The provision in Rule XV of the House of Representatives of the
Fifty-first Congress that
"On the demand of any member, or at the suggestion of the
Speaker, the names of members sufficient to make a quorum in the
hall of the house who do not vote shall be noted by the clerk and
recorded in the journal, and reported to the Speaker with the names
of the members voting, and be counted and announced in determining
the presence of a quorum to do mousiness,"
is a constitutional mode of ascertaining the presence of a
quorum, empowered to act as the House.
Under the provision in the Act of May 9, 1890, 26 Stat. 105, c.
200, the duties on worsted cloths were, by the terms of the act,
and irrespective of any action by the Secretary of the Treasury, to
be such as were placed on woolen cloths by the Act of March 3,
1883. 22 Stat. c. 121, pp. 488, 508.
In July, 1890, the appellees imported into New York certain
goods which they claimed to be dutiable as manufactures of worsted
at the rate described in Schedule K of the Act of March 3, 1883. 22
Stat. 509. The collector assessed them at the rate prescribed in
that schedule as manufactures of wool. 22 Stat. 508. This he did
by
Page 144 U. S. 2
reason of an act claimed to have passed by Congress in 1890, as
follows:
"Chap. 200. An act providing for the classification of worsted
cloths as woolens."
"Be it enacted, etc., that the Secretary of the Treasury be, and
he hereby is, authorized and directed to classify as woolen cloths
all imports of worsted cloth whether known under the name of
'worsted cloth' or under the names of 'worsteds' or 'diagonals,' or
otherwise."
"Approved May 9, 1890."
26 Stat. 105.
The hoard of general appraisers found these facts:
"(1) That the goods in question are worsted, and not woolen
goods."
"(2) That the Secretary of the Treasury never examined or
classified the goods in question."
"(3) That the journal of the House of Representatives shows the
facts attending the passage of the Act of May 9, 1890, thus:"
"The Speaker laid before the house the bill of the house (H.R.
9548) providing for the classification of worsted cloths as
woolens, coming over from last night as unfinished business, with
the previous question, and the yeas and nays ordered."
"The house having proceeded to the consideration, and the
question being put,"
"Shall the bill pass?"
"There appeared,"
"Yeas -- 138."
"Nays -- 3."
"Not voting -- 189."
"The said roll-call having been recapitulated, the Speaker
announced, from a list noted and furnished by the clerk at the
suggestion of the Speaker, the following named members as present
in the hall when their names were called, and not voting,
viz.:"
"[Here follows an alphabetical list of the names of seventy-four
members.]"
"The Speaker thereupon stated that the said members
Page 144 U. S. 3
present and refusing to vote, (74 in number), together with
those recorded as voting (138 in number), showed a total of 212
members present, constituting a quorum present to do business, and
that the yeas being 138, and the nays none, the said bill was
passed."
On appeal, the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Southern District of New York sustained the claim of the importers
and reversed the decision of the collector, 45 F. 170, from which
judgment the United States appealed to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
Two questions only are presented: first, was the Act of May 9,
1890, legally passed? and second, what is its meaning? The first is
the important question. The enrolled bill is found in the proper
office, that of the Secretary of State, authenticated and approved
in the customary and legal form. There is nothing on the face of it
to suggest any invalidity. Is there anything in the facts disclosed
by the journal of the House, as found by the general appraisers,
which vitiates it? We are not unmindful of the general observations
found in
Gardner v.
Collector, 6 Wall. 499,
73 U. S. 511,
"that whenever a question arises in a court of law of the
existence of a statute, or of the time when a statute took effect,
or of the precise terms of a statute, the judges who are called
upon to decide it have a right to resort to any source of
information which in its nature is capable of conveying to the
judicial mind a clear and satisfactory answer to such question,
always seeking first for that which in its nature is most
appropriate, unless the positive law has enacted a different
rule."
And we have at the present term, in the case of
Field v.
Clark, 143 U. S. 649, had
occasion to consider the subject of an appeal to the
Page 144 U. S. 4
journal in a disputed matter of this nature. It is unnecessary
to add anything here to that general discussion. The Constitution
(Article I, Section 5) provides that "each house shall keep a
journal of its proceedings;" and that "the yeas and nays of the
members of either house on any question shall at the desire of
one-fifth of those present, be entered on the journal." Assuming
that by reason of this latter clause, reference may be had to the
journal to see whether the yeas and nays were ordered, and, if so,
what was the vote disclosed thereby, and assuming, though without
deciding, that the facts which the Constitution requires to be
placed on the journal may be appealed to on the question whether a
law has been legally enacted, yet if reference may be had to such
journal, it must be assumed to speak the truth. It cannot be that
we can refer to the journal for the purpose of impeaching a statute
properly authenticated and approved, and then supplement and
strengthen that impeachment by parol evidence that the facts stated
on the journal are not true, or that other facts existed which, if
stated on the journal, would give force to the impeachment. If it
be suggested that the Speaker might have made a mistake as to some
one or more of these 74 members, or that the clerk may have
falsified the journal in entering therein a record of their
presence, it is equally possible that in reference to a roll-call
and the yeas and nays there should be a like mistake or
falsification. The possibility of such inaccuracy or falsehood only
suggests the unreliability of the evidence and the danger of
appealing to it to overthrow that furnished by the bill enrolled
and authenticated by the signatures of the presiding officers of
the two houses and the President of the United States. The facts,
then, as appearing from this journal, are that at the time of the
roll-call, there were present 212 members of the house, more than a
quorum, and that 138 voted in favor of the bill, which was a
majority of those present. The Constitution, in the same section,
provides that "each house may determine the rules of its
proceedings." It appears that in pursuance of this authority the
house had, prior to that day, passed this as one of its rules:
Page 144 U. S. 5
"
Rule XV"
"3. On the demand of any member or at the suggestion of the
Speaker, the names of members sufficient to make a quorum in the
hall of the house who do not vote shall be noted by the clerk and
recorded in the journal and reported to the Speaker with the names
of the members voting, and be counted and announced in determining
the presence of a quorum to do business."
Ho.Journal, 230, Feb. 14, 1890.
The action taken was in direct compliance with this rule. The
question therefore is as to the validity of this rule, and not what
methods the Speaker may of his own motion resort to for determining
the presence of a quorum, nor what matters the Speaker or clerk may
of their own volition place upon the journal. Neither do the
advantages or disadvantages, the wisdom or folly, of such a rule
present any matters for judicial consideration. With the courts,
the question is only one of power. The Constitution empowers each
house to determine its rules of proceedings. It may not by its
rules ignore constitutional restraints or violate fundamental
rights, and there should be a reasonable relation between the mode
or method of proceeding established by the rule and the result
which is sought to be attained. But within these limitations, all
matters of method are open to the determination of the house, and
it is no impeachment of the rule to say that some other way would
be better, more accurate, or even more just. It is no objection to
the validity of a rule that a different one has been prescribed and
in force for a length of time. The power to make rules is not one
which once exercised is exhausted. It is a continuous power, always
subject to be exercised by the house, and, within the limitations
suggested, absolute and beyond the challenge of any other body or
tribunal.
The Constitution provides that "a majority of each [house] shall
constitute a quorum to do business." In other words, when a
majority are present the house in a position to do business. Its
capacity to transact business is then established, created by the
mere presence of a majority, and does not depend upon the
disposition or assent or action of any single
Page 144 U. S. 6
member or fraction of the majority present. All that the
Constitution requires is the presence of a majority, and when that
majority are present, the power of the house arises.
But how shall the presence of a majority be determined? The
Constitution has prescribed no method of making this determination,
and it is therefore within the competency of the house to prescribe
any method which shall be reasonably certain to ascertain the fact.
It may prescribe answer to roll-call as the only method of
determination; or require the passage of members between tellers,
and their count, as the sole test; or the count of the Speaker or
the clerk, and an announcement from the desk of the names of those
who are present. Any one of these methods, it must be conceded, is
reasonably certain of ascertaining the fact, and as there is no
constitutional method prescribed, and no constitutional inhibition
of any of those, and no violation of fundamental rights in any, it
follows that the House may adopt either or all, or it may provide
for a combination of any two of the methods. That was done by the
rule in question, and all that that rule attempts to do is to
prescribe a method for ascertaining the presence of a majority, and
thus establishing the fact that the House is in a condition to
transact business.
As appears from the journal, at the time this bill passed the
House, there was present a majority, a quorum, and the House was
authorized to transact any and all business. It was in a condition
to act on the bill if it desired. The other branch of the question
is whether, a quorum being present, the bill received a sufficient
number of votes, and here the general rule of all Parliamentary
bodies is that when a quorum is present, the act of a majority of
the quorum is the act of the body. This has been the rule for all
time except so far as in any given case the terms of the organic
act under which the body is assembled have prescribed specific
limitations. As, for instance, in those states where the
constitution provides that a majority of all the members elected to
either House shall be necessary for the passage of any bill. No
such limitation is found in the federal Constitution, and therefore
the general law of such bodies obtains.
Page 144 U. S. 7
It is true that most of the decisions touching this question
have been in respect to the actions of trustees and directors of a
private corporation, or of the minor legislative bodies which
represent and act for cities and other municipal corporations, but
the principle is the same. The two Houses of Congress are
legislative bodies representing larger constituencies. Power is not
vested in any one individual, but in the aggregate of the members
who compose the body, and its action is not the action of any
separate member or number of members, but the action of the body as
a whole, and the question which has over and over again been raised
is what is necessary to constitute the official action of this
legislative and representative body? In
Rex v. Monday, 1
Cowp. 530, 538, Lord Mansfield said:
"I will take it for granted that a
majority of the
mayor and aldermen for the time being was sufficient to constitute
the corporate assembly, and the fact found by the special verdict
is that the majority of those in being did meet. When the assembly
are
duly met, I take it to be clear law that the corporate
act may be done by the majority of those who have once regularly
constituted the meeting."
In 5 Dane's Abridgement, p. 150, the rule is thus stated:
"When a corporation is composed of a definite number, and an
integral part of it is required to vote in an election,
a
majority of such integral definite part must attend, aliter
there is no elective assembly, but a majority of those
present when legally met will bind the rest."
In 1 Dillon's Municipal Corporations (fourth edition) section
283, the rule is thus stated:
"And as a general rule it may be stated that not only where the
corporate power resides in a select body, as a city council, but
where it has been
delegated to a committee or to agents,
then, in the absence of special provisions otherwise, a
minority of the select body, or of the committee or
agents, are powerless to bind the majority or do any valid act. If
all the members of the select body or committee, or if
all
the agents are assembled, or if all have been duly notified, and
the minority refuse or neglect to meet with the others, a majority
of those present may act, provided those present constitute a
majority of the whole number. In other words, in such case, a major
part of the
Page 144 U. S. 8
whole is necessary to constitute a quorum, and a majority of the
quorum may act. If the major part withdraw so as to leave no
quorum, the power of the minority to act is, in general, considered
to cease."
This declaration has been quoted approvingly by this Court in
the case of
Brown v. District of Columbia, 127 U.
S. 579,
127 U. S. 586.
In 2 Kent's Commentaries 293, the author draws a distinction
between what is necessarily a meeting of a representative and a
constituent body in these words:
"There is a distinction taken between a corporate act to be done
by a select and definite body, as by a board of directors, and one
to be performed by the constituent members. In the latter case, a
majority of those who appear may act, but in the former, a majority
of the definite body must be present, and then a majority of the
quorum may decide."
See also Ex Parte Willcocks, 7 Cowen 402;
Commonwealth v. Green, 4 Wharton 531;
State v.
Green, 37 Ohio St. 227;
Launtz v. People, 113 Ill.
137;
Gas Co. v. Rushville, 121 Ind. 206;
Gosling v.
Veley, 7 Q.B. 406, 4 H.L.Cas. 679.
In
State v. Deliesseline, 1 McCord 52, it is said:
"For, according to the principle of all the cases referred to, a
quorum possesses all the powers of the whole body; a majority of
which quorum must, of course, govern. . . . The constitutions of
this state and the United States declare that a majority shall be a
quorum to do business, but a majority of that quorum are sufficient
to decide the most important question."
In
Wells v. Rahway Co., 19 N.J.Eq. 402, we find this
language:
"A majority of the directors of a corporation, in the absence of
any regulation in the charter, is a quorum, and a majority of such
quorum, when convened, can do any act within the power of the
directors."
And in
Attorney General v. Shepard, 62 N.H. 383, 384,
the question was whether an amendment to a city charter had been
properly adopted by the board of aldermen. All the members of the
board were present but one. The ordinance was duly read and put to
a vote, and declared by the chair to be passed. The yeas and nays
were then called; three voted in the affirmative, three refused to
vote, and the chair declared
Page 144 U. S. 9
the ordinance passed. The court held, Chief Justice Doe
delivering the opinion, that the amendment to the charter was
legally adopted by the board of aldermen. He said:
"The exercise of lawmaking power is not stopped by the mere
silence and inaction of some of the lawmakers who are present. An
arbitrary, technical, and exclusive method of ascertaining whether
a quorum is present, operating to prevent the performance of
official duty and obstruct the business of government, is no part
of our common law. The statute requiring the presence of four
aldermen does not mean that, in the presence of four, a majority of
the votes cast may not be enough. The journal properly shows how
many members were there when the vote was taken by yeas and nays;
there was no difficulty in ascertaining and recording the fact, and
the requirement of a quorum at that time was not intended to
furnish a means of suspending the legislative power and duty of a
quorum. No illegality appears in the adoption of the
amendment."
Summing up this matter, this law is found in the Secretary of
State's office, properly authenticated. If we appeal to the journal
of the House, we find that a majority of its members were present
when the bill passed, a majority creating by the Constitution a
quorum, with authority to act upon any measure; that the presence
of that quorum was determined in accordance with a valid rule
theretofore adopted by the House, and that of that quorum a
majority voted in favor of the bill. It therefore legally passed
the House, and the law, as found in the office of the Secretary of
State, is beyond challenge.
With reference to the other question: the opinion of the circuit
court seemed to be that the act cast upon the Secretary of the
Treasury a special duty of classification in all cases of the
importation of worsted cloths, and that unless he so acted in any
particular case the duty remained as it was prior to the passage of
the act. We quote its language:
"This act, however, proceeds upon an entirely novel theory. It
provides expressly for a classification in direct nonconformity to
the facts. It authorizes an officer of the government who may find
an import to be in fact an article which under the tariff
Page 144 U. S. 10
laws pays one rate of duty to call it something else, which it
is not, in order to enable the revenue officers to levy upon it a
rate of duty which that other article, which it is not, pays. . . .
I do not mean by that to suggest for one moment that, under the
phraseology of this act, it is the duty of the Secretary of the
Treasury to himself examine the packages of goods, to handle or see
their contents; but, having been informed and advised as to the
facts in the same way in which he is informed and advised upon any
facts upon which he is required to pass, by the examination and
report of such trust worthy subordinates as he may select, the
final classification of the particular articles is one to be made
by him."
We do not so construe the act. We understand it rather as a
declaration by Congress as to the construction to be placed upon
that portion of the act of 1883 which refers to imported woolen
cloths. It was an act suggested by the contest then pending in the
courts, and which was finally decided adversely to the government
in the case of
Seeberger v. Cahn, 137 U. S.
95, in which it was held by this Court that
"cloths popularly known as 'diagonals,' and known in trade as
'worsteds,' and composed mainly of worsted, but with a small
proportion of shoddy and of cotton, are subject to duty as a
manufacture of worsted, and not as a manufacture of wool, under the
Act of March 3, 1883, c. 121."
The form of expression used in the act may be novel, but the
intent of Congress is quite clear. Recognizing the fact that the
Secretary of the Treasury is the head of the financial department
of the government, that to him, as its chief administrative
official, is given the supervision of the tariff and all the
collections thereunder, it directs him to classify all worsted
cloths as woolen cloths, and it gives to him no discretion. He may
not classify some worsteds as woolens and others as not. There is
given no choice or selection, but it is the imperative direction of
Congress to him, as the chief administrative officer in the
collection of duties, to place all worsted cloths, by whatever name
properly known or known to the trade, within the category of woolen
cloths, and, of course, if placed within that category, or, using
the familiar language of the tariff, if "classified as woolen
cloths,"
Page 144 U. S. 11
subject to the duty imposed on such cloths. If action were
necessary by the Secretary of the Treasury to put this act into
force, which we think it was not, such action was taken by the
circular letter of May 13, 1890, from the Treasury Department to
all customs officers, publishing the act for the information and
guidance of the public.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the act was legally passed,
and that by its own terms, and irrespective of any action by the
Secretary of the Treasury, the duties on worsted cloths were to be
such as were placed by the act of 1883 on woolen cloths.
The judgment of the circuit court will be reversed, and the
case remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this
opinion.