State Ex Rel. O'Meara v. Ross , 20 Nev. 61 ( 1887 )


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  • By the Court,

    Belknap, J.:

    The board of county commissioners of Storey county allowed a bill of the Emmett Guard for rent of an armory for the month of March, 1887, under section 22 of the military law, which makes it the duty of the board of county commissioners of any county, in which public arms, accoutrements, or military stores are received for the use of any volunteer organized military company, to provide an armory for such company. (Gen. Stat. 646.) Bills of this nature are paid out of the general fund of the county, upon the presentation of the county auditor’s certificate to the treasurer that the allowance has been made by the board of county commissioners. The auditor refuses to issue his certificate to this- effect, and this proceeding in mandamus is brought to compel' its-, issuance.

    *63 The Emmett Guard is a volunteer military company of Storey county, and was organized prior to the year 1865. It has complied with the various provisions imposed by the laws of the state, except this: its officers and members have failed to take the oath of allegiance prescribed by the act of the legislature supplementary to the military law, and approved March 3, 1887. The section containing the oath is as follows: “ Sec. 2. All officers and members of the volunteer militia of this state, on becoming members and performing duty, must take and subscribe the following oath, which all commissioned officers thereof are authorized to administer: “Ido solemnly swear that I will support the constitution of the United States and the constitution of the state of Nevada, and will maintain and defend the laws and all officers employed in administering the same. * * *” (Stat. 1887, 102.) The refusal of the auditor is based upon the failure of the officers and members of the company to take this oath. The question for determination, therefore, is whether a military company, whose officers and members have not taken the oath, is entitled to armory rent payable out of the public fund.

    In behalf of the relator it is said that the requirement to take the oath applies to those only who have become members since the passage of the law, and not to those who were members of the organization prior to March 3, 1887 — the date of enactment. The contention is based upon the following language of the statute: “All officers and members * * * on becoming members and performing duty * * * must take and subscribe the following oath. * * *’’

    The leading rule for the construction of statutes is to ascertain the intention of the legislature in enacting the statute, and the intent, when ascertained, will prevail over the literal sense. (Bac. Abr. “ Statutes,” 1, Secs. 5-10.) The intent may be ascertained from a consideration of the condition of the law before the enactment, and the cause for the change. Down to the time of the adoption of the supplementary military law no oath of allegiance had been required of the members of military companies. The purpose of the statute was to prescribe such oath. It is not to be presumed that this pledge of allegiance was to be exacted only from the new members of the militia, because no reason exists for a distinction in this regard between those who were members before the passage of the act, and *64 those who have since, or may hereafter, become members. The company in whose interest this proceeding is brought has had accessions to its membership since the passage of the law. If the view contended for were adopted, the anomalous result would be produced of requiring a pledge of allegiance from some, and not from other members of the same company. Probably other companies would be affected similarly. In the enactment of the provision, the legislature naturally intended to require a uniform pledge of allegiance from all of the members of the militia, Again: The law of March 3, 1887, is amendatory of, and supplementary to, the general military law of 1865. This law, at section 55, (Gen. Stat. 679), provides that “ all volunteer companies * * * organized prior to the passage of this act shall be deemed to have been organized in compliance with its provisions and entitled to its benefits; but such companies * * * shall be required to comply with all the remaining provisions of this act * * *” The original statute of 1865 and the amendatory law of 1887 must be taken together as one statute, and the requirement relating to the oath in the amendatory law becomes in effect one of the provisions anticipated by the section above quoted. The requirement is, therefore, expressly obligatory upon military companies organized prior to the passage of the law of 1865. If the legislature 1 had intended to exclude companies then existing from the operation of the law requiring the oath, such intention, in view of the provisions of section 55, would doubtless have been expressed.

    The main question — whether armory rent shall be allowed— is also affected by the provisions of section 55. Referring again to this section, it will be seen that companies organized in compliance with the various provisions of the act are entitled to its benefits. It is fairly inferable from this provision that companies failing to comply with the law are not entitled to its benefits. Another view may be taken leading to the same result. The legislature has required from the officers and members of all militia companies an oath of allegiance. This requirement was intended as a qualification. Those lacking the qualification are not legally-appointed members of the militia. The rule of law is plain that the writ of mandamus will issue only to enforce a clear legal right. The members of the company have not the legal qualification, and are not therefore entitled to the writ. In determining that the company is not a *65 legally constituted military organization, it must not be understood that the provisions of the military law are not obligatory upon its members. The imposi tion of an oath was intended for the benefit of the state, and a failure to take it will not relieve the members of the company from their duty under the law.

    It was urged that the statute prescribes no penalty for failure to take the oath. No penalty is prescribed which the civil courts can enforce. The military law commits to the governor of the state as commander-in-chief of the military forces the ultimate control of matters pertaining to the organization and discipline of the militia, to which this matter relates. He is authorized at any time “to disband any portion of the organized volunteer forces

    * * * which may evince a mutinous, disorderly or disobedient spirit. * * * ” (Gen. Stat. 694.)

    If it be claimed that refusing to allow armory rent is, in effect, imposing a penalty, the answer is, the members of the company have not obeyed the law, and, for this reason, cannot have the assistance of this court in obtaining the relief which they seek.

    Mandamus denied.