The single issue in this case is whether the legislature, under its plenary power, may constitutionally change by local law the boundaries of a municipality to include property not contiguous1 to the municipality's *534 boundaries as previously fixed. Stated otherwise, the question is whether Act No. 92708, Ala. Acts 1992, violates any one of three constitutional restraints on the legislature's power: Article IV, §§ 104(5), 104(18), and 105, of the Constitution of Alabama, 1901.
Act No. 92-708, a local law,2 became effective on October 7, 1992. It reads:
"AN ACT
"To alter or rearrange the boundary lines of the City of Vestavia Hills, Jefferson County, Alabama, so as to include within the corporate limits of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, certain other territory in Jefferson County, Alabama. "Be it Enacted by the Legislature of Alabama:
"Section 1. The boundary lines of the City of Vestavia Hills, Jefferson County, Alabama, be, and the same are hereby altered or rearranged so as to include all of the territory heretofore encompassed by the corporate limits of the City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, and in addition thereto the following described territory, to-wit:
"[The act at this point described two parcels. The metes and bounds descriptions of Parcel I and Parcel II are omitted here because they are unnecessary for resolution of the issue presented.]
"A map of the above described territory showing the relationship of such territory to the corporate limits of the City of Vestavia Hills, Alabama, is attached hereto as Exhibit 'A' and is incorporated herein by reference. . . ."3
Ala. Acts 1992, at 198, 204. The act by its exact words "altered or rearranged" the boundary lines of the City of Vestavia Hills (hereinafter "Vestavia") to include two separate parcels that are more than three miles from the nearest existing Vestavia boundary; therefore, neither parcel was or is contiguous to Vestavia.
Thereafter, the City of Birmingham and Richard Arrington, Jr., as its mayor (hereinafter "Birmingham"), filed a complaint alleging that Act No. 92-708 was unconstitutional and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. Vestavia denied by answer. After a hearing, the circuit court held that Act No. 92-708 did not violate any provision of the Constitution of 1901. Birmingham appealed.
Section 104 of the Constitution prohibits the passage of any local laws in 31 specific areas. Birmingham argues that Act No. 92-708 falls into two of these specific areas, those mentioned in § 104(5) and § 104(18). Furthermore, Birmingham also argues that Act No. 92-708 violates § 105 because, Birmingham says, it is a local law addressing an area already provided for by general laws. See Ala. Code 1975, §
Vestavia argues that the act does not violate any provision of the Constitution and that the legislature acted according to its express power to "alter or rearrange the boundary of a city," as stated in the proviso of § 104(18). Vestavia also challenges the contention that the act violates § 105, for two reasons: first, it says, the legislature is expressly authorized to change a city's boundaries, by the proviso included in § 104(18), and second, it says, the act makes a territorial change in the boundaries of Vestavia that *535 cannot otherwise be made under the present general laws.
The relevant portions of § 104 provide:
"The legislature shall not pass a special, private, or local law in any of the following cases:
". . . .
"(5) Incorporating a city, town, or village;
". . . .
"(18) Amending, confirming, or extending the charter of any private or municipal corporation, or remitting the forfeiture thereof; provided, this shall not prohibit the legislature from altering or rearranging the boundaries of the city, town or village [emphasis added];
". . . .
"The legislature shall pass general laws for the cases enumerated in this section."
Section 105 provides:
"No special, private, or local law . . . shall be enacted in any case which is provided for by a general law . . . and the courts, and not the legislature, shall judge as to whether the matter of said law is provided for by a general law, and as to whether the relief sought can be given by any court. . . ."
A local law must comply with both § 104 and § 105 of Alabama's 1901 Constitution. Drummond Co. v. Boswell,
The standard of review for determining the constitutionality of a statute was stated in State Board of Health v. GreaterBirmingham Ass'n of Home Builders, Inc.,
"Before turning to the constitutional issue posed in this case, it is appropriate to reiterate the fundamental proposition that validly enacted legislation is presumed to be constitutional. As we stated in Mobile Housing Board v. Cross,
, 285 Ala. 94 97 ,, 229 So.2d 485 487 (1969):" 'Every presumption is in favor of the constitutionality of an act of the legislature and this court will not declare it invalid unless in its judgment, the act clearly and unmistakably comes within the inhibition of the constitution.' "
"We will not invalidate a statute on constitutional grounds if by reasonable construction it can be given a field of operation within constitutionally imposed limitations. See Ex parte Huguley Water System,
, 282 Ala. 633 (1968)." 213 So.2d 799
In Home Indemnity Co. v. Anders,
See Crosslin v. City of Muscle Shoals,"In determining whether the act is constitutional, we are bound by the following presumption:
" '[I]n passing upon the constitutionality of a legislative act, the courts uniformly approach the question with every presumption and intendment in favor of its validity, and seek to sustain rather than strike down the enactment of a coordinate branch of government. All these principles are embraced in the simple statement that it is the recognized duty of the court to sustain the act unless it is clear beyond reasonable doubt that it is violative of the fundamental law.' "
Alabama State Federation of Labor v. McAdory,
, 246 Ala. 1 9 ,, 18 So.2d 810 815 (1944)."
Unless restricted by the Constitution, the legislature's power with respect to municipalities is plenary. Trailway OilCo. v. City of Mobile,
Vestavia correctly asserts that annexation and incorporation are two distinct subjects. Legislation dealing with each carries different definitions, each is dealt with in a different chapter of the Alabama Code, and each requires different prerequisites under Alabama law. The verb "to annex" is defined as "to add or unite to something already existing." 3A C.J.S. Annex (1973) (emphasis added). While "annex" implies some type of physical connection or joinder, the term does not always imply that actual contact is necessary for annexation.Id.; Black's Law Dictionary 88 (6th ed. 1990). "Incorporation" is defined as "[t]he act or process of forming or creating a corporation. The formation of a legal or political body, with the quality of perpetual existence and succession, unless limited by the act of incorporation." Black's Law Dictionary
766 (6th ed. 1990) (emphasis added). The municipal corporation of Vestavia had previously been formed. By Act No. 92-708, the legislature has added the property described therein to Vestavia. See Fetters v. City of Hoover,
Neither the Alabama Constitution nor Alabama's general annexation laws require that an area to be annexed into a municipality meet the exact requirements of an area to beincorporated as a city. For example, homogeneity and minimum population limits are statutory requirements for incorporation4 but are not always necessary for annexation.5
Section 104(5) deals solely with municipal incorporations. InCity of Ensley v. Simpson,
Section 104(18) of the Alabama Constitution, in its main clause, prohibits the legislature from amending the charter of a municipality by local law, but the proviso of § 104(18) expressly allows it to "alter or rearrange" a city's boundaries. While the main clause is another restriction on the legislature's plenary power, the proviso is not. The dispute here involves the interpretation of the proviso.
Birmingham concedes that the proviso is an exception to the main clause's restriction on the legislature's ability to amend city charters by local law but insists that the proviso allows only boundary changes that expand or contractcontiguous territory, consistent with the general laws on annexation. Vestavia contends that the proviso could have either of the following two interpretations: that a boundary alteration is an amendment to a city's charter, which, unless excepted, would be prohibited by the main clause of § 104(18), or that a legislative boundary change is an action having nothing to do with a municipality's charter and would be within the legislature's power even if the proviso did not exist. However, Vestavia argues that both of these interpretations reach the same result, which is that Act 92-708 is expressly permitted by § 104(18). We agree.
"Boundary" is generally defined as "a line or object indicating the limit or furthest extent of a tract of land or territory." 11 *537 C.J.S. Boundaries § 1 (1938). Therefore, any annexation of territory, contiguous or noncontiguous, done by either general or local law, would result in the alteration or rearrangement of the boundaries of a municipality. Here, because the geographical limit of Vestavia was expanded to include the parcels described in Act No. 92-708, Vestavia's boundaries were automatically changed by the act.
This boundary change had nothing to do with Vestavia's charter. The term "charter" has been defined as "[a] city's organic law." Black's Law Dictionary 235-36 (6th ed. 1990). Under Alabama law, "the charter of a corporation consists of its articles of incorporation taken in connection with the law under which it was organized; or a charter is an act of a legislature whereby a corporation is created and its franchise is defined." State ex rel. Carter v. Harris,
A boundary change is not an amendment to a city's charter. In the landmark case of City of Ensley v. Simpson,
City of Ensley,"Nor is the alteration or rearrangement of the boundaries an amendment of the charter of a municipality. The Constitution clearly recognizes this fact by excepting an act altering or rearranging boundaries from the prohibition against local laws amending charters."
In State ex rel. Brooks v. Gullatt,
Birmingham argues that when the 1901 Constitution was adopted the only general law in existence relating to municipalities limited a city's power to annex land to that which was contiguous to its boundaries and, therefore, that we should construe the language of the proviso in § 104(18) as limiting the power of the legislature to annex by local act only contiguous land by altering or rearranging the boundary of a city or town. See Ala. Code 1896, § 2967. This 1896 statute allowed for the "alteration or change of . . . the boundaries of the town" by either a petition and subsequent election or written consent of two-thirds of the property owners in the area to be annexed.6 Birmingham and Vestavia agree that this statute provided only for the annexation of contiguous property. Birmingham urges that the framers of the Constitution, likely using the 1896 statute as the source of the "altering or rearranging" language, merely offers a local law alternative for reaching the same result as that of the general laws, the annexation of contiguous property. This argument is at best speculative. *538
Nothing in the Constitution suggests that the framers meant anything more than is said by the words they used. This Court said in McGee v. Borom,
"In construing a constitutional provision, the courts have no right to broaden the meaning of words used and, likewise, have no right to restrict the meaning of those words. We are, therefore, not at liberty to disregard or restrict the plain meaning of the provisions of the Constitution. McPherson v. Blacker,, 146 U.S. 1 , 13 S.Ct. 3 (1892)." 36 L.Ed. 869
A proviso is to be strictly construed and "limited to objects fairly within its terms." 16 C.J.S. Constitutional Law § 28 (1984). This proviso excludes the "altering or rearranging" of boundaries from the legislative limitation of the main clause, and it does not mention contiguity or noncontiguity. Thus, from the plain words of the Constitution, the legislature is left with the power to change a city's boundaries by local law, without any restriction to territory that is contiguous. SeeState ex rel. Brooks v. Gullatt,
" 'We are called on to construe the terms of the Constitution, an instrument from the people, and we are to effectuate their purpose from the words employed in the document. We are not permitted to color it by the addition of words or the engrafting of our views as to how it should have been written.. . . [I]t must be presumed that those who drafted the Constitution had a clear conception of the principles they intended to express, that they knew the English language and that they knew how to use it, that they gave careful consideration to the practical application of the Constitution and arranged its provisions in the order that would most accurately express their intention.' "
Finally, Birmingham contends that even if § 104(18) permits the legislature, by local law, to rearrange the boundaries of a city, Act No. 92-708 violates § 105 of the 1901 Alabama Constitution. Section 105 prohibits the passage of a local law in an area provided for by general law. E.g., Peddycoart v.City of Birmingham,
Under § 104, "the legislature shall pass general laws" for the 31 enumerated areas in which it is prohibited from passing local laws, including incorporating a city (§ 104(5)) and amending a city's charter (§ 104(18)). Following Birmingham's reasoning, one would conclude that, because of the passage of municipal corporation statutes providing for methods of incorporation, annexation, and merger,7 the subject of annexation is "subsumed" by general laws, and, therefore, that Act No. 92-708 contravenes § 105. On the contrary, Vestavia argues that because § 104(18) expressly authorizes the legislature to change the boundaries of a city by local act, Act No. 92-708 does not conflict with § 105, and further, that if § 104(18) were not in the Constitution, then § 105 would still not be violated because, Vestavia argues, the act does not involve a subject covered by any existing general law in Alabama.
We hold that Act No. 92-708 does not violate § 105 of the Constitution. The legislature has authorized municipalities to annex territory: by an election, in accordance with Ala. Code 1975, §
The general laws provide for municipal governments, voters,or property owners to annex contiguous territories into an existing *540 city.11 By Act No. 92-708, the legislature has altered or rearranged a city's boundaries to include noncontiguous territory. No general law subsumes the subject matter of Act No. 92-708. As conceded by both parties, the two noncontiguous tracts of land at issue could not have been annexed under any existing general laws.
The courts, according to § 105, must decide if the "matter" of a local law is "provided for" by a general law. As this Court held in Drummond Co. v. Boswell,
"It is not the broad, overall subject matter which is looked to in determining whether the local act, taken together with the general law, is violative of § 105; rather, it is whether the object of the local law is to accomplish an end not substantially provided for and effectuated by a general law."
The "matter" of Act No. 92-708 was not substantially provided for by a general law, because the annexation would not have been possible under the preexisting annexation laws. Judge McElroy, in his article on § 105, points out that the advocates of this section of the Constitution never intended to abolish the legislature's power to pass a local law when no general law provided for its result. Judge J. Russell McElroy, No . . .Local Law . . . Shall be Enacted in Any Case Which is Providedfor by a General Law, 7 Ala. Law. 243, 259 (1946); see also Note, Local Legislation in Alabama: The Impact of Peddycoart v.City of Birmingham, 32 Ala.L.Rev. 167, 181-82 (1980). A local law violates § 105 only when the substance of the local law is already substantially provided for under an existing general law; the substance of Act No. 92-708 is not substantially provided for under a general law.
In City of Ensley v. Simpson,
In City of Ensley, this Court rejected the argument that, according to § 105, the general annexation laws in essence "preempted" the legislature from passing any local annexation law. The general laws did provide a method for annexing this territory into Birmingham, but as the City of Ensley Court stated, "the same result might have been obtained by a tedious and embarrassing process of repeated additions to the territory [of Birmingham]."
"[T]he Legislature had the right to weigh the advantages of the scheme as a whole and enact law accordingly to accomplish the desired end at one stroke. Under no general law could the same considerations be submitted to the same electorate or the same result reached in the same way."
"The subject of legislation in the general law is the alteration or rearrangement of boundaries as affecting contiguous municipalities and unincorporated territory. The subject-matter dealt with in the special act is the alteration or rearrangement of boundaries as affecting noncontiguous municipalities as well. Considered in their totality, the two acts are not identical as to subject-matter. We therefore conclude that the special act is not obnoxious to section 105 of the Constitution."
In two other cases, this Court has also upheld local acts against a § 105 challenge. In State ex rel. Brooks v. Gullatt,
" '[I]f the local bill purposes something different from the provisions of the general law, and not within the catalogue of section 104, and in a case where the relief may not be had in some proceeding outside of the Legislature, how has it been provided for, and where is the inhibition to enact the local law? It seems, then, that this provision of the Constitution [§ 105] was intended to prohibit the enactment of special, private, or local laws to meet the purposes of particular cases which may be accomplished by proceedings outside of the Legislature under the provisions of general statutes enacted to meet all cases of that general character.' "
In this case, the legislature enacted a local law in response to a city's need to annex noncontiguous property. Vestavia had no choice but to turn to the legislature, because both the City of Mountain Brook and Birmingham destroyed the contiguity between the two parcels and Vestavia, and neither of those two cities was willing to sacrifice some of its property to allow Vestavia to establish contiguity. According to Peddycoart v.City of Birmingham,
"[L]ocal legislation reflecting responses to local needs may be enacted. It is only when those local needs already have been responded to by general legislation that Section 105 of our state Constitution prohibits special treatment by local law."
The legislature was responding to Vestavia's need, which could not be responded to under existing general laws.
Moreover, the legislature's action was not unprecedented. The parties agree that on previous occasions the legislature has enacted local laws to annex noncontiguous territories into municipalities in Alabama. For example, the legislature has annexed noncontiguous property, including an airport, a municipal golf course, water and sewage treatment plants, etc., into cities such as Lincoln, Forkland, Fairhope, and Sylacauga.14 As recently as February 1994, the legislature annexed noncontiguous property into Hartselle.15 While some of these cities later annexed *542 property connecting the noncontiguous tracts, the fact remains that, as in this case with Vestavia, the property was noncontiguous when the legislature annexed it.
No provision of the Alabama Constitution limits the legislature's broad authority with respect to municipalities and their boundaries so as to prevent the legislature from adopting a local act annexing noncontiguous territory to a municipality.
AFFIRMED.
MADDOX, ALMON, HOUSTON, KENNEDY and COOK, JJ., concur.
"CHAPTER 42.
"ALTERATION OF CORPORATE LIMITS
"ARTICLE 1.
"ANNEXATION OF TERRITORY BY MUNICIPALITIES GENERALLY.
"§11-42-1 . Applicability of provisions of article; provisions of article not exclusive.
"Any town or city may from time to time extend its corporate limits in the manner set forth in this article, but the provisions of this article shall not preclude any city or town from extending its corporate limits in any other way or manner that may be authorized by law.
"§
"Whenever the council shall pass a resolution to the effect that the public health or public good requires that certain territory (described in the resolution) shall be brought within the limits of the city or town: . . . .
"§
"(a) Any city or town having extended its corporate limits under the provisions of this article or other law may again extend its corporate limits under this article or under any other law authorizing an extension of corporate limits by such city or town.
". . . .
"ARTICLE 2.
"ANNEXATION OF TERRITORY BY MUNICIPALITIES
OF 2,000 INHABITANTS OR MORE.
". . . .
"§
"Whenever all of the owners of property located and contained within an area contiguous to the corporate limits of any incorporated municipality . . . shall sign and file a written petition with the city clerk of such municipality requesting that such property or territory be annexed to the said municipality, and the governing body of such municipality adopts an ordinance assenting to the annexation of said property to such municipality, the corporate limits of said municipality shall be extended and rearranged so as to embrace and include such property and such property or territory shall become a part of the corporate area of such municipality upon the date of publication of said ordinance. . . ."§
"Any incorporated municipality having extended its corporate limits under the provisions of this article or any other law may again extend its corporate limits under this article or under any other law authorizing an extension of the corporate limits by such incorporated municipality."§
"The provisions of this article shall in no wise preclude any municipality from extending its corporate limits by annexation in any other way or manner that may be authorized by law.
". . . .
"ARTICLE 3.
"ANNEXATION OF TERRITORY BY CITIES OF
25,000 INHABITANTS OR MORE.
"§11-42-40 . Applicability of provisions of article; provisions of article not exclusive.
"Any city having 25,000 inhabitants or more . . . may extend its corporate limits in the manner and with the rights, powers and privileges as set forth in this article, but the provisions of this article shall not preclude any city from extending its corporate limits in any other way or manner that may be authorized by law.
"§
"The council or governing body of the city may pass a resolution to the effect that the public health or public good requires that certain territory (described in the resolution) shall be brought within the limits of the city.
". . . .
"§
"Any city having extended its corporate limits under the provisions of this article or any other act or law may again extend its corporate limits under this article or under any other act or law authorizing an extension of corporate limits by such city."
(Emphasis added.)
