— The, complaint contains two counts, each founded upon an account for money had and received by the defendant to plaintiff’s use. The first count seeks a recovery of one thousand four hundred and forty-five and 56-100 dollars paid by the plaintiff to the defendant under protest and compulsión. Of this amount one thousand and eighty-four and 17-00 dollars was paid on account of a special tax levied by the court of county commissioners “of three twentieths of one per centum on all the taxable property in the county for the purpose of paying semi-annual interest on county bonds, and for the purpose of building a bridge across Town Creek at Cliovies” exclusive of the one half of one per centum permitted to be levied under the constitution. The remainder, of the fourteen hundred and forty-five and 56-100 dollars, to-wit, three hundred and sixty-one and 39-100 dollars paid by plaintiff to the defendant, as was the three hundred and sixty and 03-100 dollars claimed in the second count of the complaint, was on account of the special school tax levied for the Years 1897 and 1898.
The right to require the plaintiff to pay the one thousand and eighty-four and 17-100 dollars depends in a measure upon the constitutionality of the act of the general assembly approved. February 5, 1891, (Acts 1890-91, p. 359) entitled “An act to authorize the court of county commissioners of DeKalb county to issue bonds of said county to an amount not exceeding thirty thousand dollars and to dispose of the same for the purpose of securing means for building a court house and. furnishing the same with suitable furniture and for building an addition to the county jail of said county.”
Section 1 of this act provides, “that for the purpose of securing the means for building a court house, and furnishing the same with suitable furniture and for building an addition to the county jail, for 'DeKalb county, the court of county commissioners for said DeKalb county is hereby authorized and empowered to issue and dispose of bonds of said county to the amount of thirty thousand dollars or so much -thereof as said court may deem necessary, payable in twenty years, from said date of issuance etc.”
Section 2 provides, that the bonds may be in such sum and shall be made payable at such place or places as the court may direct, and that they shall not be valid
Section 3 authorizes the court of county commissioners by a majority vote to do any and all things necessary to carry in effect the provisions of the act at any term of the court, whether regular or special etc. etc.
Section 4 provides, “that said court is hereby authorized to levy a special tax from time to time as may be necessary to pay the interest on said .bonds and to pa} the principal at maturity.”
It is not questioned that the legislature has the power under the section of the constitution above quoted by proper.enactment to authorize a special tax to be levied by the court of county commissioners to pay the bonds or interest thereon evidencing an indebtedness created by the county for the erection of the court house and an addition to the county jail. The chief objection, and we may add the only plausible one, taken to the constitutionality of the act, is that it offends section 2 of article IV of the Constitution, which declares that “each law shall contain but one subject which shall be clearly expressed in its title etc.”
The object to be accomplished in embodying this clause in the constitution has been so often declared by this court that it will serve no good purpose to repeat it here. — Ballentyne v. Wickersham,
In the case of Ex parte Pollard,
The leading thought in the title of the act in question, when compared and construed with the act, is obviously the one expressed in the language “for. the purpose of securing means for building a court house-and providing the same with suitable furniture and for building an addition to the county jail of said county. — Judson v. City of Bessemer,
One of the methods of securing the means for building the court house etc. as'provided by the fourth sec
In the case of Hare v. Kennerly,
Ñor has section 31 of the fourth article of the constitution, any application to the act, nor is it a limitation of the legislative power exercised in its enactment.'— The State v. Street, supra.
The remaining contention against the constitutionality -of the statute is that it contains the provision for furnishing the court house with suitable furniture, in violation of the provision of the clause of the constitution first above quoted since that limits the power of the legislature to levy a special tax to pay such debts created by the county for the erection of necessary public buildings. In this we cannot concur. The authorization to levy a tax to erect a court house, includes and confers the authority to provide for furnishing it with suitable furniture.
It is suggested however that notwithstanding the act is constitutional the levy of three-twentieths of one per cent is void for the reason that it includes in it a provision for the building of a bridge. No argument is made in support of it in appellant’s counsel’s brief and as he did not deem it of sufficient importance to urge it, we will not consider it further than to say that it is untenable.
The act authorizing the levy of the special tax for school purposes is constitutional, and the amount paid by plaintiff on that account cannot be recovered back. Southern Railway Co. v. St. Clair Co., in MS.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
