138 Ky. 804 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion op the Court by
Xffirming.
An Act to Regulate the Establishment of Industrial Schools.
“Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky:
“Section 1. That it shall be unlawful for any person, company, corporation or association to own, control, operate or maintain any industrial school, college or institute where farming or any other occupation, trade, profession or calling is taught or sought to be taught, in its course of study or instruction where such person, company, corporation or association owns, operates or controls exceeding seventy-five acres of land unless said person, company, corporation or association shall obtain the consent of a majority of the legal voters residing in the voting precinct where such school is to be maintained or operated in the manner hereinafter provided.
“Sec. 2. Before any such school, college or institute shall hereafter commence operation the person, .company, corporation or association owning or controlling said school shall apply to the judge of the county court of the county wherein said school, college or institute is located or sought to be located or operated for permission to operate, conduct or maintain such school, college or 'institute', and thereupon it shall be the duty of the said county judge to call an election in the voting precinct wherein such school, college or institute is located or sought to be located, operated or maintained for the purpose of taking the
“Sec. 3. When application for such permission is filed with the judge of the county court of the county wherein such school, college or institute is sought to be located, operated or maintained, said judge shall call an election to be held between the hours of six o'clock a.'m. and four o’clock p. m. on a date to be fixed by him, giving notice thereof by at least twenty written or printed notices posted in conspicuous places in said precinct for at least forty days prior to the date fixed for said' election, and the board of election commissioners for such county shall appoint the officers of election to hold said election in such precinct where a vote is ordered, which officers shall be two judges, one clerk and one sheriff, whose duties and qualifications shall be the same as those serving in a general election; and said election officers shall certify the result of the vote within three days to the board of election commissioners' of said county, who shall canvass the returns and certify the result to the county judge of said county. All expenses for said election to be paid by the applicant for such permission.
“See. 4. Any person, company, corporation or association who shall own, operate, control or maintain any such school, college or institute without procuring
“Sec. 5. The provisions of this act shall not apply to cities of the first, second, third or fourth class or to those schools, colleges and institutes already built and in actual operation for a period of one year before the passage of this act.
‘ ‘ Sec. 6. All laws and parts of laws in conflict with this act are hereby repealed.
‘ ‘ This act shall take effect from the date of its passage. ’ ’
The question arose as follows: The appellee, Lincoln Institute of Kentucky, is a charitable corporation organized under the laws of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, with power to establish a normal and industrial school for colored people. For the purposes for which it was organized, it has an endowment of some $400,000, which is held, in part, at least, by the Columbia Trust Company as its trustee. The appellee purchased a tract of land in Shelby county, Ky., of about 444 acres, upon which it proposes to erect the necessary buildings and to place the necessary implements and apparatus, and to inaugurate and maintain a normal and industrial school for colored people, in accordance with the purposes for which it was organized, and demanded of its trustee enough of the funds held by it to pay for the land so purchased. With this request the appellant refused to comply, for the reason that the provisions of the Holland bill had not been complied with, and that it would be unlawful to establish the school at the place selected without' first complying with the provisions of the statute. A general demurrer to this answei was interposed and sustained, and, the defendant re
In order that the purposes and aims of the appellee corporation may be more fully understood, we insert herein the preamble and the first four articles of its constitution:
“Preamble. — In order to promote the cause of Christ we, the undersigned, hereby associate ourselves, and our successors, to form a corporation under the provision of article VIII, chapter 32 of the Kentucky Statutes, and adopt the following articles:
“Article 1. — Name. This institution shall be called the Lincoln Institute of Kentucky and located in Shelby county, nine miles west of Shelbyville, with such adjunct institutions as may be established in any any other parts of the commonwealth.
“Art. II. Object. The object of this institute shall be to furnish thorough Christian education in as many departments as resources permit, with special attention to the training of teachers, and instruction in industrial pursuits, and with all possible adaptation to the educational needs of the colored people of this state.
“Art. III. Christian Character. This institute shall endeavor to exert through all its departments and officers an influence distinctly Christian, but in the employment of officers and teachers, no sectarian test shall be applied, and no one Christian body shall
The primary question with which we are confronted is: May the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Kentucky prohibit the institution and maintenance of such a school as appellee! "We say, may the General Assembly prohibit, because it is manifest that, if the legislative power may be exercised in such a way as to authorize the voters of a precinct to prohibit the establishment of such an institution, clearly the Legislature may itself prohibit it. For the appellant it is maintained that the act in question is a valid exercise of the police power of the state, and for the appellee it is contended that it is an exercise of mere arbitrary power, in violation both of the Constitution of the state of Kentucky and and the Constitution of the United States. To the solution of this question we will now address ourselves.
Section 1 of the Bill of Rights is a.s follows: “All men are, by nature, free and equal, and have certain inherent and inalienable rights, among which may be reckoned: (1) The right of enjoying and defending their lives and liberties. * * * (3) The right of seeking and pursuing their safety and happiness. * * * (5) The right of acquiring and protecting property.
“Sec. 2. Absolute and arbitrary power over the lives, liberty and property of freemen exists nowhere in a republic, not even in the largest majority.”
“Sec. 26. To guard against transgression of the high powers which we have delegated, we declare that everything in this Bill of Rights is excepted out of the general powers of government, and shall forever remain inviolable; and all laws contrary thereto, or contrary to this Constitution, shall be void. ’ ’
The Lincoln Institute is a legally constituted cor
In the case of Commonwealth v. Fowler, 96 Ky. 171, 28 S. W. 787, 16 Ky. Law Rep. 362, 33 L. R. A. 839, this court said: “Every one has the right to follow an innocent calling without permission from the government. He may do with his own whatever he pleases, so that he injure no one else. We agree with learned counsel that ‘the doctrine of legislative permission, as a condition precedent to the conduct of any useful or harmless business, is grossly repugnant to those obvious principles of human right which lie at the foundation of just government among men.’ So, then, without governmental interference or consent, we say the farmer may till his soil, the merchant may buy and sell, the lawyer and doctor practice their professions, and the druggist and pharmacist compound their medicines.”
In the case of Commonwealth v. Bacon, 13
It is useless to multiply authorities on so obvious a proposition. If the teaching of the young to be useful, upright, Christian citizens is not inimical to the public safety, public morals, or the public health, then it must follow that an act which seeks either to prohibit it altogether or to authorize others to prohibit it must be invalid. It is difficult to find language to make plainer that which is so obvious as is the proposition before us. The purposes of the institution under discussion include the whole circle of the solid virtues with which youth may be endowed. Undoubtedly, it is a substantial good to educate the youth of the state; and such' is the declared policy of the Constitution. Section 183 provides: “The General Assembly shall, by' appropriate legislation, provide for an efficient system of common schools
Education strengthens the mind, purifies the heart,- and widens the horizon of thought. It magnifies the domain of hope, multiplies the chances of success in
We conclude, then, on this branch of the case, that religious and scientific education, instead of being in any wise injurious or dangerous to the public safety, morals, health or welfare, on the contrary, is promotive of public virtue, intelligence, and good citizenslup, and is therefore to be desired and promoted rather than prohibited or impeded; and, this being true, the act under discussion, which puts it within the power of the voters of any precinct to prohibit the establishment of such a school as that contemplated by appellee, is unconstitutional, and therefore void. Nor can the act be upheld as an amendment to the charters of such corporations as appellee. It is true that one branch of the case of Berea College v. Commonwealth of Kentucky was affirmed on a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States (211 U. S. 45, 29 Sup. Ct. 33, 53 L. Ed. 81) upon this principle, but that doctrine was repudiated by our own court on another branch of the case which was decided in favor of the college, and therefore not appealed from. In that case, as said above, we held that so much of the “Day act” (Acts 1904, c. 85) as prohibited the conducting of schools for white and black students within 25 miles of each other was illegal, and therefore invalid; and this could not have been done under the principle that even an invalid act may be upheld as an amendment to the charter of the complaining corporation. If that principle had prevailed in our court, then the Day
The act under consideration is also in violation of section 60 of the Constitution, which, in so far as pertinent to the subject in hand, is as follows: “The G eneral Assembly shall not directly enact any special or local act by the repeal in part of a general act, or by exempting from the operation of a general act any city, town, district or county. * * * No law, except such as relates to the sale, loan or gift of vinous, spirituous or malt liquors, bridges, turnpikes or other public roads, public buildings or improvements, fencing, running at large of stock, matters pertaining to common schools, paupers, and the regulation by counties, cities, towns, or other municipalities of their local affairs, shall be enacted to take effect upon the approval of any other authority than the General Assembly, unless otherwise expressly provided in this Constitution.” The act in question exempts cities of the first, second, third and fourth classes from its provisions. In other words, what purports to be a general law is made special by exempting fr.om its provisions the first four classes of the cities of the Commonwealth. It also makes the establishment of such a charity as appellee to depend, not upon the legislative authority, but upon the votes of the citizens of the precinct wherein the school is proposed to be established. In the case of Droege v. McInerney, 120 Ky. 796, 87 S. W. 1085, 27 Ky. Law Rep. 1137, an act of the General Assembly establishing a county board of election commissioners was held to be invalid because it excepted from its provisions cities of the second class, and in Western
We are therefore of opinion that the act in question is unconstitutional, first, because it is an exercise of arbitrary power and contrary to those provisions in the Bill of Rights above cited; and, second, that it is invalid because contrary to the provisions of section 60 of the Constitution. The judgment of the chancellor, so holding, must be affirmed; and it is so ordered.