PER CURIAM RESPONSE OF THE SUPREME COURT.
This сourst is of the opinion that the notice given as to the proposed bill first enacted became functus officio upon the enactment of said bill. Thereforе the said notice and proof of the publication of same, before the passage of said first local law, could not be used to obviate the necessity for complying with sections 106 and 107 of the Constitution of 1901, as to the required publication and proof of the notice essential to the validity of the second enaсtment. We hold that publication and proof of the notice as to the proof as to the first enactment did not dispense with a separate and distinct notice as to the substance of the second enactment, for four consecutive weeks, and proof *158 thereof as required by section 106 of the Constitution.
Appellant was arrested upon warrants charging him with having violated provisions of “An act to provide for the more efficient working of the public roads of Crenshaw county,” etc. — Local Acts 1915, p. 85. Section 1 of said act imрoses the duty of working said roads, or in lieu thereof to pay a commutation fee of $5, section 2 imposes a vehicle license tax, and section 3 imposes a dog tax of $1 on each dog kept in said county. The failure or refusal to comply with any of the requirements of these several sections is made a misdemeanor. Upon his arrest, appellant filed a petition in the probate court of Crenshaw county, praying a writ of habeas corpus to inquire into the legality of his dеtention, setting up that the act under which he was arrested was unconstitutional and the warrants issued thereunder were null and void. The act under which the warrants were issued (Loсal Acts 1915, p. 85 et seq.) was apparently and in terms repealed by a subsequent act, entitled “An act to provide for the more efficient working of the public roаds of Crenshaw county,” etc., approved September 22, 1915.— Local Acts 1915, p. 403 et seq. For convenience, the act under which the warrants were issued will be at times hereinafter referred to as the first act and the subsequent or repealing act as the second act.
We hold that the published notice of the proposed bill did set forth the substance оf the assailed act as required by section 106 •of the Constitution.
Nor is the impоsition of the vehicle tax double taxation. It is not a property tax; the tax is not upon the rem; it is a privilege or license running to the owners and possessors of vehicles.
—Brown v. City of Mobile,
It follows from what we have said that the court below was correct in denying the petition of appellant, as he was committed under valid process, and the judgment of the trial court must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
