58 So. 390 | Ala. | 1912
The complaint in this case was as follows: “The plaintiff claims of the defendant the sum of twelve hundred and fifty dollars ($1,250) for merchandise, goods, and chattels sold by the plaintiff to the defendant on the 1st day of December, 1911, which sum of money, together with the interest thereon, is due and unpaid, and is the' property of the plaintiff.”
The sole plea thereto was as follows: “No. 1. The defendant for answer to the complaint in this cause says that the goods, merchandise, and chattels mentioned in said complaint consist exclusively of cotton seed.meal containing 7% per cent, of ammonia, and that the same was sold and delivered by plaintiff to defendant in the state of Alabama in bags for fertilizing purposes, and that neither at the time of said sale or delivery thereof did the packages containing the same have attached thereto the Alabama tax tags prepared by the Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries, under the provisions of section 28 of the Code of Alabama, and commonly known as the 'Fertilizer Tax Tags,’ and that said sale and delivery was in violation of criminal section 6881 of the Code of Alabama. [Signed] A. D. Pitts, Defendant’s Attorney.”
A demurrer was interposed to this plea, assigning the following grounds: “(1) For that the fact that said tax tags were not attached to said packages containing said meal constitutes no defense to the complaint. (2) For that said plea sets up no legal defense to the complaint. (3) For that there is no provision of law requiring that such tax tags shall be attached to packages containing cotton seed meal containing 7% per cent, of ammonia sold for fertilizing purposes. (4) For that such meal is exempted from said tag tax under provisions of section 45 of the Code. (5) For that such failure to so attach such tax tags is not a violation of
The case was submitted to the court for judgment upon this demurrer, and the following judgment was entered by the trial court, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted: “This cause being submitted upon the plaintiff’s demurrer to plea No. 1, and the court having considered said demurrer, it is considered and adjudged by the court that in obedience to the ruling of the Court of Appeals of Alabama, made at the November term, 1911, of said court in the case of the State of Alabama v. Law Lamar, Jr., MSS., the said demurrer be and it is hereby overruled. And, the plaintiff declining to plead further, it is considered and adjudged by the court that the defendant have judgment of his said plea and go hence and recover of the plaintiff the costs in this behalf expended, for which execution may be issued. And the plaintiff excepted to the judgment of the court.’
The sole question presented to us for review is this: Was the plea sufficient, or was it subject to the demurrer interposed? We hold that it ivas no answer to the complaint and was subject to the demurrer interposed; and therefore that the trial court erred in overruling the demurrer, and that plaintiff properly declined to plead further, suffering judgment final thereon, to the end of having the error corrected on appeal. If there is any laiv in this state that requires all cotton seed meal containing 7% per cent, of ammonia to be tagged Avith fertilizer tags before the same is sold for fertilizing purposes, it is not embraced in either section 28 or section 6881 of the Code; and sales of such merchandise, therefore, are not rendered void by failure'to comply Avith these statutory provisions. Section 45 of the Code,
All such statutes, however, as lias been repeatedly pointed out, are laws, by virtue of the acts themselves, and not by virtue of the fact of being embraced in the Code. They are not a part of the Code proper because printed in the Code. See act adopting Code, preface, vol. 1, p. 1, Code. For the purpose of incorporating into the Code proper these later acts thus placed in the bound volumes of the Code, an act to that specified end urns passed August 26, 1909 (Acts 1909, p. 174). To apply these principles to the concrete case in hand, article 2 of chapter 2 of the Code (sections 24-48) Avas no pare of the Code proper prior to August 26, 1909, for the reason that it was a mere compilation of statutes passed after the Code Avas adopted, but required to be placed in the printed volumes by the act which first adopted the Code. But this article did become a phrt of the Code proper, after the printed volumes were adopted as the Code, by the act of August 26, 1909. So this article, as a part of the Code, is subsequent in date to the act passed at the Special Session 1907 of date-November 22, 1907 (Acts Sp. Sess. 1907, p. 20), Avhicli Aims construed by the Court of Appeals in the case of State v. Lamar, 5 Ala. App., 259, 59 South. 737. The fact that this article of the Code (sections 24-48) was not a part of tiie Code proper as originally adopted but became such only by the act readopting it, passed at the session of 1909 (Acts 1909, p. 174), seems not to have been called to tiie attention of the court, and ivas not considered by tiie Court of Appeals in the opinion in the decision indicated. It therefore follows that section 28 of the Code has no application to the registration or tagging of cotton seed meal, this subject being expressly exempted from the operation of this article by section 45 of the
It follows from what is said aboye that if the sale of cotton seed meal in this case was, as set up in the plea, a violation of the statutes of this state, it was of sections 49 and 6887 of the Code, and not of sections 28 and 6881, which relate to fertilizers other than cotton seed meal, lime, ashes, etc.; or of other statutes not in the Code, notably section 4 of the act of November 22, 1907 (Sp. Sess. p. 20). As to this question, however, we do not intimate any opinion, because not necessary, and because the constitutionality of some of these acts is assailed on this appeal.
Court will never pass upon the constitutionality of statutes unless necessary to a decision of a cause, and "will never hold them unconstitutional if such construction can be reasonably avoided.
ReArersed and remanded.