54 So. 605 | Ala. | 1911
By the act of March 2, 1907 (Gen. Laws 1907, p. 255), the Fifteenth judicial circuit was created, with a judge and solicitor. It was provided that the salary of the solicitor should be §1,800 per annum, and the solicitor, appointed by the Governor on March 7, 1907, has since that time been in receipt of the salary provided by the act. Now he seeks to have the auditor draw a warrant in his favor for the difference during his incumbency between the salary as fixed by the act creating the Fifteenth circuit and the salary of other circuit solicitors which has been fixed since February 21, 1893, at §2,400 per annum. — Code 1896, § 5527; Code 1907, § 7791. These sections provide in identical language as follows: “The solicitor of each judicial circuit shall be paid a salary of twenty-four hundred dollars per annum, in monthly installments, on the warrant of the auditor drawn upon the treasurer.” By an act approved March 6, 1907, the state was divided into 16 circuits. — Gen. Acts 1907, p. 367. This act also provided for the Fifteenth circuit. It provided that the Governor should immediately appoint a judge and a solicitor for circuits in which vacancies in such offices existed. It did not deal with the subject of salaries. As has been indicated, petitioner was appointed on the next day. The Code of 1907 was adopted by an act approved July 27, 1907, and became operative May 1, 1908. Pe
In his opinion, which has been incorporated into the transcript, the learned judge of the Fifteenth circuit held that the act of March 2, 1907, was violative of section 105 of the Constitution of 1901. The relevant provision of that section is expressed as follows: “No special private or local law, except a law fixing the time of holding courts, shall be enacted in any case which is provided for by a general law, or when the relief sought can be' given by any court of this state.” His theory, we gather, was that so long as there is to be found in the statute book a law fixing the salary of circuit solicitors in general terms, the Legislature is without power, when creating a new office of that character, to fix the salary of the new officer at a different amount. This opinion involved of course a holding that the act under consideration is a local act. And it has been so held. — State ex rel. Attorney General v. Sayre, 142 Ala. 641, 39 South. 240. Whatever of obscurity there may be in this provision of the Constitution, it is certain that it was not intended to prohibit all local legislation. It was not intended to prohibit local legislation on subjects according to any specific classification. That was done in section 104, where those classes of local laws which were to be prohibited are catalogued, and presumptively the framers of the Constitution said in that section all they intended to say on that subject. It was not intended to operate against local legislation in those cases where á local statute undertakes to do something that has been precisely done in a general law. It could not be assumed that the Legislature would waste its time in the duplication of statutes. But if the local bill
Petitioner seems to contend that so much of the act as fixes his salary at $1,800 was repealed by later enactments. The adoption of the Code of 1907 did not have that effect because local laws are expressly saved by section 10 of that Code. Nor did the act of March 6th. Neither expressly nor by any sort of implication did that act deal with the subject of salaries. The bill to create the Fifteenth circuit originated in the Senate. In the House it was amended and as amended passed. Upon its return to the Senate the House amendment was concurred in. It was then sent to the Governor for his approval. The Governor returned the bill to the Senate with a formal proposal of an amendment. Both the Senate and the House concurred in the amendment. The journal of the Senate shows the names of those voting for and against concurring in the House amendment, and the journals of both houses show the same fact in respect to concurrence in the amendment proposed by the Governor. We understand the petitioner (appellee) to advance two propositions in this connection: (1) That on each occasion of concurrence in the amendment of the bill it was necessary that the journals should be made to show a vote upon the amended bill in its entirety; (2) the Governor has no power to amend bills, but that, when he proposes an amendment which will remove his objection, “the house to which it is sent may so amend the bill,” meaning by this argument, we take it, that some member of the house must offer the amendment in the formal way of amendments originating there. General legislative practice, far older than the Constitution in which the first of the provisions in question appears, and not at all in conflict with it, has sanctioned the method adopted by the
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, and a judgment here rendered dismissing the petition for mandamus at the petitioner’s cost.
Reversed and rendered.