181 S.W.2d 226 | Ark. | 1944
At the 1941 session of the General Assembly, Act No. 391 was passed entitled: "An Act to Create the Employment Security Division in the Department of Labor; . . ." Acts of 1941, p. 1098, et seq. This legislation superseded and by 21 thereof expressly repealed two prior Acts on the same subject, these being Act 155 of the Acts of 1937 and Act 200 of the Acts of 1939 amending Act 155. This litigation challenges the constitutionality of Act 391 as being violative of both the state and federal constitutions. The grounds upon which Act 391 is attacked would have been equally applicable to the question of the validity of the prior legislation. This Act 391 extends from page 1089 to page 1154, both inclusive, of the Acts of 1941, but the disposition of this appeal does not require an analysis of its provisions, *487 and we shall refer only to those provisions of the Act which it is urged render it unconstitutional.
As is well known, and as was said in former opinions by this court, construing the legislation which Act 391 supersedes, the Acts were passed to conform to the federal legislation on the same subject, which imposed certain taxes upon employers of labor with certain exceptions not important here to consider. This federal legislation imposed a tax which was collectible throughout the nation whether the states thereof enacted legislation supplementary and complementary to it or not, but permitted those states which did pass such legislation to retain a fixed portion of the taxes, all of which would otherwise have been payable to the federal government. Buckstaff Bath House Co. v. McKinley, Commr.,
It is here urged that the Act violates the equal protection and due process clauses of the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution, but this contention is definitely and adversely disposed of by the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Carmichael v. Southern Coal Coke Co.,
In our opinion in the Buckstaff case, supra, it was said that "we must first determine whether collection of the taxes levied by Act 155 (of the Acts of 1937) is a legitimate exercise of the state's governmental functions." After citing and reviewing the decisions of the *488
Supreme Court of the United States in the cases of Stewart Machine Company v. Davis,
The opinion in the Carmichael case, supra, involved the constitutionality of a statute of the state of Alabama, which was there upheld, and in the footnote to the opinion of this court in the Buckstaff case, supra, there appears the statement that, "the Arkansas Unemployment Compensation Law is said to be almost identical with the Alabama law."
The case of McKinley, Commr. of Labor, v. R. L. Payne Son Lbr. Co.,
It is argued that neither of these opinions by this court is conclusive of the constitutionality of Act 391 of the Acts of 1941, for the reason that the objections to the constitutionality of Act 391 here raised were not raised or considered in either of the prior cases arising under Act 155 of 1937 and Act 200 of the Acts of 1939.
This is true, and we, therefore, consider the objections to Act 391 of the Acts of 1941. But before doing so we will dispose of a motion made in the court below and insisted upon here. This appeal is from the decree of the court below dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiction, and an objection to the jurisdiction sustained by the court below was and is that this is a suit against the state and is, therefore, in contravention of 20, art. V, of the *489 Constitution, which provides that "the state of Arkansas shall never be made defendant in any of her courts." The purpose of this suit is to restrain the officers provided for by Act 391 from discharging the duties imposed upon them by the Act in the collection of the taxes which it imposes, and it is, therefore, insisted that the suit is in effect one against the state, although the state is not a nominal party.
Among the other and latest cases cited in support of this contention is that of Page v. McKinley,
This opinion in the Page case, supra, cites a number of our opinions on this subject and among others the case of Pitcock v. State,
The instant suit is predicated upon the theory and allegation that certain officers, under the purported authority of an Act which is unconstitutional and, therefore, void, are about to take the plaintiff's property by imposing a tax, which when imposed becomes a lien upon it. But if the relief prayed is granted no obligation is imposed upon the state. It is, therefore, not a suit against the state. The opinion in McCain, Commr. of Labor, v. Crossett Lumber Co.,
It is argued that inasmuch as the Act creates a Department of Labor which is placed under the supervision of an officer designated as the Commissioner of Labor, who is charged with the enforcement of the provisions of the Act, it is violative of the following provisions of our Constitution, to-wit: Section 1, art. IV; 1, art. V; 1, art. VI; art. VII, and 9 of art. XIX.
We will consider these objections to Ark. 391 collectively, but before doing so we may say here, as was said in the case of Bush v. Martineau,
Section 1, art. IV, of the Constitution provides that the powers of the government shall be divided into three distinct departments, legislative, executive and judicial. Section 1, art. V, vests the legislative powers of the state in a General Assembly, consisting of a Senate and House of Representatives. Section 1, art. VI, provides that the executive department of the state shall consist of a Governor, Secretary of State, Treasurer, Auditor and Attorney General, and authorized the establishment of the office of Commissioner of State Lands, a power which has been exercised. By the sixth amendment to the Constitution the office of Lieutenant Governor was created. Article VII of the Constitution vests the judicial power in certain courts there named.
In our opinion, Act 391 does not offend against any of these provisions. It does create an administrative agency charged with the duty of enforcing its provisions, but it does nothing more, and we do not find in the provisions of the Constitution above referred to or elsewhere in the constitution any inhibition against the employment of such an agency for such a purpose. To do so would greatly and, we think, unduly restrict the power inhering in the General Assembly to create agencies of this character. The General Assembly, in the exercise *492 of its legislative power, has found it necessary to create a number of such agencies, to the functioning of which many of the same constitutional objections have been unsuccessfully interposed, nor do we think the legislation is violative of 9 of art. XIX of the Constitution.
An early and frequently cited case is that of Lucas v. Futrall,
The police power which resides in the state as a sovereign exists without express constitutional grant, and may be used in any manner not prohibited.
In the exercise of this power the General Assembly, at its 1913 session, passed Act 96, creating the State Board of Health and Vital Statistics, which Act was attacked upon the ground that it delegated legislative as well as police powers to the board and created permanent state offices. This Act authorized the board to make rules and regulations pursuant to which its functions should be performed. None of the objections to the Act was sustained, although two members of the court were of the opinion that the Act was violative of 9 of art. *493 XIX of the Constitution in that it created permanent state offices; but the majority held otherwise.
For all practical purposes, this question has been considered as settled by the opinion in the case of Greer v. Merchants' Mechanics' Bank,
"(1) The framers of the Constitution obviously did not intend to place an absolute prohibition against the creation by the Legislature of offices not expressly provided for. The prohibition only reaches to the creation of permanent state offices. That being true, the question arises, who is to be the judge of the question of permanence of an office, or the necessity for its temporary existence. The answer to this question, we think, results in the solution of the difficulty presented in this case. Observing the general rules of interpretation in determining whether a given constitutional provision is mandatory, or whether it is merely directory and cautionary to the Legislature, we are of the opinion that this provision falls within the latter class. The command is to the Legislature itself, and it necessarily involves the power to determine the necessity for creating a temporary office and to determine whether the work to be done is of a temporary or permanent nature."
It was there further said: "We attach little, if any, importance to the provision of the statute limiting the *494 time to twelve years, for we think that the Legislature has the power to determine whether an office to be created is permanent or temporary, whether expressly declared in the Act or not. If it is created as a temporary office, we must assume that the Legislature found it to be such. The creation of the office implies a determination that it is temporary, and not permanent.
"There can be no irrepealable laws which depend for existence entirely upon the legislative will, and any office created by the Legislature is temporary in the sense that it is subject to the legislative will, and may be abolished at any time.
"Those who take such temporary offices as may be created by the Legislature do so with notice of the insure tenure and the acceptance of the office creates no contract with the state. Humphry v. Sadler,
The opinion in this Greer case stated that the 1913 General Assembly, which passed the Act creating the State Banking Department, had also created several other new departments, and that power has been exercised by subsequent sessions of the General Assembly until today we have 44 governmental agencies and departments. These were created as the state grew and its interests became more varied and the state's welfare, in the opinion of the General Assembly, required the legislation. Separate appropriations are made for these agencies and departments, the best known and most important of which are: the Insurance Department, the Oil and Gas Commission, the State Purchasing Agent, the Agricultural and Industrial Commission, the State Health Commission, Banking Department, Department of Labor, the Auditorial Department, the State Board of Education, State Forestry Commission, State Geologist, Public Utilities Commission, Bond Refunding Board, Basic Science Board, Arkansas Corporation Commission, Fish and Game Commission, Flood Control Commission, State Planning Board, Soil Commission, Department of Revenues, and State Police Department. Others are of less importance except to persons affected. *495
It would be revolutionary to declare the Acts creating these departments and agencies unconstitutional, and would not be done if any doubt existed as to their constitutionality.
This legislation does not, as learned counsel for appellant insists, infringe upon the provisions of the Constitution dividing our government into three departments, nor has it created permanent state offices in violation of the Constitution. It was said in the opinion in the Buckstaff case, supra, that this legislation was enacted pursuant to the police power of the state, and so with the other legislation above referred to. Having this power, the General Assembly has the right to create such offices and agencies as are necessary to its exercise. Lucas v. Futrall, supra; Little River Board of Education v. Ashdown Special School District,
Inasmuch as we think Act 391 is constitutional, the decree from which is this appeal must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
HOLT, J., nonparticipating.