70 So. 744 | Ala. | 1916
This proceeding looks to the issuance of a writ of mandamus to require the board of revenue of Jefferson county and its individual members to comply with the laws of. the state; by providing and furnishing office or quarters for the judge of probate of Jefferson county at Bessemer, Jefferson county, as well as necessary fixtures, books, blanks, and other supplies required by law for the same; by providing and furnishing offices for the tax collector and the tax assessor and for the board of revenue of that county, at Bessemer; by providing and furnishing branch offices for county officers at Bessemer. The petition for the writ is grounded in the legislative act approved September 16, 1915 (General Acts, Sess. 1915, pp. 549-553). The writ was granted as prayed. The respective counsel concur in presenting the matters decisive of the merits of the controversy, eliminating all other less vital subjects of disputes, viz., the constitutionality of the act above noted. The title of the act under review is as follows: “An act to provide for and require all county officers of all counties in Alabama now having or which may hereafter have, a population of as much as one hundred and fifty thousand people according to the last federal census, or any such census which may hereafter be taken, to install, equip and maintain, in addition to their offices at the county sites of such counties, offices at each other place in such counties where a circuit court or court of like jurisdiction, is now authorized by law to be held, or where such court may hereafter be authorized by law to be held, for the transaction of all business pertaining thereto, that may arise in or be connected with that part of such county within which the cases arising therein, may be tried in such circuit court or court of like jurisdiction at such place, to provide for the selection, qualification and compensation and fix the powers and duties of the deputies of
Aside from two requirements made in the body of this act, to which we will later refer, the title of the act foreshadows the-substance of the act. Its general purpose, particularly expressed in many provisions in the body of the act, is to establish branch offices, at Bessemer, for county officers performing county functions in Jefferson county, and to affirmatively restrict the performance of these functions with respect to matters arising in, or referable to, a certain defined territorial area in the southern part of Jefferson to the official headquarters thereof at Bessemer. In short, the effect of the act, if valid, is to forbid the performance of the therein defined county functions, by county official agencies, at Birmingham, the county site, and to require their performance at Bessemer, a place not the county seat of the county.
By an act approved February 28, 1901 (Weakley’s Local Laws of Jefferson County, p. 115 et seq.), the city court of Bessemer was established; and its territorial jurisdiction was laid over precincts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 24, 27, 33, 35, 40, 41, and -7, naming, besides thus numbering, the precincts. The objections'to the-constitutional validity of the act of 1915 are predicated of the provisions of section 41, subdivision 11 of section 104, and sections 39, 45, and 106 of the Constitution of 1901. Section 41 provides that “no courthouse or county site shall be removed except by a majority vote of the qualified electors” of the county voting at an election held for that purpose. Subdivision 11 of section 104 provides that the Legislature shall not pass a.
In the comparatively recent decision delivered here on appeal of the Bank of Lafayette v. McNaron, 172 Ala. 469, 55 South. 242, it was ruled that an act requiring the circuit court of a county to be regularly held at a point therein other than the county site did not offend the organic law prohibiting the removal of a courthouse or county site. “Courthouse” and “county site” had been held to be synonymous, and to signify “seat of government.” — Matkin v. Marengo County, 137 Ala. 155, 164, 165, 34 South. 171; Bank of Lafayette v. McNaron, supra. In the earlier appeal of the Matkin-Marengp County controversy (134 Ala. 275, 280, 32 South. 669, 670), Justice Sharpe, writing for the court, said of the presently pertinent provisions of section 41 of the Constitution inhibiting the removal of a courthouse or county site without the sanction of the ballot: “Judicial notice of proceedings in the late Constitution Convention discloses that this clause was inserted in the organic law (of 1901) in response to public sentiment engendered by supposed abuses by the Legislature of the power it formerly had to change a seat of justice by direct enactment; hence the imperative prohibition of such changes except by the method defined.”
As was noted in the second Matkin Appeal, supra, and re-noted in Bank of Lafayette v. McNaron, supra, in at least two counties in the state (Barbour and Blount), the Legislature, previous to the adoption of the Constitution of 1901, had established branch offices for county officers, at places other than at
The object this act intended to accomplish was and is the establishment of a branch headquarters for county government, whereat county officers should perform certain county functions. To effect the legislative purpose it was necessary to define the places at which and the circumstances under which such branch headquarters should be established. Evidently it was not thought to be desirable to establish such headquarters in all the counties of the state, the matter of population being considered a
In view of the object sought to be attained by the act under review, it is plain that the use in this, act of population as the measure of and means for defining a class upon which the enactment should operate effected no violation of constitutional restraints. Passing over this established means of classification for legislative purposes, the contention is that a so-called “reclassification,” in addition to that predicated of population, is made in the act by the provision establishing a branch headquarters for the exercise of county authority and functions at places whereat the circuit court or a court of like jurisdiction is now held or' may be hereafter authorized by law to be held. It is asserted that State ex rel v. Weakley, 153 Ala. 648, 45 South. 175, concludes to the support of this contention, and requires the pronouncement that the act under review is a local, not a general law. The insistence is resolved to this: That a valid classification was not made for the operation of this act. The decision just mentioned was rested for authority on Scowden’s Appeal, 96 Pa. 422. There, as in our Weakley Case, the object of the legislation was a certain class of municipalities; the class of municipalities being defined by the measure and means of the population thereof. In neither case were counties the primary consideration of the legislation. But in both cases there was provided in the acts assailed the further restriction — a distinct element of the classification essayed — based upon the population of the county in which the municipality of the population specified was located. Both acts were held void and upon the ground
There is no reason forbidding a single classification, for legislative purposes, made by the coalescing effects of two elements or factors, reasonably related and associated and capable of marking a single distinction, or of defining a discrimination, between types of a more general aggregation of persons or things. There is nothing objectionable in a segregation — for the legislative purpose of enacting a general law — of those subjects of legislation which have a common characteristic or common characteristics when measured or defined by related elements that combine to mark a distinction, or to discriminate them. If, as was the case in Scowden’s Appeal and in our Weakley Case, an element going to mark the distinction or discrimination sought to be established is without reasonable relation to the thing to be affected and the purpose to be accomplished by the legislation, guised as a general law, the legislative effort must fail because the means of attempted classification are inapt and inappropriate, and hence is arbitrary. While the ruling made in our Weakley Case is undoubtedly sound, yet a good deal might be said in criticism of the soundness of the opinion in the Scow den Appeal if the court sites there involved were with reference to tribunals having jurisdiction coextensive with the counties falling within the. definition of the act; for it is readily conceivable that the legislative judgment might quite reasonably conclude that the public welfare and the convenience of the people of a populous county would be better conserved by increasing the number of trial court sites, and terms of court thereat, when a less populous county would suggest or justify no such action, since it is common knowledge that the maximum volume of “grist for the mills” the courts provide is largely, if not entirely, measured by the number of people within the area to be served by the tribunal.
The act under review is affected with no such infirmity as leads to the invalidity of the act considered in the Weakley Case, 153 Ala. 648, 45 South. 175. That was a purely municipal act,
The act is not subject to the objections presented. It is valid, The order of the judge of the city court of Bessemer awarding the writ of mandamus was well issued. It is affirmed.
Affirmed.