10 S.E.2d 365 | Ga. | 1940
1. If the act approved March 24, 1939, amending the act of February 10, 1937, be treated as a valid law, and if both be construed according to their evident intention, the two acts together repealed by implication so much of section 3 of the special act of August 23, 1872, as declared a basis for apportionment of the State school fund to Bibb County, and placed the county upon the different and general basis prescribed by the act of 1937.
2. The provision of the constitution of 1877 that "Existing local school systems shall not be affected by this constitution," is not a prohibition against legislative enactment changing such local systems. Accordingly, the act of 1939 mentioned in the preceding note is not unconstitutional as violating that provision.
"21. Petitioner avers that the only legal basis on which a distribution of the common-school tax funds may be made to it is the basis prescribed in section 3 of the act establishing and chartering petitioner, and it is the announced intention of the defendant herein named to disregard the basis prescribed in said special act and to apply to petitioner the basis prescribed in said act of 1937, which basis has no application to this petitioner, so that the act or acts of the defendants herein named applying such basis to this petitioner is contrary to law.
"22. Petitioner avers that it is the legal duty of the defendants herein named to apportion and allot to petitioner the pro rata share of Bibb County of the common-school tax funds of the State of Georgia on the basis and in the manner prescribed in the special act of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia herein before set forth and referred to.
"23. Up to the present time petitioner has elected and petitioner does for the present elect to receive its share of the common-school tax funds of the State of Georgia on the basis prescribed in section 3 of the act establishing and chartering it. *583
"24. Petitioner has consistently demanded of the defendants herein named that in the distribution of the common-school tax funds of the State the basis prescribed in the aforesaid special act be allowed as the only legal and lawful basis of distribution; but petitioner is now advised and notified that its demands will not be complied with in the future.
"25. Petitioner avers that the act approved March 24th, 1939, does not serve to change the rights of petitioner to have its proportion of tax funds allotted to it on the basis of the act of 1872, and specially avers that said act of March 24th, 1939, is contrary to the provisions of paragraph 1 of section 5 of article 8 of the constitution of 1877, in that said paragraph provides that existing school systems shall not be affected by this constitution.
"26. Petitioner further avers that said act of March 24th, 1939, does not expressly in terms, or by necessary implication, or by revision, or in any other manner repeal or amend or affect the special act chartering petitioner under which petitioner's rights are fixed, but that on the contrary said special act is still of full force and effect, and petitioner is entitled to have distributed to it its proportion of the school-tax funds of said State under the terms and provisions of said special act."
The court dismissed the petition on general demurrer, and the plaintiff excepted.
The act of 1937 applied as a general law to all counties of the State, except that in section 3 was a proviso "that those counties in which the public schools are operated under special acts recognized and continued by the constitution of 1877 shall be governed by the provisions of this act, except where the same is in conflict with any such special act." In Board of Educationand Orphanage for Bibb County v. State Board of Education,
1. Regarding the first contention, let it be said that the present case and that of State Board of Education v. CountyBoard of Education of Richmond County,
2. The second contention, as amplified in the argument and briefs, is that the clause "Existing local school systems shall not be affected by this constitution," so preserved and fixed the status of the existing system of Bibb County that the special act establishing it could never thereafter be amended or repealed by a mere act of the General Assembly; or, in other words, that it is a positive inhibition against legislative enactment, and consequently a change could only be made by constitutional amendment. It is further insisted that this court has passed upon substantially the same question in several previous cases, and in each instance has determined it favorably to the local school system. We may say first that we can not agree with counsel as to the effect of our previous decisions. In Smith v. Bohler,
In Barber v. Alexander,
The case of State Board of Education and Orphanage for BibbCounty v. State Board of Education,
Since it thus appears that the question is an open one, let us now consider the clause "Existing local school systems shall not be affected by this constitution." In this connection, we think it is of some importance that in a later portion of the constitution, referring to the relative rank and superiority of stated laws, it was declared that "All laws now of force in this State, not inconsistent with this constitution and the ordinances of this convention, shall remain of force until the same are repealed or modified by the General Assembly" (Code, § 2-8503); and that in a still later paragraph it was provided that "Local and private acts passed for the benefit of counties, cities, towns, corporations, and private persons, not inconsistent with the supreme law, nor with this constitution, and which have not expired nor been repealed, shall have the force of statute law" (Code, § 2-8504). In a previous section was a provision that "Laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout the State, and no special law shall be enacted in any case for which provision has been made by an existing general law" (Code, § 2-401), and provision had also been made for "a thorough system of common schools . . as nearly uniform as practicable" (Code, § 2-6601). It was probably on account of the two last-mentioned provisions that the framers of the constitution deemed it advisable to insert the clause that existing local systems should not be affected. Otherwise the constitution itself might have abolished them, and the avoidance of any such result was apparently the sole purpose of the clause in question. We can not sustain the contention that it was the purpose of this clause to perpetuate existing systems as against any possible change by the legislature so long as the constitution itself remained of force, and without amendment in relation to these systems. Any such construction would virtually lift the special acts from the realm of legislative action and incorporate them as parts of the constitution itself. We think on the contrary that they were merely continued in effect, with "the force of statute law" (Code, § 2-8504), until "modified or repealed by the General Assembly" (§ 2-8503). If they were not "affected" by the constitution, it must necessarily be true that they were neither strengthened nor weakened by that instrument, but were simply left to stand as if the constitution itself had not been adopted. The constitution did "preserve" and continue them to this extent, that is, against destruction or *588 modification by any provision which the constitution itself contained; but further than this it did not go. It is our opinion that the act of 1939 is not unconstitutional as contended, and that on the whole the petition failed to state a cause of action. The judgment sustaining the general demurrer is therefore
Affirmed. All the Justices concur.