99 Ky. 188 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1896
delivered the opinion oe the court.
This was an action in the Hardin Circuit Court for a “writ of prohibition” against the appellees, the Hardin County Court and the county judge of said county, and to restrain the county judge from entering or spreading upon the records of said court a certificate of the canvassing board of elections of said county, showing the result of an election held in the town of Elizabethtown on the 10th day of December, 1892, upon the propositions submitted to the voters of the town “whether spirituous, vinous and malt liquors should be “sold, bartered or loaned” within the corporate limits of said town, and whether the prohibition law in force in Hardin county, Kentucky, shall become inoperative so far as it affects “the said town.” The petition also sought to restrain the county judge “from granting license to- sell said liquors in Elizabethtown.”
These propositions were submitted .to the voters of the town by the order of the county judge in pursuance of the provisions of the local option law, approved August 6, 1892 (chapter 89 of the Session Acts of 1891-2-3, page 214), and the result of the said election, as evidenced by the certificate of the canvassing hoard, was that a majority of the votes cast in favor of the sale, etc., of liquors in the town, and that the prohibtion law in force in Hardin county should become inoperative so far as it affected the town. On final hearing the lower court adjudged that the local
It is earnestly and ably argued by the learned counsel of the appellant that the act of August 6,1892, was not passed in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution, and is, therefore, invalid; but that, if the act was properly passed, the “emergency clause” was not adopted in the manner required by the Constitution, and that, therefore, the law did not go into effect until ninety days after the adjournment of the session of the Legislature at which it was passed, as provided in section 55 of the Constitution, and, consequently, was not in force when the propositions were submitted and voted on.
The same question respecting the validity of the act of August G, 1892, was raised in the case of Lafferty, &c. v. Huffman, &c., ante In that case it was held that the court could not go behind the enrolled bill, and, by tracing out, in the Journals of the two Houses of the General Assembly, the legislative history of the bill, ascertain whether or not it was passed in pursuance of the provisions of the Constitution on the subject, but that on that question this court was bound by the evidence furnished by the certificates on the enrolled bill of the presiding officers of the two Houses, and the approval of the governor, that the bill had been enacted into a law in the manner prescribed by the Constitution. We adhere to the opinion in that case. There, however, no question was raised as to the validity of the “emergency clause;” but that clause is a portion of, the enrolled bill as certified — a distinct section of the act as approved and promulgated — and its validity must be determined in the same way and upon the same evidence
The next contention is that the act did not authorize an election in Elizabethtown to make the Hardin county prohibition law inoperative so far as it affected the town. What is known as the “Hardin County Prohibition Law” was passed on the 5th day of May, 1881 (Session Acts, 1883-1, volume 2, page 901), under which, upon the vote of the I>eople of the whole county on the 1st Monday in August, 1881, the sale of liquor was prohibited in that county. Afterwards, by an act approved March 15, 1890 (Session Acts, 1889-90, volume 1, page 696), the question was resubmitted to the people of the county by magisterial districts, at one election, held on the 10th day of May, 1890, and the sale of liquor was by that vote prohibited in all of the districts of the county except one, including the district, as then existing, which embraced the town of Elizabethtown, and no subsequent vote was taken in any part of the county under said acts. Prohibition was, therefore, in force in the whole county, save one magisterial district, at the time the present Constitution and the act of August 6, 1892, went into effect. (Kirkpatrick v. Commonwealth, 95 Ky., 326.)
By section one of that act, provision was made for taking the sense of the qualified voters of any county, city, town, district or precinct on the proposition “whether or not spirituous, vinous or malt liquors shall be sold, bartered or loaned therein, or whether or not any prohibition law in force in any county, city, town, district or precinct, by virtue
We do not undertake to decide here, as the question is not before us on this record, whether or not prohibition, effected under the act of August G, 1892, or under any other act passed in pursuance of section 61, of the Constitution, by the vote of the.people of any county, or of any city or town or other subdivision of a county, as a whole, could be made inoperative in any subordinate or minor part or subdivision less than the whole of the territory in which prohibition has been so effected by the vote of the qualified voters residing in such subordinate or minor subdivision. Rut we hold that it is the express requirement of the Constitution that the matter of what is called local option shall be provided for by general law, under which the people of the State, acting in their local divisions and subdivisions named in the Constitution, shall have the right to regulate and settle the matter for themselves. A new order of things is provided for by the Constitution, by which it is intended eventually, by general law, to do away with all local or special laws previously enacted on the subject. And while the Constitution does not, by its own force, repeal any “local- option” law in existence at the time of its adoption, it does not forbid the repeal of such laws by
Finding no error, the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.