise, may be changed by the vote of two-thirds of the members of each house of the Legislature. This court, of course, rejected the argument that because this salary-raising statute had received the favorable vote of two-thirds or more of each House of the Legislature it had the effect of a constitutional amendment. It was in that connection that the court described the proceedings which are necessary to adopt a constitutional amendment — the essential features of which proceedings are the two-thirds vote of each House of the Legislature and the adoption by a majority of the votes of the people themselves. The statute which the city judges contended had the effect of a constitutional amendment was, of course, never submitted or intended to be submitted to the voters for their approval or rejection. When the plaintiffs in the present case quoted from the opinion in State ex rel. Bahns et al v. City of New Orleans, the requirements for adopting a constitutional amendment, I was impressed with the idea that they were hard-pressed for a decision by this court to support their argument.

The generalities quoted in the prevailing opinion in this case, from Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, from Jameson on Constitutional Conventions, from Corpus Juris, from Duncan v. McCall, 139 U.S. 449, 11 S.Ct. 573, 576, 35 L.Ed. 219, and from McCreary v. Speer, 156 Ky. 783, 162 S.W. 99, are not contrary to the doctrine of the decisions rendered by the Supreme Court of Louisiana, maintaining that, after a constitutional amendment has been proposed by the vote of two-thirds or more of the members elected to each House of the Legislature, and has been approved by a majority vote of the people voting at a general election held throughout the State, nobody has a right of action to annul the amendment on the ground that there was an error or omission in the proceedings leading up to its submission to the people, or on the ground that the members of the Legislature should have submitted the amendment in the form of two or more amendments, instead of submitting it as one amendment.

In the prevailing opinion in this case the court cites Oakland Paving Co. v. Hilton, 69 Cal. 479, 11 P. 3. That decision was expressly repudiated and virtually overruled by the Supreme Court of California, in the case of Oakland Paving Co. v. Tompkins, City Marshal, 72 Cal. 5, 12 P. 801, 1 Am.St.Rep. 17. In that case the court declared, pointblank, that the decision in the case of Oakland Paving Co. v. Hilton should not be considered as authority—thus:

“This question is not a new one in this court. In People v. Strother, 67 Cal. 624, 8 P. 383, it was the only issue of any importance, and it was squarely decided that the amendment had been constitutionally adopted. This was in bank [en banc], and there was no apparent dissent. This decision was in October, 1885, and in the following May in the case of Oakland Paving Co. v. Hilton [69 Cal. 479], 11 P. 3, an opinion was rendered by Justice Thornton, which was concurred in by Mr. Justice McKee, holding to the contrary. The other members of the court who participated in that decision based their concurrence on other grounds.
“It is contended that in this condition of the decisions, the question ought to be considered an open one. We do not accede to this proposition. In the case of People v. Strother the point was squarely presented, was the only one involved, and was plainly and unequivocally decided. We see no reason why it is not entitled to the usual authority of a precedent; nor do we concede that in so deciding there was error.”

It is conceded in the prevailing opinion in this case that this court has never heretofore declared a constitutional amendment unconstitutional — meaning, of course, an amendment that does not violate any provision in the federal Constitution. It is said, though, that the court has had occasion to declare unconstitutional a clause embraced in a constitution regularly adopted by a convention called by the Legislature for that purpose, but subject to certain restrictions set forth in the Act of the Legislature convoking the convention. The court refers to the case of State v. American Sugar Refining Co., 137 La. 407, 68 So. 742, 745. In that case" the act of the Legislature, being Act No. 1 of the Extra Session of 1913, proposing to call the convention, was submitted to the vote of the electors throughout the state at a general election, and was approved by a majority vote of the electors. The Constitution itself, however, after being adopted by the Constitutional Convention of 1913, was not submitted to the people for their approval or rejection. It was for those reasons that the court claimed authority to consider the question of validity of one of the articles, being Article 190, of the Constitution of 1913. On that subject the court said:

“The Legislature in enacting Act No. 1, Extra Session of 1913, paid no attention to the alleged restriction in the call of the Governor, and that official signed the act, and the people approved all the restrictions therein set forth.
“When the people, acting under a proper resolution of the Legislature, vote in favor of calling a convention, they are presumed to ratify the terms of the call, which thereby become the basis of the authority delegated to the convention. 6 R.C.L. § 18, p. 27.
“Act No. 1 of the Extra Session of 1913 calling for a convention, with full power and authority to frame and adopt, without submission to the people, a new Constitution of the state, subject, however, to a number of restrictions enumerated in said act, having been adopted by the people, constituted a mandate to the convention of 1913.”

I have never disputed the general rule, which is supported by the many law books cited in the prevailing opinion in this case, that the question of validity of a constitutional amendment, when properly presented, is a question for the courts to decide. The principle for which I stand is that, after a constitutional amendment has been submitted to the people by a vote of not less than two-thirds of the members elected to each House of the Legislature, and has been adopted by a majority vote of the people voting in a general state-wide election, the courts should not annul the amendment on the ground merely that there was a defect or an omission in the procedure leading up to the submission of the amendment, or on the ground that the Legislature should have divided the amendment into two or more propositions, instead of submitting it as one proposition.

The annulling of the constitutional amendment in this instance will have very far-reaching and troublesome consequences. The amendment has been in effect nearly seven months. In that time many executive orders have been issued and executed in pursuance of this constitutional amendment. Vast sums of money forming State funds have been transferred from one department to another. Public boards and commissions have been abolished, and their functions transferred to other departments of the government. Some of the most important laws enacted by the Legislature in its regular session of 1940 will be subject to annulment by the courts in consequence of this decision. Other laws enacted at that session of the Legislature may not be affected by this decision. It will be a difficult task, therefore, for the State’s officials — and particularly for the courts of justice — to untangle the maze of trouble and bewilderment that must follow this decision.

The one feature of the case, however, that transcends in importance all other features is that the court is setting aside the edict of the people themselves, expressed at the polls. There is no period of prescription, or time-limit, that could bar a suit like this, as to which it has been decided that each and every taxpayer in the State has a right of action. The result is that all of the many constitutional amendments that have been adopted by the people since the Constitution of 1921 was adopted are now in danger of being annulled at the suit of any one of the many taxpayers throughout the State, if any one of them can discover a flaw or an omission in the proceedings which led up to the adoption of the amendment, or if any taxpayer can convince a majority of the members of the court that the Legislature should have submitted the amendment in the form of two or more amendments instead of submitting it as one amendment.

We are reminded in the prevailing opinion rendered in this case that the Constitution of the United States guarantees to every State in the Union a republican form of government. I respectfully submit that when a comparatively small group of men who are the members — or a majority of the members — of a court of last resort annul an amendment of the Constitution of their State merely because of an error or omission in the proceedings which led up to the submission of the amendment to the people and its adoption by the people — or because the members of the court are of the opinion that the amendment should have been adopted by the people as two or more amendments instead of being adopted as one amendment — the proceeding seems not consistent with the theory of a republican form of government. In fact it is apt to tax the people’s understanding of President Lincoln’s high resolve that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

For these reasons I respectfully decline to subscribe to the decision rendered in this case.

On Application for Rehearing.

PER CURIAM.

The relators in their application for a rehearing have asked us to clarify our opinion and decree by pointing out whether or not they affect the constitutionality of Acts 44, 47 and 48 of 1940 in their entirety, or whether these statutes are partially affected, and, if so, what parts thereof are valid and what parts are invalid.

The sole issue before the Court was whether or not Act 384 of 1940 was adopted in accordance with the sacramental provisions of the Constitution. The question of the constitutionality of Acts 44, 47 and 48 of 1940 was in no way brought into this litigation either by the relators or the respondents. We have no authority in this case to express any opinion as to the legality of departments, boards, or agencies created by Acts 44, 47 and 48 of 1940, or the powers conferred upon public officials thereunder. Such gratuitous statements on our part would be purely obita dicta.

This Court is without jurisdiction to give advisory opinions or render declaratory judgments. To pass upon the constitutionality of Acts 44, 47 and 48 of 1940 in this case would be clearly giving an advisory opinion or rendering a declaratory judgment. This, we decline to do.

In the alternative, the relators, in their application for a rehearing have asked us to advance upon our docket the civil suit of the State of Louisiana et al. v. James Thomas et al., No. 36,310 of the docket of this Court, on appeal from a judgment of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court in and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, declaring Act 13 of 1940, known as the Louisiana Crime Commission Statute and Act 47 of 1940, generally referred to as the State Administrative Code, unconstitutional, null and void, and to consolidate it with this case. The record in that proceeding was filed in this Court on June 27, 1941, or three days before our opinion and decree were handed down in this case on June 30, 1941. In the Thomas case, the Department of Highways of the State of Louisiana, the Attorney General and the Louisiana Crime Commission instituted suit against thirteen individual defendants and partnerships located in various parishes throughout the State to recover the sum of $1,910.55, which the defendants are alleged to have unlawfully obtained from the State. In this case, six taxpayers and citizens of East Baton Rouge Parish are the plaintiffs, and the State Treasurer, the State Auditor, and the State Budget Director are the defendants. It is clear, therefore, that the parties in the two suits are not the same.

Most of the defenses in the Thomas case differ from those in this case and particularly the eleven alleged grounds of unconstitutionality of Act 13 of 1940, none of which has any bearing on the issues in the present suit. Several of the alleged grounds of unconstitutionality of Act 47 of 1940 are entirely different from those in the instant case. The only common issue in the two cases is that Act 47 of 1940 is said to be unconstitutional, because it is alleged to be an enabling act predicated on Act 384 of 1940, the joint resolution known as proposed constitutional amendment No. 3, which the defendants in the Thomas case also asserted was not adopted in conformity with the Constitution.

The defendants in the Thomas case are entitled under the rules of this Court to have it regularly set for .hearing and the plaintiffs therein, under our Rule IX, Sections 2 and 3, had the right to file the motion to have the case fixed by preference and placed on our preference docket to be heard summarily as possible, but, as the defendants have not joined in the motion to advance and consolidate, they cannot be compelled to have the case argued and submitted during the vacation period of this Court. It is also impossible to consolidate the two cases under the law because they do not involve the same parties litigant nor the same facts and issues, except for the single point as to Act 47 of 1940.

We reiterate that the relators were content with having only the constitutionality of Act 384 of 1940 determined in the instant case and in no way sought to have the Court pass upon the constitutionality of Acts 44, 47 and 48 of 1940 in this suit, and, therefore, we are without authority to consider whether or not Acts 44, 47 and 48 of 1940 are wholly or partially unconstitutional in the present case, because the pleadings herein in no wise propose or suggest any such issue. Moreover, the briefs filed during the trial of the case both in the district court and in this Court in no way suggested that we determine whether or not Acts 44, 47 and 48 of 1940 are unconstitutional in whole or in part. We, therefore, find it impossible to grant the requests of the relators in this respect.

In the briefs filed by the relators and amici curise in this matter on the application for rehearing, it is argued for the first time in this Court that the decree of the district court, which was affirmed by us when Act 384 of 1940 was held to be void, is much broader and more far-reaching in its terms than it should be in view of the fact that the only question involved in the case was the validity vel non of Act 384 of 1940. The decree restrains the State Treasurer and the State Auditor from transferring any funds appropriated to various State Agencies named in Act 44 of 1940 (which were in existence prior to the passage of Acts 47 and 48 of 1940) to the State Agencies listed under Act 384 of 1940. The agencies listed under Act 384 of 1940 are the same State agencies which were created under Title III of Act 47 of 1940 and, by that Act and Act 384, many of the various State Agencies heretofore existing under the Constitution and laws of this State were consolidated and others were abolished.

Since the question of the constitutionality of Act 47 of 1940, by which the duties and functions of the State Agencies listed in Act 384 are set out and defined, cannot be passed upon by us in this matter and since the decree prohibits the State Treasurer and the State Auditor from transferring any funds to those agencies, it is possible that these officials may take the position that they would violate the decree of the district court, if they transferred funds appropriated by the General Appropriations Act (Act 44 of 1940) to any of the agencies created by Act 47 of 1940 and listed in Act 384 of 1940.

Therefore, in order to avoid any misunderstanding, we feel that the decree of the district court should be modified so as not to restrain the State Treasurer and the State Auditor from transferring any funds appropriated to any State officers or agencies by Act 44 of 1940 to any State agencies created by Act 47 of 1940 and listed in Act 384 of 1940, provided the agencies to whom the otherwise appropriated funds are to be transferred are not dependent upon the validity of Act 384 of 1940 for their legal existence. However, since by Act 384 of 1940 many offices, boards, and other State agencies created by and under the authority of the Constitution of 1921 were abolished or their duties and functions curtailed, and since we have found that this proposed constitutional amendment is void, the State Treasurer and the State Auditor should be enjoined from transferring any funds appropriated to these constitutional officers, boards and agencies by Act 44 of 1940, to any of the agencies listed in Act 384 of 1940. The decree will be modified accordingly.

It is said that chaos and confusion in the governmental affairs of the State will result from the Court’s action in declaring the proposed constitutional amendment void. ’ This statement is grossly and manifestly inaccurate. If confusion and chaos should ensue, it will not be due to the action of the Court but will be the result of the failure of the drafters of the joint resolution to observe, follow and obey the plain essential provisions of the Constitution. Furthermore, to say that, unless the Court disregards its sworn duty to enforce the Constitution, chaos and confusion will result, is an inherently weak argument in favor of the alleged constitutionality of the proposed amendment. It is obvious that, if the Court were to countenance the violations of the sacramental provisions of the Constitution, those who would thereafter desire to violate it and disregard its clear mandatory provisions would resort to the scheme of involving and confusing the affairs of the State and then simply tell the Court that it was powerless- to exercise one of its primary functions by rendering the proper decree to make the Constitution effective.

It is stated that the absolute repeal of Act 2 of the Extra Session of 1927, which was adopted as a constitutional amendment and became Article XVI-A of the Constitution of 1921, by Act 384 of 1940, known as Constitutional Amendment No. 3, only had the effect of eliminating from the Constitution certain obsolete provisions which had been fully carried out by the Reparations Commission of the Caer-narvon Crevasse. It is clear that there are several million dollars worth of bonds, which were issued under Act 2 of the Extra Session of 1927, outstanding, and that Section 9 of that Act or constitutional amendment of 1927, is the sole and only authority under which the Board of Levee Commissioners for the Orleans Levee District has the right to annually levy an ad valorem tax not exceeding one mill on all of the real property located in the Parish of Orleans, and that these taxes are dedicated for the retirement of both the principal and interest of the bonds. We have not been referred to any provision in any law which replaces Section 9 of Act 2 of the Extra Session of 1927 and it is, therefore, apparent that no funds would be available to retire the bonds and pay the interest coupons as they mature, in the event the Court were to hold that the constitutional amendment, Act 384 of 1940, was constitutionally adopted. The Board’s authority to annually levy the tax to provide the funds to retire the bonds and pay the interest thereon was unquestionably withdrawn by the proposed amendment. We have already pointed out in our opinion that the Caernarvon Crevasse bond issue is a separate and distinct object from the several other objects covered by the proposed constitutional amendment, Act 384 of 1940, and, in that respect the amendment violates the mandatory separability provision of the Constitution of 1921.

President Lincoln’s memorable statement in his immortal address delivered in 1863, at Gettysburg, that this is “ * * * a government of the people, by the people, for the people, * * * ” has an historical background. Forty-four years prior thereto, in the case of McCulloch v. Maryland, 1819, 4 Wheat. 316, 403-405, 4 L.Ed. 579, where the United States Supreme Court declared an act of the Legislature of Maryland unconstitutional, Chief Justice Marshall stated that the Government of the United States is “ * * * emphatically, and truly, a government of the people. In form and in substance it emanates from them. Its powers are granted by them, and are to be exercised directly on them, and for their benefit. * * * ” Daniel Webster in his Reply to Hayne in the United States Senate in the year 1830, in referring to the Government of the United States of America said: “It is * * * the people’s Government; made for the people; made by the people; and answerable to the people.” See Debates, 21st Cong. 1st Sess. 74; Curtis 1, 356-61 and The Life of John Marshall by Beveridge, Vol. 4, Chapter 6, page 293. These statements mean that the people of the United States are living under a constitutional and representative form of government; that they have the right to amend the Constitution in the way in which it designates that it shall be done; that they are entitled under the Constitution to a government divided into three distinct branches, each of which is independent in its respective sphere, namely, the Legislative Department that enacts the law, the Executive Department that enforces the law, and the Judicial Department that interprets and construes the law; that the Judicial Department has the right and it is its duty to determine whether or not the Legislative or the Executive Departments’ actions have transcended and exceeded the constitutional authority vested in them and that each branch operates as a check or balance against the others so that there will not be a usurpation of power or a consolidation of all of the powers in one department, whereby an arbitrary or despotic form of government would be created. Surely, President Lincoln, Chief Justice Marshall and Senator Webster did not say, nor do their words imply, that the majority of the voters of a State have the constitutional right to amend the State Constitution by violating its definite and clear mandatory provisions and by such procedure give their actions the status of a constitutional amendment to be binding upon all of the people in the State.

It cannot be logically and fairly stated that, because this Court has held that the proposed constitutional amendment is void, its holding is, in effect, a declaration that the Supreme Court of Louisiana has arrayed its opinion against the will of 140,000 voters of this State. When the mandatory provisions of the Constitution are violated, the Constitution itself strikes with nullity the act that did violence to its provisions. The Justices of the Supreme Court simply perform their sworn duty to uphold the Constitution by declaring that the offensive act transcends the fundamental law and, therefore, is ineffective. If other officials of the State government intentionally or unintentionally fail to comply with the mandatory provisions of the Constitution — which clearly and explicitly set forth the manner in which that fundamental law shall be amended— it is the absolute right of any citizen and taxpayer to challenge the constitutionality of a proposed amendment and it is the obvious sworn duty of the members of the Supreme Court to declare that the Constitution has been violated and, therefore, the attempt to so amend it was ineffective, not because of the opinion or the will of the Justices of the Court, but because the clear and mandatory provisions of the Constitution under which the proposed amendment was submitted to the people were entirely disregarded and disobeyed. It is the sacred responsibility and duty of the Court of last resort to protect the constitutional rights of the minority against invasion or destruction by the vote of a majority. Otherwise, this would become a government of men and not of law. This cardinal principle is one of the basic pillars of sound, just and stable government by both the Sovereign States and the Sovereign Union. The electors themselves had no thought of destroying a constitutional form of government when they voted for the proposed amendment but to give constitutional effect to the proposed amendment with the sanction of the Court would unquestionably lead to the destruction of the Constitution because the amendment was not predicated and founded upon the observance of the Constitution’s mandatory provisions but was based upon their violation.

It is argued that the Court has thwarted the will of a majority of the voters upon strict legal technicalities. It cannot be truthfully stated nor successfully urged that the clause of the Constitution requiring constitutional amendments to be submitted separately is an unimportant or a technical provision. The purpose of this mandatory provision in the Constitution is to require the Legislature to submit proposed amendments thereto in a manner in which they can be readily understood by the people. The members of the Constitutional Convention, by this provision, sought to prevent the Legislature from grouping together in one proposed amendment multiple objects and subjects in such a confusing and complex manner as to make it incomprehensible and, in that way, to avoid the great danger of the people adopting a constitutional amendment which would grant plenary power that would not otherwise have been delegated and entrusted to public officials if the amendment had been properly understood. By grouping a great many objects and subjects together in one amendment, dangerous hidden powers might be obtained by certain officials, which powers could subsequently be used arbitrarily and despotically. The proposed amendment before the Court furnishes its own example. For instance, the power granted to the Board of Levee Commissioners for the Orleans Levee District, under Section 9 of Act 2 of the Extra Session of 1927, to levy a tax annually, was repealed outright and this left the bonds, which were to have been retired thereby, outstanding and without funds to meet their payment in both principal and interest. Surely, if this particular matter had been made the object of one amendment, so that the members of the Legislature and the people would have understood it, it hardly admits of argument that neither the members of the Legislature nor the electors themselves would have voted to repudiate a just, legal and outstanding obligation such as the bonds in question. But, without doubt, that is just what they have done. This, we submit, demonstrates the great danger of the Legislature disregarding the constitutional mandatory requirements of having each amendment cover one object and only such subjects cognate thereto. When the Constitution expressly states that any amendment thereto shall be submitted to the electors by the Legislature separately, it certainly does not mean that the members of the Legislature shall have, the discretion to submit several amendments as one amendment and that they are the sole judges of whether or not they have complied with this provision. When the delegates of the Constitutional Convention concluded that a provision in the Constitution was essential and fundamental they left nothing to the discretion or judgment of the public officials but made the requirement indispensable. Therefore, the mandatory provisions in the Constitution were considered by their authors to be basic and not technical. They knew if the provisions of the Constitution were not followed chaos would inevitably result and democracy would certainly perish. Consequently, it cannot be said that the failure to observe this requirement of the Constitution was a mere legal technicality. This provision is not only imperative but is basic and fundamental. Its violation cannot be cast aside with the appellation that the provision is a simple legal technical requirement. Neither can public clamor lessen its importance as being indispensable for the safety and protection of the property, rights, liberty, and lives of the citizens of a sovereign state under a constitutional form of government. According to the 1940 census there were 2,355,821 inhabitants of this State and the Constitution guarantees to each of them its protection whether they be qualified voters or not. The returns of the election show that 140,543 votes were cast in favor of the amendment and 133,876 votes were cast against it, thus giving a majority in favor of the amendment of 6,667 votes. But the majority of the voters were powerless to destroy the constitutional rights of the remaining 2,215,278 inhabitants by voting for a legislative joint resolution that did violence to the mandatory provisions of the Constitution from its inception.

In the case of Johnson v. Craft, 205 Ala. 386, 87 So. 375-385, the Supreme Court of Alabama held that the proposed road bond amendment had failed to become a part of the Constitution of Alabama, although a majority of the electors voted for it, because the Legislature had not observed the mandatory provisions of the Constitution by fixing the date of the election. In dealing with the question of “public clamor” and alleged “technicalities”, Justice McClellan, on rehearing, said:

“Since the decision on February 3, 1921, declaring that this ‘road bond amendment’ did not become a part of the Constitution, because of the violation of mandatory provisions of the Constitution, there has appeared distinct manifestations of a desire on the part of some to undertake to influence, through a cultivated public clamor, ¡the judges who formulated the judgment, when they came, as they have now, to reconsider that judgment on rehearing. Ignorance, and nothing worse, accounts for some, if not all, of this activity and publicity; ignorance of the distinction between anarchy and constitutional government; ignorance of the imperative necessity to maintain and preserve the independence of the judiciary, a condition that cannot prevail if extraneous circumstances, unrelated to the law or to judicial processes, are countenanced by worthy citizens; ignorance of the fact that judges are bound by oath, as well as by every sense of self-respecting fidelity and responsibility, to enforce the Constitution, an obligation that rests on the conscience of the individual judge to satisfy which it is given no other judge, or judges, to do, for no judge is made the keeper of the conscience of another judge; ignorance of the fact that no power or authority is conferred on this court or its judges to forgive, condone, or heal violations of plain, unambiguous mandates, prohibitions, or limitations of the Constitution, even if the violation results in the greatest good or promotes a universal benefaction; for, if ‘forced and unnatural constructions’ of plain, unambiguous provisions of the Constitution are accepted by the courts, ‘they inflict a wound upon the Constitution which nothing can heal.’ Sadler v. Langham, 34 Ala. [311] 335, where this court, through Stone, J., approved this statement of an absolute judicial rule:
“ ‘My rule has ever been to follow the fundamental law as it is written, regardless of consequences.’
“Recurring now to the thought of the quotation (ante) from the brief supporting the application, this court contemplates with satisfaction the affirmative disavowal, by the great array of counsel representing ap-pellee, of any participation in the unfortunate, wholly ill-founded sentiment there said to have found lodgment in the lay mind that this court had, in its judgment, introduced a ‘technicality’ to defeat the popular will or desire. The state of the ‘public mind’ to which counsel refer would seem impossible of creation or existence in this enlightened state, unless it is assumed that those entertaining the sentiment indicated are unaware or have forgotten that Alabama has a Constitution, supreme and enduring until changed in accordance with its prescriptions, and binding upon all the people, as well as every judge and other officer who has taken his solemn oath to support and vindicate the Constitution. If this ‘public mind’ should consider, as counsel have candidly done in their unreserved disavowal, that all are subject to the paramount government of the Constitution, they would come at once to know that there is no such thing as a ‘technicality’ when the enforcement of mandates of the Constitution is the judicial action required by the Constitution. The Constitution contains no idle assertions, no meaningless language, no ephemeral purpose, no recognition of the right of even all the people— except through revolution and attendant anarchy — or of the Legislature or of the courts to refuse obedience to its supreme authority, or by evasion or subterfuge to defeat the Constitution as the highest expression of the people’s will. The most eminent writer on Constitutions and the jurisprudence that gives them effect (Cooley, p. 88) has said, what all must know, that the court which permits public sentiment to influence a construction of a Constitution that is not warranted by its intent ‘would be justly chargeable with reckless disregard of official oath and public duty’— a charge that represents the acme of odium and the superlative of infidelity. Now, as ever before, the penalty for the violation of the Constitution is that the product of the offense is a nullity.”

George Washington, the Father of our Country, the President of the Constitutional Convention which drafted the Constitution of the United States, and the First President of the United States, in his Farewell Address, made the underlying cardinal principle of this case the subject of his advice to the people, upon his retirement from public office, when he stated:

“It is important, likewise, that the habits of thinking in a free country should inspire caution in those intrusted with its administration, to confine themselves within their respective constitutional spheres, avoiding in the exercise of the powers of one department to encroach upon another. The spirit of encroachment tends to consolidate the powers of all the departments in one, and thus to create, whatever the form of government, a real despotism. A just estimate of that love of power, and proneness to abuse it, which predominates in the human heart, is sufficient to satisfy us of the truth of this position. The necessity of reciprocal checks in the exercise of political power, by dividing and distributing it into different depositaries, and constituting each the guardian of the public weal against invasions by the others, has been evinced by experiments ancient and modern ; some of them in our country and under our own eyes. To preserve them must be as necessary as to institute them. If, in the opinion of the people, the distribution or modification of the constitutional powers be in amy particular wrong, let it be corrected by an amendment in the way zvhich the Constitution designates. But let there be no change by usurpation; for though this, in one instance, may be the instrument of good, it is the customary weapon by zvhich free governments are destroyed. The precedent must always greatly overbalance in permanent evil any partial or transient benefit which the use can at any time yield. * * *JJl (Italics ours.)

It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the preliminary writ of injunction issued by the district court in this matter be and it is amended and modified so as to read:

“It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the rule herein issued be made absolute, and, accordingly, that a preliminary injunction issue herein, as prayed for, enjoining, restraining and prohibiting A. P. Tugwell, State Treasurer, and L. B. Baynard, State Auditor, from accepting, honoring and acting upon notice or notices from Grady C. Durham, or any other individual claiming authority to exercise the duties as “Budget Officer”, to transfer funds appropriated to any State officer or State agency named in Act 44 of 1940 whose office or agency has been created by the Constitution of 1921, as amended, to the agencies listed under Act 384 of 1940, until further orders of the court. The right of plaintiffs and respondents to apply for a rehearing on the question of modification of the injunction of the district court is reserved.

The application of the relators for a rehearing is refused.

ODOM, J., dissents from the refusal to grant a rehearing.

O’NIELL, Chief Justice

(dissenting).

Adhering to my original opinion in this case, I am constrained to dissent from the refusal of the court to grant a rehearing. I do not consider the paragraph which is quoted from Washngton’s Farewell Address, in the statement per curiam in this case, as being applicable to any issue in this case, although I did consider it applicable in a case where I once quoted that paragraph from Washington’s Farewell Address in support of the proposition that Article 2 of the Constitution of Louisiana, which forbids any person or collection of persons holding office in any one of the three departments of the government to exercise any power properly belonging to either of the other departments, is self-operative as a prohibitory law, and not merely declaratory of a general principle. The subject which is dealt with in that paragraph of Washington’s Farewell Address is .the importance of preserving the independence of each one of the three departments of government — legislative, executive and judicial.  