36 Kan. 337 | Kan. | 1887
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The object of the petition filed in the court below is to obtain a preventive remedy against the en
“That the board of county commissioners of Cherokee county is hereby authorized, at the regular time of making the annual levy of taxes for the year eighteen hundred and eighty-six, to levy a tax not to exceed three mills on each dollar of taxable property in said county, and in each succeeding year thereafter a like tax, until the taxes thus levied shall reach the sum of seventy thousand dollars and no more, which taxes so levied shall be collectedas other taxes;, and the said board of county commissioners shall appropriate the same as follows,” etc.
Under the act, a court house is to be built and furnished in Cherokee county, at a cost not exceeding $40,000, and certain bridges are to be built and paid for in that county. The'subject of the act is the creation and use of a fund for public improvements in Cherokee county, consisting of a court house and bridges. The learned district judge who granted the temporary injunction in this case and refused to dissolve the same upon hearing, stated in his opinion that as the fund provided for was to be used to build a court house and pay for bridges, the act contains two subjects, and therefore the same is in contravention of the mandate of the constitution. Of course if we ignore the provisions of the act to create a fund of $70,-000 for the purpose of public improvements, and then decide that the building of a court house has no connection with the building of bridges, and that these matters have no relation to each other, the decision of the court below may be sustained ; but we do not think this is the proper view of the case
The constructioh of county buildings and bridges has been a matter of previous consideration by the legislature in the same statute, thus:
“All contracts for the erection of any court house, jail or other county building, or the construction of any bridge the cost of which exceeds one thousand dollars, shall be awarded on a public letting to the lowest responsible bidder.” (Comp. Laws of 1879. ch. 25. §21.1
If the legislature had passed an act entitled “An act to authorize the board of county commissioners of Cherokee county to provide a fund and appropriate the same for public improvements in said county,” and had therein authorized the creation and use of a fund of $70,000 for public improvements in Cherokee county, the board of county commissioners of that county would have had authority to use the fund for the construction of a court house, and for building and paying for bridges; and such an act would be constitutional.
If such an act would be constitutional, we can perceive no good reason why the act of 1886 should not also be held constitutional, although the objects are distinctly designated for which the fund created by the levies of taxes is to be used. Considering the building of a court house and the building and purchase of bridges public improvements in the county,
In our view, a court house and the bridges of a county are public improvements; therefore, these things in the act are congruous; and while more is expressed in the title than is necessary, nothing is expressed therein to deceive or surprise. At the time of the passage of said chapter seventy-five, Cherokee county constituted one senatorial district, the fourteenth, and three representative districts, the forty-first, the forty-second, and the forty-third. The act applies to Cherokee county only; and if it be urged against the act that it is “hodge-podge” or “log-rolling” legislation, because provision is made therein to purchase and build bridges, as well as to construct a court house, the answer is that it cannot be invalidated because the fund is to be devoted to several acts or purposes. If this were not the case, then various acts of the legislature regarding appropriations would be held invalid, especially the annual appropriations made for miscellaneous purposes, because the money therein appropriated is to be used for several distinct and separate purposes.