111 P. 947 | Okla. Crim. App. | 1910
The Second Legislature of this state passed an act providing that sessions of the County Court in Wagoner County should be held at Coweta as well as at the county seat; and that the terms should begin at Coweta on the third Mondays in February, May, August and November of each year, and should continue not exceeding four weeks. This act was approved March 12, 1909. (Art. XIII, chap. 14, Session Laws of 1909). Subsequently the same Legislature passed another act entitled, "An Act providing for terms of the county court in the several counties of the State of Oklahoma," section 1 of which provides that the county court in the several counties in this state shall convene *96 at the county seat on the first Mondays of January, April, July, and October of each year; section 3 provides that if there is one and only one place other than the county seat where it is provided by law that terms of the county court shall be held, the terms of said court shall commence at such place on the first Mondays of February, May, August and November of each year, and continue for a period of three weeks, if the public business requires it; section 4 makes provision for the terms in counties having two places of holding county court other than the county seat; and section 5 repeals all laws in conflict with the act. This act was approved March 23, 1909, eleven days after the approval of the Coweta act. Neither act carried the emergency clause, and therefore neither became effective until June 11, 1909, 90 days after the adjournment of the Legislature. Coweta is the only place in Wagoner County other than the county seat where provision has been made by law for holding terms of the county court of that county.
The county court was convened at Coweta on the third Monday in August, 1909, as provided in the act approved March 12, and did not convene on the first Monday in August as provided in the subsequent act. On September 3, 1909, at this purported term of the court, the petitioner was tried and convicted of violating the prohibition law, and was sentenced to pay a fine of $250.00 and to be imprisoned for a period of ninety days. He undertook to appeal from this judgment, but failed to serve the statutory notices of appeal, and for that reason his appeal was dismissed.James v. State, infra,
The sole question involved is, which of the two acts above mentioned controls in fixing the terms of the County Court of Wagoner County at Coweta? If the provisions of the act approved March 12, 1909, control, then the term was a legal one and petitioner must be remanded to custody. If the subsequent act controls, then the assemblage of officers and persons who tried petitioner on September 3, 1909, did not constitute a court, the trial and judgment were void, and petitioner should be released.
It has been suggested that inasmuch as both acts were passed by the same Legislature, and were each to take effect at the same time, neither could repeal the other; but this is not the law. Where two acts which contain repugnant provisions are passed by the same Legislature, ordinarily that which last received executive approval, or was last passed over the executive's veto, will be held to repeal pro tanto the other. Thus it was held inRex v. The Justices of Middlesex, 2 B. Ad. 818, 22 E.C.L. 190, that, "Where two acts of parliament, which passed during the same session, and were to come into operation the same day, are repugnant to each other, that which last received the royal assent must prevail, and be considered pro tanto a repeal of the other." Again in Strauss v. Heiss,
The act approved March 23, 1909, professed to fix the terms of the county court in the several counties in this state; it had no other purpose. That approved March 12, 1909, created Coweta a county court town, and fixed the terms of the county court to be held at that place. The one act was therefore in a sense special; the other general. There are authorities to the effect that an act creating a court in a single county, or specially fixing the terms of court in a single county, or regulating the procedure therein, is not a local or special act, because such matter relates to the administration of the laws of the state, and affects equally all persons who are, or may come, within the jurisdiction of such court. Whether this rule is sound we need not stop to determine; for in our opinion, whether the Coweta act be general or special, it was repealed pro tanto by the subsequent act.
The rule that a later statute, general in its terms and broad enough to include matters provided for by a former special act, will ordinarily not affect the special provisions of such former act, is not a provision of substantive law, but is merely one rule for determining the legislative intent; and when it is apparent that the Legislature intended to make the later act exclusive, designed it to cover the whole subject-matter to which it relates, and to embrace the entire law on the subject, it will repeal the repugnant provisions of all former acts, general or special. "When an earlier statute is special only in the sense that it applies to a single case, of which there are many in the state, and the later statute is general in its operation and applies to all such cases, then the *99
earlier one is repealed by the later." 26 Am. Eng. Enc. L. 743. See, also, Southport v. Ogden,
"The question is one of intent. There is no rule of law which prohibits the repeal of a special act by a general one, nor is there any principle forbidding such repeal without the use of words declarative of that intent. The question is always one of intention, and the purpose to abrogate the particular enactment by a later general statute is sufficiently manifested when the provisions of both cannot stand together. * * * Special or locallaws will be repealed by general laws when the intention to do sois manifest, as where the latter are intended to establishuniform rules for the whole state."
See also Allaby v. Mauston Electric Service Co.,
FURMAN, PRESIDING JUDGE, and DOYLE, JUDGE, concur. *101