120 Ky. 796 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1905
Opinion by
Affirming.
By the act of October 24, 1900 (Laws 1900, Special Session, p. 29, chap. 5, sec. 2), a county board of election commissioners was created. The act contained this provision: ‘ ‘ The. sheriff of the county by virtue of his office shall be a member of said board and shall preside at its meetings, and in case of disagreement between the other members of said board, acting as umpire he shall be permitted to vote. * * * In counties where there is no sheriff or where from other causes the sheriff can not act the circuit .clerk shall act in his place.” (Ky. Stats., 1903, sec. 1596a, sub-see. 2.)
By an act approved March 22, 1904 (Acts 1904, p. 197, chap. 93), the words last above quoted were changed to read as follows; “In counties where there is no sheriff, and in counties containing cities of the second class, or where, from any cause the sheriff can not act, the circuit court clerk of the county, by virtue of his office, shall be a member of said board instead of the sheriff, and shall act in the place of and is given all the rights and powers that are given to sheriffs under this section.”
Appellant, Frank A. Droege, is the circuit clerk of Kenton county, and appellee, M. D. Mclnemey, is the sheriff. This is a controversy between them as to the validity of the act of 1904, in so far as it provides that in counties containing cities of the second
See. 59 of the Constitution provides that the General Assembly shall not pass any local or special acts “to provide for conducting elections.” It also provides that, in all cases where. a general law can be made applicable, no special law can be enacted.
In 1 Sutherland on Statutory Construction, sec. 203, the rule is thus stated: “Whether or not an act is class legislation, or whether or not it is a general or special law, depends fundamentally upon a question of classification. When an act is assailed as class or special legislation, the attack is necessarily based upon the claim that there are persons or things similarly situated to those embraced in the act, and which by the terms of the act are excluded from its operation. The question then is whether the persons or things embraced by the act form by themselves a proper and legitimate class with reference to the purposes of the act. It is agreed on all hands that the Constitution does not forbid a reasonable and proper classification of the objects of legislation. The question is, what is reasonable and proper in the premises ¶ ’ ’
In Safety Building & Loan Company v. Ecklar, 106 Ky., 115, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 1770, 50 S. W., 50, this court said: “We assert it to be elementary that the true test whether a law is a general one, in the constitutional sense, is not alone that it applies equally to all in a class — though that is also necessary — but, in addition, there must be distinctive and natural reasons inducing and supporting the classification. A law does not escape the constitutional inhibition against being a special law merely because it applies
The same rule was announced in Louisville v. Kuntz, 104 Ky., 584, 20 Ky. Law Rep., 805, 47 S. W., 592; See, also, 26 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 683.)
In Stone, Auditor v. Wilson, 39 S. W., 49, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 126, sec. 1776, Ky. Stats., 1894, regulating the compensation of clerks in counties having a population of over 40,000 and less than 75,000 was held valid.
In Winston v. Stone, Auditor, 102 Ky., 423, 19 Ky. Law Rep., 1483, 43 S. W., 397, sec. 1761, Ky. Stats., 1894, regulating the compensation of officers in counties having a population of over 75,000 was held not special or local legislation. But in both of these cases the classification which the Legislature made was not arbitrary or unreasonable. There are distinctive and natural reasons supporting the classification, for it necessarily follows that in counties having a large population the fees of the county officers are much larger than in counties having a smaller population, and, although in the smaller counties all the fees of the office may be barely sufficient to support the officer, in the counties having a large population a part of the fees may be adequate for this purpose, and the surplus may be turned into the State treasury. The limitation of the compensation of the officers takes away the temptation to use large sums of money to obtain the office, and also tends to promote the public service. '
In Walston v. Louisville, 23 Ky. Law Rep., 1852, 66 S. W., 385, sec. 2998, Ky. Stats., 1899, which provides that, in cities of the first class, interest shall run at a certain rate on unpaid tax bills,- was held constitutional. But this section is part of the act for the government of cities of the first class, and
Judgment affirmed,