55 Cal. 489 | Cal. | 1880
Lead Opinion
This cause presents but one question: Is the act approved April 2nd, 1880, and commonly known as the Traylor Act, in violation of the Constitution of the State ? The act is entitled, “ An Act to add a new section to the Political Code, to be known as section 1618, relating to salaries of school teachers in cities having 100,000 inhabitants or more,” and establishes the salaries to be paid to the teachers in the public schools “ in all consolidated cities and counties containing more than 100,000 inhabitants.”
Section 5 of art. ix, of the Constitution declares:
“ The Legislature shall provide for a system of common schools, by which a free school shall be kept up and supported in each district at least six months in every year, after the first year in which a school has been established.”
By § 25 of art. iv, it is provided that “ The Legislature shall not pass local or special laws in any of the following enumerated cases, that is to say:
“First— * * * *
“ Twenty-seventh—Providing for the management of common schools. * * * *
“ Thirty-third—In all other cases where a general law can be made applicable.”
We entertain no doubt that the fixing of the salaries of the teachers is as much a part of the “management” of the schools as is the employment of teachers, or the grading of classes. Ordinarily, an important part of the contract of employment of any one to serve in any capacity, is the fixing of the compensation for the services to be rendered, and, there is nothing in the Constitution to indicate that the word “ management” was used in the connection in which it is found in any other than its ordinary sense. • ,
If, therefore, the act in question is special or local in its character, it is expressly prohibited by the 27th subdivision of § 25. That it is local in its nature and in its operation seems to us plain. It may not be an easy matter to define with precision
Burrill, in his Law Dictionary, (vol. 2, pages 153-4) defines the word “ local ” as follows: “ Relating to place; expressive of place; belonging to or confined to a particular place; distinguished from general, personal, or transitory.”
Looking at the Traylor Act, we see that it only purports to deal with salaries of teachers in consolidated cities and counties containing more than 100,000 inhabitants.
Whether we take judicial notice of the fact that there is in the State one such city and county or not, we do know that this act does not make provision for the salaries of the teachers in any city, county, or district in the State, outside of consolidated cities and counties of the population mentioned, and that it is entirely confined as to its subject and in its operation, if not to a specified locality, at least to specified localities. It would seem to follow, necessarily, that it is local as contradistinguished from general, and therefore within the constitutional inhibition already quoted.
This view renders it unnecessary to consider whether the act is also violative of the 33rd subdivision of § 25 of art. iv of the Constitution.
It is said that the question whether a general law can be made applicable is one for the discretion of the Legislature and not for the courts. It is true that it has been so decided, but under constitutions not containing a declaration that its provisions “ are mandatory and prohibitory, unless by express words they are declared to be otherwise,” as does the present Constitution of this State. It may be—although we do not so decide— that it would be the duty of the Court, under these provisions, to say whether a general law could be made applicable, in order to determine, in a given case, whether the act in question contravened that provision of the Constitution prohibiting the Legislature from passing any special or local law where a gen
It is contended that the Traylor Act is but an amendment to the Political Code, that the Political Code contains a general law upon the subject to which the Traylor Act relates, and that by this sort of tacking the latter act is converted into a general law. We cannot appreciate the logic or force of the argument. The question is, had the Legislature the constitutional power to pass the act under consideration ? If it is a general law it had, and no resort to the Political Code is needed to uphold it. It is good of and by itself. If it is a special or local law, then it comes directly within the inhibition of the Constitution, and never had any validity, for the Legislature had no power to enact it. We do not understand how any law can be amended by a void act.
But the Traylor Act is in no sense an amendment to the Political Code. It is entitled, “ An Act to add a new section to the Political Code, to be known as section one thousand six hundred and eighteen,” etc., and its first section is: “ A new section is hereby added to said Political Code, to be known as and numbered sixteen hundred and eighteen, and to read as follows,” etc.
The new section is to follow immediately § 1617 of the Political Code, which, so far as necessary to be quoted, reads thus : “ The powers of boards of trustees of school districts, and of boards'of education in cities, are as follows : * * * 7. To employ the teachers, janitors, and employes of schools; to fix and order paid their compensation.”
The new section, which is a subsequent act, declares that in consolidated cities and counties of a certain population the salaries of teachers shall be certain sums respectively. The subsequent act, if anything, is, to the extent it goes, a repeal by implication of the seventh subdivision of § 1617, but in no sense is it an amendment. If an amendment, what docs it amend? The Political Code, or some particular section of it? If treated as an amendment at all, it is in direct conflict with § 24 of article ix, of the Constitution, which declares that * * * “ no law shall be revised or amended by reference to its title ; but in such case, the act revised or section amended shall be re-enacted, and published at length as revised or amended.” * * *
Judgment reversed and cause remanded, with directions to sustain the demurrer to the petition.
Morrison, C. J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment, and in the opinion of Mr. Justice Eoss.
1. It may be admitted that a portion of a statute is repealed (by implication) when a subsequent statute is passed containing provisions so far in conflict with such .portions of the first that the provisions of the new and the part of the older statute cannot coexist. In such case, however, the provisions of the latter, which operate a repeal of a portion of the older statute, arc not, properly speaking, amendments of the older law. The last expression of the legislative will is an original law, to which arc applicable the provisions of the Constitution, requiring that every law of certain classes shall be “ general,” and that it shall embrace but one subject, to be “ expressed in its title.” (Const, art. iv, §.§ 24, 25.) The Traylor Act is therefore not an amendment of the Political Code.
2. But if, on the other hand, the Traylor Act can, for any purpose, be treated as an intended amendment of any portion of the Political Code, it is an amendment of the section thereof with which it conflicts, to wit, § 1617. Subdivision 7 of that section authorizes “ the boards of trustees in school districts, and the boards of education in cities,” to employ all teachers, and fix and order paid their compensation. The Traylor Act takes from the local boards the power of fixing the salaries of
3. I desire to add, even if the Traylor Act could be considered as an amendment of the Political Code, and the two, read together, could be treated as one law, such law would not be a “ general law ” within the meaning of those terms as employed in the Constitution. The Political Code purports to be, and in fact is, one statute, since it was passed through both houses of the Legislature and signed by the Governor as a single statute, and is entitled “ An Act to establish a Political Code.” It treats of a variety of subjects, not only furnishing a different rule for different localities with respect to many of them, but as to many of its provisions not applying to certain localities ,at all.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur. The act in question does not purport to, and does not, in fact, deal with a rate of salaries applicable to the State at large. The Constitution, § 5, article ix, says that the Legislature shall provide for a system of common schools, by which a free school shall be kept up and supported in each district, etc. The term “district” is defined, Political Code, § 1576. The act in question, which was approved April 2nd, 1880, upon its face deals with a portion only, in fact with only one locality. It is, therefore, special, if not local in terms, and is within the prohibition of article iv, § 25, subdivision 27, of the Constitution, which is, that the Legislature shall not pass a special law ^providing for the management of common schools.
A special law is one referring to a selected class, as well as to a particular object. This act refers to a selected class, viz., teachers in cities of .one hundred thousand inhabitants or more. I have no doubt that the Legislature may fix rates of salaries throughout the State, and in so doing, may grade; or it may confer the power upon the local boards; but to fix the salaries
Subdivision 20, § 25, article iv, prohibits the passage of special or local laws changing county seats. Could it be said not to be special legislation to pass a law changing county seats of all counties having more than one hundred thousand inhabitants, and prescribing another mode for counties having a less population?
By subdivision 33, the Legislature is prohibited from passing a special or local law “ in all other cases where a general law can be made applicable.” Cannot a general law fixing salaries, or prescribing a mode for fixing salaries, be made applicable to the entire State?
On the 7th of April, 1880, an act was passed relating to the public schools generally, and by that act, the Board of Education has power to fix the compensation of teachers. (§ 1617, subd. 7, amdts. Pol. Code, 1880, p. 36.) It is proper to suggest, that by the Constitution the educational department is made a State care, as distinguished from municipal, and that the regulation of schools in the City and County of San Francisco does not remain unchangeable under the “ Consolidation Act.” This view is in keeping with my concurring opinion in Desmond v. Dunn, 55 Cal. 242. It is not in conflict with People ex. rel. Beckwith v. The Board of Education etc., opinion filed June 22nd, 1880. The Consolidation Act may remain for municipal purposes—that is, city and county government—yet the educational department, as a State matter, be subject under the Constitution to general laws passed for that purpose.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. The principal, if not the only ground relied upon by those who deny the constitutionality of the “ Traylor Act,” is that it contravenes subdivision 27 of § 25 of article iv of the Constitution. That clause reads as follows: “ The Legislature shall not pass local or special laws providing for the management of common schools.” If this act does not provide “ for
The first question which I shall consider is, whether or not the “ Traylor Act ” is a law “ providing for the management of common schools.” If it is, I think that it should be held unconstitutional, on the ground that the subject of the act is not expressed in its title. (Const. § 24, art. iv.) The act is entitled, “ An Act to add a new section to the Political Code, to be known as section one thousand six hundred and eighteen, relating to salaries of school teachers in cities having one hundred thousand inhabitants or more.” If this title was selected to express the subject of an act “ providing for the management of common schools,” it seems to me that the Legislature could not have gone much wider of the mark. I do not think that any one would expect to find, under that title, anything providing for the management of common schools, nor do I think that this act contains any such provision. It relates to teachers’ salaries, and the salaries of teachers have about as much to do with the management of common schools as the salaries of judges have to do with the administration of justice. If this act had been entitled “ An Act to add a new section to the Political Code, to be known as section one thousand six hundred and eighteen, providing for the management of common schools in cities having one hundred thousand inhabitants or more,” the title would have expressed what is now claimed to be the subject of the act. But I cannot help thinking that the inappropriateness of such a title, if it had been placed at the head of this act, would be patent to every one who should read both the title and the act. The Legislature may, if it sees fit, increase the salaries of the Judges of the Superior Courts of this State. If such an act is ever passed, I do not think that it will be entitled “ An Act to provide for the management of courts of justice,” and yet it would be quite as much an act providing for their management as this is “ for the management of common schools.” It does not seem to me that an act which should authorize some school district to erect a school-house would be an act providing for the management of common schools. And yet the sums paid for the erection of school-houses enter quite as much into the management
Tiie next question is, whether the Traylor Act is a local or a special kvw Avitliin any Avell-settlcd definition of the terms local or special laAvs. I do not think that it is.
1. The doctrine is elementary that an amendment of a statute by a subsequent act operates precisely as if the subject-matter of the amendment had been incorporated in the prior act at the time of its adoption, so far as regards any action had after the amendment is made. Under that rule the “ Traylor Act ” must be viewed in the same light hoav, so far as this case is concerned, as it Avould be if it had constituted a part of the original act at,
2. As an independent act, it seems to me that the “ Traylor Act ” should be held to be a general law. Neither the term “ special law ” or “ local law ” has been defined with the exactitude that most law phrases have been. Perhaps neither is susceptible of a very nice definition. Cases are not wanting, however, in which particular enactments were held to be special or local, and others to be general. In Holland’s Case, it is said: “ The rule of law is, that of general statutes the j udges ought to take notice, although not pleaded—otherwise of special or particular statutes.” (4 Co. 76 a.) In Indiana, it has been held that a special law “ is such as at common law the courts would not notice, unless it were specially pleaded and proved like any other fact.” (High v. The State, 24 Ind. 28 ; Toledo etc. Ry. Co. v. Nordyke, 27 id. 95.) . In the same State, it was held that a law which related to a particular class of cases, and to them aloné, was not a special law. (Hymes v. Aydelott, 26
It was urged on the argument in behalf of respondent, that the power to fix the salaries of teachers is given to the Board of Education by the Consolidation Act, which constitutes the charter of the municipal corporation of the City and County of San Francisco. I think that the counsel mistakes the fact. The act under which I understand that the respondent claims to derive its power to fix the salaries of teachers is entitled “ An act to provide for the support of the Common Schools of the City and County of San Francisco, and to define the powers and duties of the Board of Education thereof,” approved April 1st, 1872. If I am correct as to the fact, the maxim, “Leges posteriores priores contrarias .abrogant,” would seem to apply in this case.
The question whether the provisions of this act, if opposed to any of the provisions of the Consolidation Act, should be held to repeal such repugnant provisions of the latter act, does not arise in this case. That the Consolidation Act cannot be repealed or amended by any general act of incorporation until a majority of the electors of the City and County of San Francisco determine to become organized under such general act, seems to me to be sufficiently clear; and that is as far as the dictum in Desmond v. Dunn, as I understand it, goes. The case at bar presents this state of facts:
The Legislature, in 1872, conferred the power upon the respondent to fix the salaries of teachers, and in 1880 the Legislature took that power away from the respondent, and resumed the right which it always had of directly exercising that power itself. It is urged, however, that the Legislature could not accomplish this by amending the Political Cede in the manner in which it is attempted to be done in the Traylor Act. This raises a very serious question, as a very large proportion of all the enactments of the late Legislature are of the same character. I now have before me a volume entitled “ Acts Amenda
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the judgment of the Court below should be affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent, and concur in the conclusion reached by Sharp-STEIN, J.