PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This is an appeal from an Order dated October 1, 1990, of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, Minnehaha County, the Honorable Judge Richard D. Hurd presiding. This Order denied Appellant Williams’ (hereinafter Williams) Amended Answer and Claim of Exemptions and sustained Appel-lee Account Management’s (hereinafter Garnishor) Objection to the Claim of Exemptions. All litigation/appeal flows from an attempt to collect a medical bill.
Williams filed a Notice of Appeal with the Clerk of Courts for Minnehaha County on November 30, 1990. Jurisdiction is invoked pursuant to SDCL 15-26A-3(5).
ISSUES/HOLDING
On appeal, Williams raises the following issues, which are divided into three parts for purposes of our decision:
I.That SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53 violate Article VI, Section 18 of the South Dakota Constitution.
II. That SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53 violate Article XXI, Section 4 of the South Dakota Constitution.
III. That House Bill 1344 (1990 S.D. Sess. Laws, Ch. 157) violates Article III, Section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution. We deny these constitutional challenges and affirm on all issues.
FACTS
This action was brought by Garnishor, seeking garnishment of Williams’ wages and salary while he was an employee of John Morrell and Company. Garnishor commenced this action on September 26, 1989, seeking to collect $4,643.11 owed to McKennan Hospital for medical services. In the principal lawsuit, garnishor served Williams with a Summons and Complaint which Williams failed to answer. A Default Judgment was entered against him on November 7, 1989, in the amount of $4,703.61. Garnishor commenced garnishment proceedings (the ancillary proceeding) after Service of Notice of Entry of the Judgment and issuance of Execution of same. In response, Williams filed an Answer and Claim of Exemptions. In this document, Williams asserted that he was head of a household and that all his personal property, not absolutely exempt by law, totaled $691.30 in value, which included $67.80 of his weekly earnings. The trial court later allowed Williams to file an Amended Answer and Claim of Exemptions claiming that SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53, derived from House Bill 1344 (1990 S.D. Sess. Laws Ch. 157) of the 1990 Legislative session, were unconstitutional. Garnishor replied by filing an Objection to Williams’ Claim of Exemptions. Trial court denied Williams’ Claim of Exemptions and sustained Garnishor’s objection to Williams’ Claim of Exemptions. From this ruling, Williams appeals.
Because of the effect of SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53, Williams may not claim earnings as additional personal property exemptions by the fact that Williams is a wage earner. Non-wage earners, who are a head of a household and have person *299 al property of substantial value, can receive the entire $4,000 personal property exemption.
DECISION
I. Do SDCL 43-45-U and SDCL 21-18-53 violate Article VI, Section 18 of the South Dakota Constitution? We hold that they do not.
We briefly review the history of SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53. In 1986, the South Dakota Legislature passed House Bill 1347 (1986 S.D. Sess. Law, ch. 361), thereby amending an earlier version of SDCL 43-45-4. This amendment provided:
In addition to the property provided for in § 43-45-2 and 43-45-3, the debtor, if the head of a family, may, by himself, his agent or attorney, select from all other of his personal property, not absolutely exempt, goods, chattels, merchandise, money, or other personal property not to exceed in the aggregate four thousand dollars in value; and, if a single person, not the head of a family, property as aforesaid of the value of two thousand dollars, which is also exempt and which shall be chosen and appraised as provided by law. For the purpose of wage garnishment and state tax debt, the debt- or may, if the head of a family, exempt fifteen hundred dollars of money or property, or, if a single person, exempt six hundred dollars of money or property.
This amendment raised the amount of the personal property exemption from fifteen hundred dollars to four thousand dollars for debtors who are head of a family; and, additionally, from six hundred dollars to two thousand dollars for single person debtors. This amendment also limited the property exemptions for “head of family” debtors to fifteen hundred dollars and for single person debtors to six hundred dollars in wage garnishment and tax debt matters.
However, in the 1990 legislative session, SDCL 43-45-4 was again amended, whereupon the reference to wage garnishments in the 1986 amendment to SDCL 43-45-4 was deleted. In addition, House Bill 1344 added a new section to SDCL ch. 21-18 and ch. 43-45 at subsections 53 and 14, respectively. This new section provides:
The earnings of a debtor are exempt from process or levy only to the extent provided in § 21-18-51 and 21-18-52.
1990 S.D. Sess. Laws, ch. 157 § 5 and 9. Therefore, this bill restricted debtors to exempt their earnings only to the extent provided in § 21-18-51 and § 21-18-52.
We reiterate the well-known principles of review by which this Court is bound in considering the constitutionality of any act of the Legislature. Any legislative act is accorded a presumption in favor of constitutionality and that presumption is not overcome until the unconstitutionality of the act is clearly and unmistakably shown and there is no reasonable doubt that it violates fundamental constitutional principles.
See, In re Request for Opinion of Supreme Court,
Since Williams challenges the constitutionality of SDCL 43-45-14 and 21-18-53, he bears the burden of proof that they violate a state constitutional provision.
McMacken,
Williams contends that SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53 in their present form and as applied to him, unconstitutionally discriminate between debtors who have earnings and those who do not, in violation of Article VI, § 18 of the South Dakota Constitution. This section declares that “[N]o law shall be passed granting to any citizen, class of citizens or corporations, privileges or immunities which upon the same terms shall not equally belong to all citizens or corporations.”
In determining whether these statutes comport with Article VI, § 18 of the South Dakota Constitution, we employ a two part test which has been traditionally used by this Court when a statute has been called
*300
into question because of an alleged denial of equal protection of the laws. The test that we espoused in
City of Aberdeen v. Meidinger,
The first part of the test is whether the statute does set up arbitrary classifications among various persons subject to it.
The second part of the test is whether there is a rational relationship between the classification and some legitimate legislative purpose.
See, South Dakota Physicians Health Group v. State,
Applying the first prong, we look to see if the statute applies equally to all people.
Lyons,
We do not find this classification of debtors to be patently arbitrary nor unreasonable. The two classes of debtors are not economically postured in the same stance. Article VI, § 18 provides, in part, that “[N]o law shall be passed granting ... privileges or immunities,
which upon the same terms
shall not equally belong to all citizens_” (Emphasis supplied). This constitutional provision prohibits classification between individuals that are “upon the same terms,”; it does not prohibit the Legislature from making classifications based upon differences in “terms” surrounding individuals. In other words, there may be disparate treatment between different classes of individuals, subject, however, to express constitutional classifications, though there can be no discrimination between the members of one class.
See, Barnett v. Siewert,
The second prong of the test is whether there is a rational relationship between the classification and some legislative purpose. We are concerned with the constitutionality of an act. We will not intervene as long as there is a rational relationship between the legislative purpose and the classification, subject however, to any express constitutional classification.
Morrill v. Wollman,
II. Do SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53 violate Article XXI, Section 4 of the South Dakota Constitution? We do not consider this issue because the issue was improperly raised for the first time on appeal.
On appeal, Williams raises the question of whether SDCL 43-45-14 and SDCL 21-18-53 are constitutional under Article XXI, § 4 of the South Dakota Constitution. We refuse to consider this constitutional question at this time. The issue was not brought before the trial court but is raised for the first time on appeal.
We have consistently held that the constitutionality of a statute cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.
Sharp v. Sharp,
III. Does 1990 S.D. Sess. Laws, ch. 157 (House Bill 1344) violate Article III, Section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution by embracing more than one subject in the body of the bill? We hold that it does not.
Williams asserts that House Bill 1344 (H.B. 1344) is violative of Article III, Section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution. Article III, Section 21 states: “No law shall embrace more than one subject, which shall be expressed in its title.” The title of H.B. 1344 is: An Act to revise certain provisions relating to garnishment. Williams contends that the substance of H.B. 1344 covers three subjects, not simply the one referred to in its title — garnishment. He maintains that two other subjects, levy and exemptions from process, are improper additions to H.B. 1344.
*302 We do not agree. H.B. 1344 satisfies constitutional standards. Our rationale immediately follows.
Article III, Section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution has three purposes:
(1) To prevent the combining into one bill of several diverse measures which have no common basis except, perhaps, their separate inability to receive a favorable vote on their own merits;
(2) To prevent the unintentional and unknowing passage of provisions inserted in a bill of which the title gives no intimation; and,
(3) To fairly apprise the public of matters which are contained in the various bills and to prevent fraud or deception of the public as to matters being considered by the Legislature.
See, South Dakota Physicians Health Group v. State,
Williams specifically cites sections 5, 8 and 9 of H.B. 1344 as containing the improper subject additions. Sections 5 and 9 of H.B. 1344 amend the extent by which a debtor’s earnings are exempt from process or levy as provided by SDCL 21-18-51 and 21-18-52, which involve garnishment proceedings. Section 8, which amends the maximum personal property exemptions for earners, also amends SDCL 43-45-4 by deleting the reference to wage garnishments in that section. Williams contends that these amendments contained in H.B. 1344 are improper since they involve subject matters completely different than the subject referred to in the title — garnishment; hence, he argues, unconstitutional because they do not fairly apprise the public that earnings are going to be eliminated as an additional personal property exemption.
The provision of Article III, section 21, creates two mandates which we must apply to test the constitutionality of H.B. 1344. To the extent that no law shall embrace more than one subject, the “subject” is defined as the public or private concern for which the law is enacted and all provisions of the Act must (1) relate directly to the same subject, (2) have a natural connection, and (3) not be foreign to the subject as stated in the title.
Meierhenry v. City of Huron,
In a line of cases led by
State v. Morgan,
We find that H.B. 1344 does embrace only one subject — garnishment. Subsections 5, 8 and 9, which Williams contends are improper subject additions, are easily subsumed within the general subject of the bill. Sections 5 and 9 amend the extent by which a debtor’s earnings are exempt from process or levy to the extent provided in SDCL 21-18-51 and 52. These sections involve garnishment proceedings. Section 8 amends SDCL 43-45-4 by deleting the reference to wage garnishment therein. *303 Clearly, these three disputed sections of H.B. 1344 (1) relate directly to the subject of garnishment, (2) have a natural connection to that subject, and (3) are not foreign to that subject as stated in the title. These sections of H.B. 1344 are an integral part of the garnishment process.
The second requirement that we must apply is that the subject shall be expressed in the title. The title “An Act to revise certain provisions relating to garnishment” is somewhat general in its treatment of the subject. The central question is: Does the title put a person on notice of a germane subject in the body of a statute? “ ‘When the title is general, as it may be, all persons interested are put upon inquiry as to anything in the body of the act which is germane to the subject expressed.’ ”
McMacken v. State,
H.B. 1344 is not in violation of Article III, section 21 of the South Dakota Constitution. H.B. 1344 concerns one subject— garnishment — which is sufficiently expressed it its title. The title of H.B. 1344 is adequate to put on notice all persons interested in any pertinent issues under the expressed subject.
Having examined all aspects of appellant’s constitutional challenge, we conclude that the decision of the trial court should be affirmed.
Affirmed.
