I concur without reservation in the foregoing Per Curiam opinion, but think the following observations of my own conception are not inappropriate to be here set forth in connection with the subject discussed.
The amended return of the respondent, filed pursuant to the leave given heretofore by this Court (State, ex rel. Landis, v. Thompson,
"1. Respondent amends his original return by striking paragraph 8 thereof and the amendment thereto and substituting *Page 566 in lieu thereof the following, to be numbered paragraph 8:
"Respondent further alleges that the members in attendance upon the Legislature of the State of Florida upon the 31st day of May, 1935, illegally designing to extend the session of the Legislature of the State of Florida beyond the limit of sixty days as provided by the Constitution, knowingly refrained from moving for the adjournment of the session of said Legislature on the said date, and, thereafter, without protest, knowingly continued to participate in the conduct of supposed legislative business pending before such legislative body for a period of approximately twenty-eight hours after twelve o'clock midnight of May 31, 1935; that said legislators in pursuance of such illegal acts, and as a means of carrying the same into effect adopted the subterfuge of stopping the clocks of the House and Senate at the hour of twelve o'clock noon on May 31, 1935, or shortly before that time, and caused the Journals of the House and Senate to be falsified by showing the adjournment *Page 567 of both House and Senate at twelve o'clock noon on said date, while in truth and in fact said Legislature attempted to remain in session trying to conduct legislative business as if legally in session until approximately four o'clock Sunday morning, June 2, 1935, which is approximately twenty-eight hours after midnight of May 31, 1935; that said facts are matters of general knowledge, of which this Court should take cognizance; that the Journals of the House and Senate were so falsified in pursuance of said acts of said members of the Legislature in an effort to extend the session of the Legislature beyond the time limit fixed by the Constitution; that on and after the hour of twelve o'clock of the 31st day of May, 1935, the said Legislature was not legally in session, and the purported records of the House and Senate of proceedings had after such time are not the records of the Legislature of the State of Florida, but are only the purported records of an aggregation of individuals, and are without force and effect in law.
"2. Respondent further amends his answer by adding the following paragraph, to be known as paragraph 8-a:
"3. Respondent further amends his original return by adding a new paragraph to said return, to be known as paragraph 30 and to read as follows:
"Respondent respectfully shows that he holds a commission as judge of the Circuit Court of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit under Chapter 9163 of the Laws of Florida of 1923, approved May 28, 1923; that said commission runs in cycles of six years; that the Honorable A.J. Rose, who was acting as one of the judges of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit resigned in January, 1930, and respondent was duly appointed and qualified as his successor on the 27th day of January, 1930, and confirmed by the Senate, for the unexpired term theretofore held by the Hon. A.J. Rose; that the commission thus held by respondent did not expire until June 6, 1935; that no successor to the office so created by the Act of 1923, and so held by this respondent, has been appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate, nor has his office been legally abolished; that respondent is now holding over and acting in pursuance of a continuing commission and, by reason thereof, is exercising the functions, franchises, jurisdiction and power as a circuit judge of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit of Florida, because no successor to him has ever been appointed by the Governor of the State of Florida and confirmed by the Senate, as provided by the Constitution and the laws of the State of Florida. *Page 569
"Respondent alleges that he holds office under a cycle which did not expire until June 6, 1935, after the Legislature of 1935 had adjourned, and that no one was appointed and confirmed to succeed him.
"Respondent further alleges that the Legislature of the State of Florida, at the extraordinary session in 1925, enacted Chapter 11366 of the Laws of Florida, approved November 30, 1925, which provided for another additional judge of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit; that the Legislature of the State of Florida, at its session in 1927, enacted Chapter 11887 of the Laws of Florida, approved June 6, 1927, in which another additional judge for the Eleventh Judicial Circuit was provided for; that said two additional judgeships likewise ran in cycles and no successors for respondent or for said additional judges were appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate of the State of Florida, and for that reason respondent and the other judges of the old Eleventh Judicial Circuit are still holding their offices by virtue of their old commissions until their successors have been appointed by the Governor and confirmed by the Senate."
Now the fact is that either the 1935 Legislature was a dead Legislative body on June 1, 1935, or Section 2 of Article III of the Constitution was dead on that date. This is so, because the Constitution either means that no regular legislative session must extend beyond sixty days by the calendar, or it does not. The limited sixty days' duration of the regular sessions of the Legislature is thus a matter wholly beyond the jurisdiction of the Legislature to enlarge, as it is a matter not controlled by any mechanically actuated scheme for the admeasurement of time, such as are the Legislature's daily sittings. On the contrary, the number of days a Legislature may sit is controlled entirely by the *Page 570 calendar and the Constitution itself as much so as the calendar and the Constitution operate to fix the date of the beginning of each and every regular session of the Legislature as being inevitably and in every instance the first Tuesday after the first Monday in April of each odd numbered year.
To put it another way, and more succinctly, the power of the Legislature to stop its clocks does not amount to a right to stop the calendar.
It therefore follows that whenever it is shown that the Legislature has attempted to exceed its jurisdiction as a Legislature by continuing in session beyond its allotted constitutional total number of sixty days, the conclusive legal presumption that ordinarily attaches to legislative records made up by the Legislature while in constitutional session may be affected. This is true because the conclusiveness of the legal presumption in favor of the legislative records obviously does not attach to records of a "rump" session of the Legislature as distinguished from a regularly convened constitutional session.
No clerical officer of the Legislature has the right to create a journal of legislative proceedings other than as a record of what the Legislature actually did during the constitutional period of time it was entitled to sit as a Legislature and in that capacity keep a journal at all. As was held in Amos v. Moseley,
However, in a litigated case involving the interests of private parties, the courts may be compelled to decide whether or not a particular measure purporting to be a legislative enactment was ever passed by a legislative body having jurisdiction (at the time of its passage) to act as a Legislature and in that capacity to enact valid laws. See discussion in Clugh v. Curtis,
So, while the Courts, as such, have no authority or right to invade the province of a co-ordinate branch of government by undertaking to interfere with the proceedings or records of the Legislature, or to regulate the official conduct of the duly authorized clerks of the respective branches after the Legislature's final adjournment, whether in completing the legislative journals or otherwise so long as the legislative officials are merely obeying the Legislature's rules, resolutions and commands (Fox v. Harris, Senate Clerk,
In this connection it is significant to point out that during *Page 572 the 1935 regular session of the Legislature, the Legislature did not itself purport to make up and approve the official journal of its proceedings for the last day of its regular session. On the contrary, it delegated that responsibility to the Chief Clerk of the House of Representatives and to the Secretary of the Senate, with specific directions to prepare the official "journal" for May 31, 1935 (the last day of the regular session) in such manner that "the said journal as finally incorporated into the bound volume, would present a truthful and accurate account of the proceedings of the two houses." See 1935, House Journal (House Concurrent Resolution No. 30) page 1498.
But even so, whether or not what purports to be the "journal" of May 31, 1935, of the House of Representatives, and of the Senate, is in truth and in fact the "journal" of what happened on that day alone, or a combination journal of what happened on May 31, 1935, and on June 1, 1935, and June 2, 1935, as well, cannot on principle, in the absence of authority, be collaterally established or inquired into in this case, because so long as the questioned journals purport to stand as conclusive records of the Legislature, valid on their face, they must be judicially noticedas such by the Courts in all proceedings not directly involving an adjudication as to the verity of such records. Judicial notice not only supplies the want of evidence to establish the fact judicially noticed, but necessarily precludes all attempts to proffer contradictory evidence to refute what the court holds that it must judicially know in the circumstances.
The Clerks of the two Houses of Legislature are undoubtedly beyond reach of judicial processes with respect to what they may have recorded under the suggestion and direction of the Legislature while it was in constitutional session. But as to matters that may have been recorded by *Page 573 them, concerning matters occurring after the constitutional life of the Legislature was ended, the Courts are necessarily empowered to use their appropriate processes to direct the responsible officers to expunge from what purport to be records of the Legislature, all false and extraneous matter that, if left incorporated therein, would come within range of a Court's judicial notice by reason of the mere fact that it stands as a legislative record secure against collateral attack.
Under the Constitution of Florida, the mere enrollment of a legislative bill and its signing by the Governor and subsequent deposit in the office of the Secretary of State, cannot make such bill a law, however fair on its face it may be. State, ex rel.
Bd. Com'rs Indian River Mosquito Control District, v. Helseth,
So while the Courts have no judicial power to control the judgment or discretion of legislative officials in the preparation or publication of legislative journals, even after the Legislature has finally adjourned,* their duty of judicially *Page 574 noticing legislative journals as importing absolute verity when collaterally involved in a litigated case affecting private legal rights, necessarily entitles a litigant, who may be adversely affected by what purports to be a legislative record, to have expunged from such record, and consequently put beyond the range of the Court's judicial notice of his prejudice, any matter that may have been incorporated in a putative legislative record without authority to the Legislature, or by direction of the Legislature acting in excess of its legislative powers.
The duty of keeping legislative records that may adversely affect private legal rights entitled to constitutional protection by action of the Courts predicated on such records implies, it seems to me, the power ex necessitate rei on the part of the judiciary to give effective relief to the litigant by using their processes to have the putative legislative record confined to that which is in reality a record that the Legislature possessed the constitutional power to make, or to have made, in the premises.
The respondent's return challenging the correctness of the putative legislative journal of May 31, 1935, has merely laid the predicate for invoking appropriate judicial processes against the record itself which can only be purged of any extraneous matters appearing therein by a requirement that the legislative officials themselves expunge therefrom any entry they may have incorporated therein which was not in truth and in fact the record of a legislative act transpiring *Page 575 on the legislative day of May 31, 1935. The duty thus resting on the Legislature's clerical officers is in its essence ministerial. It is likewise continuing in character, and remains enforceable so long as the Legislature's clerical officers retain their official status as such, and so long as their responsibility as such clerical officers can be made capable of being faithfully performed by means of judicial processes issued against them to coerce the faithful performance of what the Constitution commands shall be done in the way of preparing and publishing the legislative "journals."
Senate Bill No. 4 (Chapter 17085) cannot be destroyed as a whole as claimed in the petition for a rehearing, merely because a provision of it has been held unconstitutional in our previous opinion. This is so because Section 45 of Article V of the Constitution imposed the direct mandatory duty on the Legislature to pass some sort of redistricting Act covering the State's Judicial Circuits. Therefore, such constitutional duty, insofar as the Legislature may have actually performed it though any valid part of the legislative Act the Legislature did pass, cannot be defeated by the application of the mere rule of judicial construction that would otherwise apply where an Act of the Legislature is found to be partly unconstitutional and the Court cannot say that the Act would never have been passed with the unconstitutional provisions eliminated therefrom, as was the situation in State v. Jones,
How can the Supreme Court say in this case that the Legislature would have violated its constitutional duty by refusing to pass any recircuiting Act at all, merely because it might find itself constitutionally prohibited from compelling the Governor to name Circuit Judges according to *Page 576 an unconstitutional provision of the Act it did actually pass?
The rule of State v. Jones, supra, is necessarily limited in its application to those cases wherein the Legislature has a constitutional option to refuse to legislate at all on a particular subject, unless its legislative object can be accomplished in a particularly specified way. Here the Legislature had no option to entirely refuse to legislate on the subject of compliance with Section 45 of Article V of the Constitution. So we must presume that valid parts of the Act it did pass are ex proprio vigore separable from the invalid parts. To hold otherwise would impute to the Legislature an intent to defeat what it was its mandatory duty to do in compliance with the Constitution, or namely, to pass the valid portions of Senate Bill No. 4, even if the unconstitutional portions had to be eliminated therefrom.
The petition for a rehearing is therefore not well taken on the last stated proposition.
WHITFIELD, C.J., and TERRELL, BROWN and BUFORD, J.J., concur.