35 S.W.2d 70 | Ark. | 1931
Lead Opinion
It is conceded by counsel for the parties that the single question raised by this appeal is the validity of act 150 of the Acts of 1929, placing the county treasurer and county and probate clerk of Hempstead County, Arkansas, on a salary basis. Acts of 1929, vol. 1, p. 764. *108
That part of 1 relating to the issue raised by the appeal provides that the county and probate clerk of Hempstead County, Arkansas, shall receive as full compensation for his services as county and probate clerk the sum of $3,600, and the sum of $1,500 for a deputy, said sums to be paid in equal monthly installments. The county court upheld the act, and allowed Frank May and his deputy the salaries provided in the act. Curtis Cannon, a taxpayer, was allowed to intervene and appeal to the circuit court. There again the validity of the act was upheld, and the claims of the county and probate clerk and his deputy were allowed as provided by statute. The case is here on appeal.
Amendment No. 12 to our Constitution reads as follows: "The General Assembly shall not pass any local or special act. This amendment shall not prohibit the repeal of local or special acts."
In the construction of this amendment, this court has held that act No. 367 of the Acts of 1929, fixing the compensation of the sheriff of Crawford County and the duty of the county clerk of such county on a basis entirely different from that of other sheriffs and county clerks in the State is within the constitutional provision against special legislation. Smalley v. Bushmaier,
It is conceded that, if the ruling in these cases is adhered to, the act is unconstitutional, and the judgment must be reversed; but it is insisted that the holding in these cases is wrong and should be overruled. We cannot agree with counsel in this contention. The act in question is purely local, and its application is confined to Hempstead County. It fixes the salary of the county and probate clerk of that county and has no reference to the salary of the county and probate clerk of any other county. *109
Prior to the adoption of the amendment in question, this court held that the act of February 20, 1893, fixing the salaries of the officers of Sebastian County was not in violation of the Constitution of 1874, article 5, 25, providing that in all cases where a general law can be made applicable, no special law shall be enacted, since the Legislature is the judge of the necessity and propriety of the special law as applicable to any particular subject. Powell v. Durden,
The Supreme Court of New York has held that an act relating to the fees of the sheriff of a single county is a local act. Gasken v. Meeks,
The reason for the rule and the rule itself is clearly stated in Ferguson v. Ross,
"It seems impossible to fix any definite rule by which to solve the question whether a law is local or general, and it has been found expedient to leave the matter, to a considerable extent, open, to be determined upon the special circumstances of each case. There are, however, certain general principles to be deduced from the decisions. One of these is that a statute may be public and still local, and therefore within the purview of this provision of the constitution. In accordance with this view, it has been held that acts constituting or defining the jurisdiction of local courts, amending charters of municipal corporations, regulating the appointment and election of local officers in a particular city, providing for the laying out of streets or highways or the construction of bridges in a specified locality, and for local taxation to pay the expense of the work, regulating the fees of officers in a particular county or the expenses of judicial sales therein, although public acts, are nevertheless local and to be valid the subject of the enactment must be expressed in the title. [Citing authorities.]"
"Another rule evolved by the discussion of the subject is that an act embracing within its scope all the cities of the State, or all things of a certain class, is a general and not a local act, although by reason of some limitation, based on population or other condition, only a particular city or the inhabitants of a single locality can in the actual situation receive its benefits. In re N.Y. Elevated R.R.,
The act under consideration applies to only one county in the State, excluding all other counties from its consideration, and is clearly a local or special act, under the principles of law above announced.
It is claimed that this holding will render invalid a number of salary acts of a similar character passed by the Legislature of 1929. Considerations of that sort cannot affect a judicial determination of a question of law. Our duty is to construe the Constitution as it is written. As we have already seen, the Supreme Court of this State has defined a salary act for the officers of a single county to be a local or special act before the adoption of the amendment under consideration. The legal presumption is that the framers of the amendment had in mind that the court had already held that a salary act for the officers of a single county was a local or special act. A prior construction of a State Constitution will be regarded, in the absence of any evidence of different intent, as adopted by re-enactment of the same language in a revision of the Constitution. Sliders v. St. Louis
New Orleans Anchor Line,
We again call attention to the fact that this decision does not impair the decision in State v. Crawford,
Again, we do not wish to be understood as impairing the force of cases like Ark-Ash Lumber Co. v. Pride
Fairley,
We again call attention to the case of Harwood v. Wentworth,
The result of our views is that the act under consideration is unconstitutional; and it follows that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and the cause will be remanded with directions to the circuit court to certify its judgment in accordance with the opinion herein expressed down to the county court for its guidance in the premises.
Dissenting Opinion
In my opinion, the decisions of this court in the cases of Smalley v. Bushmaier,
The Local Bill Amendment, the correct number of which appears to be No. 12 (Applegate's Constitution of Arkansas Annotated, p. 231), is not to be construed as if it stood alone. It can be correctly construed only when read in connection with the Constitution of which it has become a part. In the case of Hodges v. Dawdy,
Amendment No. 12 should therefore be read and construed in connection with the whole Constitution of which it has become a part, and, when so read and construed, certain conditions must be taken into consideration. It has always been the law that the General Assembly, and that agency alone, could fix the compensation of county officers, and this might be done by fixing fees for particular services to be paid them, or allowing a salary for all services. The power to do either existed, and has never been questioned.
In the case of Nixon v. Allen,
The General Assembly would have had this power unless the Constitution had denied it. But this authority was not only not denied, but was expressly conferred by 4 of article 16, of the Constitution, which reads as follows: "The General Assembly shall fix the salaries and fees of all officers in the State, and no greater salary or fee than that fixed by law shall be paid to any officer, employee or other person, or at any rate other than par value; and the number and salaries of the clerks and employees of the different departments of the State shall be fixed by law."
Express authority is here conferred to fix both salaries and fees, and compensation to an officer may therefore be provided by either a salary or fees.
Certainly, this section of the Constitution has not been repealed by amendment No. 12, and the authority to fix the compensation of all officers in the State imports authority to fix the compensation of a particular officer or officers in certain counties, as distinguished from officers in other counties, and it cannot be true that this authority may be exercised in a particular county only by the enactment of legislation applicable to all counties.
There is a wide difference in the population and wealth of the different counties of the State, with consequent difference in the extent of the services to be performed by similar officers in the different counties. An adequate compensation for one county might be inadequate in another, and this condition was taken into account in the section of the Constitution quoted, which left to the General Assembly the authority to fix the compensation of all officers.
In the opinion on rehearing in the case of Webb v. Adams,
In this opinion in the case of Webb v. Adams, supra, on rehearing, we further said: "In this connection we do not wish to be understood as impairing in the least the force of the decisions in State v. Crawford,
"Neither do we wish to impair the force of cases like Harwood v. Wentworth,
I am therefore of the opinion that act No. 150 of the Acts of 1929, vol. 1, p. 764, herein held unconstitutional, is neither local nor special, within the meaning of amendment No. 12. It is an administrative measure, of a kind of which we have innumerable examples in the published acts of all the sessions of the General Assembly since the adoption of amendment No. 12.
In the exercise of its functions as a sovereign the State has, and must have, power to enact administrative legislation, even though such legislation operates only in a particular locality or upon a single individual.
The act upheld in the case of Urquhart v. State
The majority recognize the right of the General Assembly to fix fees and salaries, but say it must be done in accordance with some basis of classification. I have attempted to show that this was not true as to salary acts, but, if so, it appears to me that, when this concession is made, as it must be, their argument falls. Is not the Hempstead County act a classification act? When the General Assembly has the power to act, it is not required to recite the reasons inducing its action, and should we not assume that the General Assembly was *117 made aware of the population and wealth of Hempstead County and the amount of labor required of its county clerk in fixing his salary, and had fixed his salary accordingly? Must the General Assembly, after ascertaining these facts as to a particular county, postpone legislation as to that county until it has also ascertained these facts as to all other counties? And, if it be ascertained that the compensation of a particular officer which can be fixed only by the General Assembly is either excessive or inadequate, is appropriate legislation to correct the inequality to be declared invalid unless the legislation correcting the inequality relates to all other counties in which no such conditions are found to exist?
The majority cite the case of Powell v. Durden,
Section 25 of article 5, of the Constitution provides that "In all cases where a general law can be made applicable no special law shall be enacted; nor shall the operation of any general law be suspended by the Legislature for the benefit of any particular individual, corporation or association; nor where the courts have jurisdiction to grant the powers or the privileges or the relief asked for."
The point there involved was whether the General Assembly might, in view of this section of the Constitution, pass a law which applied only to a particular county, and the point decided was that the Legislature was the judge of the necessity or propriety of a special law as applicable to any subject, rather than a general law, and the act was upheld as valid on that theory. *118
Certainly, an act, even though it relates to salaries, which applies to a single county, or to any part of the State less than the whole, is not a general act, and I do not so contend. What I do contend is that a salary act, even though applicable to only one county, is not a local or special act, within the meaning of amendment No. 12, because an act of that kind is administrative in its nature, and is expressly authorized by section 4, of article 16, of the Constitution, and that section of the Constitution was unaffected by the adoption of amendment No. 12.
The act held invalid in the Smalley v. Bushmaier cases was one allowing the sheriff of Crawford County a fee of seventy-five cents per day for feeding prisoners, whereas other sheriffs of the State are allowed a dollar per day for similar services. Section 6211, C. M. Digest. That act did not fix the salary of the sheriff of that county, but did fix the fee for the particular service, different from that of other sheriffs for the same service, thereby destroying uniformity in fees for the same service throughout the State. Charging one fee in one county for a particular service, and a less or greater fee in another for the same service, is a different proposition from that of fixing different salaries for all services in different counties. Section 4 of article 16 of the Constitution confers authority on the General Assembly to fix the salaries and fees of all officers of the State, and may contemplate that the same fees shall be charged for the same service throughout the State (which I do not concede), but, certainly, does not contemplate that all similar officers of different counties placed upon a salary shall be paid the same salary.
Act 150 of the Acts of 1929, herein held unconstitutional, fixes first the salary of the county treasurer of Hempstead County, and also that of the county and probate clerk of that county and his deputy. But it does not affect the fees to be charged in that county which the county clerk is required to collect, for by section 1-A of the act it is provided that "All fees now provided by law *119 shall be collected by the county clerk of Hempstead County, Arkansas, and paid into the general revenue fund of Hempstead County." This means, of course, that the same fees shall be collected there as are collected in other counties throughout the State, and in this respect the Hempstead County act is distinguishable from the Crawford County act, held invalid in the Smalley cases.
The Hempstead County act does nothing more than fix the salary of two county officers, and I think the Legislature has this power, and that the act is valid and not in conflict with amendment No. 12.
I therefore most respectfully dissent; and I am authorized to say that Mr. Justice McHANEY concurs in the views here expressed.