128 Ga. 412 | Ga. | 1907
This case arose upon the filing of an affidavit of illegality to a fi. fa. The defendant in fi. fa. paid the amount of ihe judgment, and all cost which he admitted to be due, and insisted that the balance of the cost claimed was not due by reason of the unconstitutionality of the local act under which it was taxed. This act was approved March 2, 1874, and is entitled “An act to establish rates of fees of magistrates and constables in the City of Savannah, and to provide for the payment of costs by the County of Chatham in criminal cases.” Acts 1874, p. 220. The first section of this act fixes the fees of magistrates and constables in the City of Savannah in civil eases; the second section forbids special contracts for fees between the officers and parties; the third section provides for the payment by Chatham county of fees in criminal cases to the magistrates and constables of that county, and the fourth section requires the magistrates and constables to post the prescribed fee bill in their offices, and denounces as malpractice a failure so to do, as well as any violation of its provisions. It is claimed that this act offends article 3, section 4, paragraph 5, of the constitution of 1868: “Nor shall any law or ordinance pass which refers to more than one subject-matter, or contains matter different from what is expressed in the title thereof.” The caption and the body disclose that the legislature intended to fix a fee bill in civil cases for magistrates in the City of Savannah, and to provide for the payment of a limited amount of cost in criminal cases by Chatham county to the magis
We think that the act embraces two entirely different subject-matters: (1) .the establishment of a fee bill in civil cases for magistrates and constables in the City of Savannah; (2) the provision for the payment of costs in criminal cases to officers of the County of Chatham by that county, without regard to the location of the districts of such officers within the corporate limits of the City of Savannah. The subject-matter of the first section concerns only a portion of Chatham county — the City of Savannah, whereas the third section undertakes special legislation for the entire county-The County of Chatham and the City of Savannah are separate and distinct political entities. We may not judicially know that at the time of the passage of this act Chatham county contained militia districts outside the City of Savannah, but we do know that the corporate limits of the City of Savannah were not coextensive with the limits of Chatham county, and that there existed at least a possibility of militia districts located wholly without that city; for we find, six years after the passage of the act under consideration, that certain militia districts in Chatham county outside the City of Savannah were recognized, and their territorial limits specially defined by a local act. Acts 1880-1, p. 654. When we turn to the various decisions of this court construing this section of the constitution, we find that most of the eases are decided upon their own special facts. Thus, in 1872, the legislature passed an act “to consolidate and amend the several acts incorporating the City of Brunswick, and for other purposes therein mentioned.” One section contained a provision to make valid and confirm “all the ordinances of the Mayor and City Council of the City of Brunswick heretofore passed, and not in conflict with the constitution of the State of Georgia or of the United States.” It was held that this act was unconstitutional, because it embraced two subject-matters. Brieswick v. Brunswick, 51 Ga. 639. This case illustrates an extreme tendency towards a literal analysis and a strict construction of a legislative
Opposition between the law and the constitution should be plain and unmistakable, before the courts will invalidate the law by construction. Welborne v. State, 114 Ga. 816, and cases cited. At the same time, when a legislative act clearly and palpably conflicts with the constitution, it is the duty of the court to so declare. The requirement of singleness of purpose in legislative enactments first appeared in the constitution of 1861. In Conner’s-case, 51 Ga. 573, Judge McCay said: “The evident intent was to prevent what is commonly known as Tog rolling;’ passing through a measure not on its own merits, by combining it with other measures, each of which has a certain strength, and thus pulling them through by virtue of their combined strength.” This clause of the constitution is a protest against omnibus bills, which frequently embrace matters not related, and sometimes matters adverse in their nature. We believe the act under consideration clearly contains two subject-matters, and is in violation of the constitutional provision forbidding such legislation. The court below taxed the cost on the assumption of the constitutionality, of the local act of 1874. As we find that act to be unconstitutional, his judgment must be
Reversed.