(after stating the facts). The ordinance in question was passed pursuant to the authority conferred- by section 5649 of Kirby’s Digest. The statute is as follows: “Cities of the first class are hereby authorized to require residents of such city to pay a tax for the privilege of keeping and using wheeled vehicles, except bicycles, but such tax shall be appropriated and used exclusively for repairing and improving the streets of such city. ”
In the case of Fort Smith v. Scruggs,
It is conceded that the only question presented by this appeal is to determine whether or not section 5649 of Kirby’s Digest, in so far as it applies to automobiles, was repealed by Act No. 134 of the acts of the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas at its 1911 session. The latter act contains twenty sections, and section 13, which particularly applies to the question at issue, is in part as follows: “The owner of a motor vehicle who shall have obtained a certificate from the Secretary of State as hereinbefore provided shall not be required to obtain any other license or permits to use and operate the same. * * * Except in this section provided, no city, town or village or other municipality shall have power to make any ordinance, by-laws, or resolutions limiting or restricting the use of (or) speed of motor vehicles, and no ordinance, by-laws or resolution heretofore or hereafter made by any city, village or town or other municipal corporation within the State, by whatsoever name known or designated in respect to or limiting the speed of motor vehicles, shall have any force, effect or validity, and they are hereby declared to be of no validity or effect. ” The section also contains a proviso that nothing in the act contained shall be construed to affect the power of municipal corporations to make and enforce ordinances, rules and regulations affecting motor vehicles' which are used within their limits for public hire.
Section 20 defines the public highways and local officers governed by said act:
“Section 20. Public highways shall include any highway, county road, State road, public street, avenue, alley, park, parkway, driveway, or any other public road or public place in any county, city or village, incorporated town or towns. Local authorities shall include all officers of counties, cities, villages, incorporated town or towns and townships.”
There was no express repeal of section 5649 of Kirby's Digest by the statute enacted in 1911. In regard to repeals by implication, in the case of Wilson v. Massie,
The statute, enacted in 1911, is very broad in its terms. It is plain that it intended to regulate the use of automobiles throughout the entire State, and, with certain exceptions stated in the act, to prescribe the only rules in respect thereto. The act provides that the owners of motor vehicles shall obtain a license from the Secretary of State and pay a fee therefor, and, when that is done, he shall not be required to obtain any other license or permit to use and operate the same. The act further regulates the speed of motor vehicles on the public highways and the streets of cities and towns, and expressly provides no city or town shall have power to make any ordinance limiting or restricting the use of or speed of motor vehicles, and that no ordinance heretofore or hereafter made in respect to limiting the speed of motor vehicles shall have any force, effect or validity and is declared to be of no validity or effect. Cities and towns are given the power to make rules and regulations in respect to motor vehicles used for hire. In fact, authority that cities and towns may exercise with respect to the use of motor vehicles are expressly- enumerated in the act, and all other powers with regard thereto are expressly prohibited.
In discussing a precisely similar question, in the case of Buffalo v. Lewis,
“In this case the intention of the Legislature to repeal all laws inconsistent with and contrary to it and to make the act complete and exclusive is further shown in reserving to municipalities the right to limit by ordinance, rule or regulation the speed of motor vehicles on the public highways, and to make, enforce and maintain further ordinances, rules or regulations affecting motor vehicles which are offered for public hire. ” See also State v. Thurston, 28 R. I. 265,66 Atl. 580 .
We think it plain that the two statutes are inconsistent, and that the act of 1911 was intended to supplant the prior statute with respect to the use and regulation of motor vehicles. The later act was evidently intended to cover the whole subject, and its provisions are full and complete in that respect. The provisions of the two statutes as to motor vehicles are in direct conflict, and the prior act must give way to the later statute on the subject. Statutes having for their object the regulation of the use and operation of motor vehicles in the streets, roads and highways of the State are generally upheld as a valid exercise of the police power, and are not unconstitutional as class legislation. In determining the constitutionality of a statute of this kind, the Supreme Court of Illinois in the case of Christy v. Elliott,
Such laws as the act here in question have never been regarded as class legislation. Simply because they affect one class and not another, inasmuch as they affect all members of the same class alike, and the classification involved in the law is founded upon a reasonable basis, if these laws be otherwise unobjectionable, all that can be required in these cases is that they be general in their application to the class or locality to which they apply. They are then public in character, and of their propriety and policy the Legislature must judge. (Cooley’s Const. Lim. [16 ed.] 479-481). In Barbier v. Connolly,
The judgment will therefore be affirmed!
