104 Ky. 584 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1898
delivebed the opinion oe the coubt.
Appellee, Mary S. Kuntz, instituted this action against R. L. Clark and the city of Louisville, alleging that she was
The only question involved on the appeal is whether the statute of limitations relied on by appellant is a good defense to the action, and this depends upon the power of the Legislature to enact it. The question, therefore, to be determined is, is it a special or local act which is prohibited by section 59, subsection 5, Constitution, which provides that “the General Assembly shall not pass local or special acts concerning any of the following subjects or for any of the following pttrposes, namely: . . . Fifth, to regulate the limitation of civil or criminal causes?” Or is it authorized and embraced by the provisions of section 15G of the Constitution, which provides for the classification of cities and towns, and that the organization and powers of each class shall be defined and provided for by
When the Constitution prohibits the Legislature from passing special laws upon any given subject, it means that all laws upon that subject shall operate alike upon all, whether individual or corporate, public or private. It is a safeguard provided by the Constitution for the protection of the weak as well as the strong. The Legislature has power to make laws fixing the time when an action must be brought, but they must be general in their character, as the Constitution prohibits the Legislature from discriminating in favor of or against-individuals or classes, when it declares that there shall be no special legislation on the subjects enumerated in section 59; whilst section 156 makes classification of cities only for the purpose of organization and government, and provides that the powers and organization of each shall be defined and provided for by general laws pertaining thereto. But section 59 expressly excepts the subject of limitation of civil and criminal causes from the operation of such laws, and it seems to us that properly they have no connection with the necessary powers, government, or organization of cities. It is a recognized canon of construction that constitutional provisions should be construed so as to give force and effect to all of them, and this is done by limiting the Legislature, in granting municipal charters, to the powers which are incident to, and necessary for, their organization and
The Constitution of Pennsylvania prohibits local or special legislation on the same subjects, and in almost the same language, as the Constitution of Kentucky; and the Supreme Court of that State, in passing upon a question similar to the one we have here, (132 Pa. St.,, 275) [19 Atl., 221], said: “In order that a given act of the Assembly relating to a class of cities may escape the charge of being a local law, it is necessary, as was said in Weinman v. Railway Co., 118 Pa. St., 202 [12 Atl., 290], that it should “be applicable to all the members of the class to which it relates, and must be directed to the existence and regulation of municipal powrers and to matters of local government.” 'A law that will bear the application of this test is within the purpose for which classification was designed, and therefore constitutional. A law that will not bear its application is local, and offends against the Constitution. Among the many subjects of legislation which classification presents, we may call attention to such as the establishment, maintenance, and' control of an adequate police force for the public protection; the preservation of the public health; protection against fire; the provision of an adequate water supply; the paving, grading, curbing, and lighting of the public streets; the regulation of public markets and market houses, and of docks and wharves; the erection and care of public buildings and other municipal improvements. These are mentioned, not because they embrace all the sub
We come, now, to inquire what legislation remains forbidden to cities, notwithstanding classification. I reply that all legislation not relating to the exercise of corporate powers, or to corporate officers and their powers and duties, is unauthorized by classification. In article 3, section 7, the Constitution declares that the Legislature shall not pass any local or special law “regulating the practice or jurisdiction of or changing the rules of evidence in any judicial proceeding or inquiry before courts, aldermen, justices of the peace, sheriffs, commissioners, arbitrators, auditors, masters in chancery or other tribunals.” The same section forbids the passage of any local or special law fixing the rate of interest, exempting property from taxation, changing the laws of descent, affecting the estates of minors, and many other purposes, among which is authorizing the laying out, ‘opening, altering or maintaining roads, highways, streets and alleys.’ It is very clear that the purpose of the constitutional provision is to require that laws relating to
And this court in the case of Simpson v. Ky. Citizens’ Building and Loan Association, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 1176 [41 S. W., 570, and 42, S. W., 834], held that the provisions of section 864, Ky. Stat., which permit building and loan associations to exact from their borrowing members monthly and weekly premiums in addition to the legal rate of interest on the money borrowed, are in violation of that section of the Constitution which provides that the Legislature shall not pass local or special acts concerning, or for the. purpose of regulating; the rate of interest. The same principle was adhered to in the cast of Levi v. City of Louisville, 97 Ky., 394 [30 S. W., 973]; and in the recent case of Corley v. City of Louisville, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 602 [47 S. W., 263], this court held the provision of section 2882 of the Kentucky Statutes, which limits the time within which actions or proceedings by
As was said in Chalfant v. Edwards, 173 Pa. St., 250 [33 Atl., 1049]: “The effect of classification must -not be carried beyond its purpose as declared in the original classification laws. A law relating to any other subject, though embracing all the cities of any given class, or of all the classes into which cities are divided, is local and unconstitutional, if the subject be one upon which local or special legislation is forbidden.” For the reasons herein indicated we are of the opinion that the statute relied on is local and special, and in conflict with the provisions of section 59 of the Constitution, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.