At the called session of the Twenty-fifth Legislature, a statute was enacted for the purpose of limiting the compensation of certain officers and reducing the fees of office. It specially reduced certain fees of sheriffs and constables in certain counties of the State. Laws 1897, Called Sess., p. 5. Tarrant County belonged to the class to which the law applied. Sterling P. Clark is the sheriff of that county, and, having rendered services as such for which he was entitled to be paid by the State, he made out account therefor, charging the fees allowed by the law as it existed before the act was passed. His account was approved by the district judge and was presented to the Comptroller, who refused to allow the same for the fees as charged, but offered *176 to draw Ms warrant for the amount authorized by the new law. The sheriff, as relator, has filed in this court this, his original petition for the writ of mandаmus against the Comptroller, as respondent,-to compel the latter to draw his warrant for the amount of the account as charged by him and as allowed by the district judge. The respondent has demurred to the petition. If the Act of June 16, 1897, is valid, the mandamus must be denied; if invalid, the writ should issue.
Therefore the validity of the act is the question for our determination.
The validity of the statute is assailed upon several grounds. First, it is contended that it is in conflict with section 35 of articlе 3 of the Constitution. This section provides that “Ho bill, except general appropriation bills, * * * shall contain more than one subject, which shall be expresed in its title.” The evident purpose of the act is to reduce fees and to limit the compensation of district attorneys and of certain county officers in certain of the larger counties of the State. The underlying theory of the law was that in the more populous counties of the State the officers named in it were receiving a compensation in excess of the value of their services. It reduces fees throughout the State for certain services, and fees of the sheriffs in certain counties, and limits the compensation of other county officers and district attorneys. It also attempts to regulate the appointment of deputies in certain cases. All these matters have one general object and relatе to the one subject of the compensation of the State’s officers, except possibly the last/ It matters not, in our opinion, that the act prescribes fees both in criminal cases and in civil actions; and that since the adoption of our Code of Criminal Procedure these two classes of fees have usually been provided for in separate enactments. The title of the act is as follows: “An act to fix certain civil fees to be charged by certain county and precinct officers, and to fix and limit the fees and compensation of clerks of the district court, district attorneys, county attorneys, sheriffs and constables in felony cases, to be paid by the State, and to fix the compensation of assessors and collectors of taxes, and to limit and regulate the compensation of the sheriff, clerk of the county court, county judge, district and county attorney, clerk of the district court, assessor and collector of taxes, justices of the peace, and constables, and to prescribe penalties for the violation of this act, and to repeal all laws in conflict herewith.” With the exception of the appointment of deputies, the subject matter of the bill seems to us very fully expressed in the title. The provision in regard to deputies was intended to limit their number and fix their compensation, but whether it is germane to the subject of the act and sufficiently within the purview of the title as to bring it within the rule of the Constitution under consideration, we need not pause to inquire. Ho question in regard to that provision is directly involved in this proceeding. The section of the Constitution from which we have already quoted has this additional provision: “But if any subject shall be em
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braced in an act which shall not be expressed in the title, such act shall be void only as to so much thereof as shаll not be so expressed.” It follows that if the matter of the appointment of deputies does not come within the compass of the title, it goes for naught; but the vice does not otherwise affect the law. The act stands as if the obnoxious provision had never been inserted. Our conclusion is that the statute in question, in so far as it regulates the compensation of officers and their fees, is not in conflict with section 35 of article 3 of the Constitution. The cases of State v. Shadle,
It is also insisted that the act in question is an amendment to various provisions of our Revised Statutes which prescribe the fees and fix the compensation of the officers named therein; and that it is therefore prohibited by section 36 of article 3 of the Constitution. That article proAddes that “Ho laAv shall be revived or amended by reference to its title; but in such case the act revived or the section or sections amended shall be re-enacted and published at length.” A similar question Ayas certified for the decision of this court in the case of Snyder v. Compton,
In the next place it is urged that the act in question is repugnant to that section of the Constitution which prohibits the passage of special or local laAvs'in certain specified cases and in every case Avhere a
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general law may be made applicable. Art. 3, sec. 56, of the Constitution of 1876. The ground of the contention is that most of the vital provisions of the act are, by its terms, made applicable to a minority onty of the counties in the Statе. Its most important provisions do not apply to counties in which the vote at the last election for president was less than 3000. Does this make a local or special law within the meaning of section 56 of article 3 of the Constitution? We might rest our determination of the question' upon a former decision of this court. A similar provision to that embraced in the section in question was incorporated in the Constitution of 1869 by an amendment which took effect by ratification of the two houses of the Legislature in January, 1874. Sayles’ Const., art. 476. On the 33d day of March, 1874, the same Legislature which ratified the amendment (as was required by that Constitution) passed an act “for the encouragement of stockraising and for the protection of stockraisers,” which contained many important provisions and from the operation of which more than fifty counties of the State were exempted by name. The question of the validity of thе act came before the court in Beyman v. Black,
But we do not find it necessary to repose upon the former ruling of the court. A law is not special because it does not' apply to all persons or things alike. Indeed, most of our laws apply to some one or more Masses of persons or of things and exclude all others. Such are laws as to the rights of infants, married women,' corporations, carriers, etc. Indeed, it is perhaps the exception when a statute is found which applies to every person or thing alike. Hence it can not be that the .statute under consideration is special merely because it is made to operate in some counties of the State and not in others. The definition of a general law as distinguished from a special law given by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in the case of Wheeler v. Philadelphia, 77 Pennsylvania State, 338, and approved by the Supreme Court of Missouri is perhaps as accurate as any that has been given. State v. Tolle,
Hor do we think the act in question can be considered a local law within the meaning of the term as used in the provision of the Constitution under consideration. We have found no very satisfactory definition of a local law. But it seems to us that it is one the operation of which is confined to a fixed part of the territory of the State. It is-plain from the reading of the statute in question that it was not contemplated that it should have effect in every county of the State. While by the determination of an extrinsic fact, its operation in the main may be restricted to a minority of the counties in the State, still it applies generally to the whole State. Besides, the territory is not fixed, but is subject to-change according to the increase or decrease of the population of the respective counties as may appear by the vote. And, again, it is held that a statute, although its enforcement be restricted to a fixed locality, is not local in its character, if persons or things throughout the State be affected by it. Williams v. People,
But, holding as we do, that, as to the question before, us, there is no-material difference whether the classification be by population or by the taxable value of the counties, we have high authority that a statute of the character of that under consideration is neither a special nor a local law. An act of Congrеss prohibited the legislatures of the territories of the United States from passing local or special laws in terms similar to those emploj^ed in section 56 of article 3 of our Constitution. The territory of Arizona passed a statute, which fixed the compensation of the county officers at different sums, according to a classification of the counties based on the assessed value of property. In Harwood v. Wentworth,
The fact that the statute prescribes that the county judge shall desig- ' nate the number of deputies to which certain officers may be entitled is also urged as a ground for holding the act invalid. In dismissing the question whether or not the act embraces more than one subject, we have alread3r partially considered this question. But it is especially contended that this provision vitiates the law, because it attempts to devolve a function upon the county judge, which, under the Constitution, can be legally devolved upon the commissioners court only. But we do not concur in the proposition that the determination of the number of deputies which may be employed b3r an officer is a county affair, within the meaning of that provision of the Constitution which prescribes that the commissioners court “shall exercise such powers and jurisdiction over all county business, as is conferred by this Constitution and the laws of this State, or as ma)r be hereafter prescribed.” Art. 5, sec. 18. The officers to whom the provision applies, though called count)’' officers, are in fact officers of the State (Fears v. Nacogdoches County,
The statute provides that those officers Avhose compensation is limited to a maximum shall pa3r any surplus of fees received by them, over a *182 sufficiency to pay their respective salaries and those of their deputies, into the county treasury; and since the State pays certain fees to the district clerks, county judges, and justices of the peace, it is contended that the effect of thе law is to take from the revenues of the State, raised by taxation at large, moneys to pay fees of office and to appropriate them to the use of certain counties. If this were shown to be true, however inequitable and out of harmony with the spirit of the Constitution it may seem, we do not see that it violates any special provision of that instrument. He who claims that an act of the Legislature infringes the fundamental law should point out the restriction which is claimed to have been violated. But, unless the fees paid by the State to any particular officer should be more than sufficient to pay his salary, we do not see how it could be said that the tax money was covered into the county treasury. If it were unlawful so to appropriate the St.ate's revenues, it would be deemed that the surplus which was to be paid to the use of the counties was paid from the fees collected from private parties. It has not been shown in this proceeding that the fees of office paid by the State to any officer affected by the act will be more than sufficient to pay his salary; and we gravely doubt whether such fees will be sufficient to pay the compensation of any officer in any county in the State, to which the provision applies.
We conclude that the act in question in this case is valid, and therefore the'writ of mandamus is denied.
Writ of mandamus refused.
