60 N.J.L. 427 | N.J. | 1897
The opinion of the court was delivered by
By this writ of error we are called upon to review a judgment of the Supreme Court, affirming the validity of an ordinance of the borough of As-bury Park, adopted under the provisions of the act entitled “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act respecting licenses in the boroughs of this state,’ approved May 1st, 1894,” which amendatory act was approved March 22d, 1895, Famph. L., p. 490.
The provisions of the ordinance and of the act which was claimed to confer power upon the borough to.pass it, are fully set out in the opinion delivered in the Supreme Court and need not be here repeated.
The conclusion reached in that court is entirely approved by this court, but it is deemed proper to indicate that such approval does not apply to all the statements of the opinion.
The act in question doubtless impliedly amends section 12
But the act in question is not thus limited. Its language .is unrestricted and it evidently operates upon all the municipalities called boroughs in whatever mode their organization has been effected.
The act in question may also be supported against the charge that it lacks constitutional validity because special in its character, on other grounds than those stated in the court below.
Its purpose is to raise revenue for the municipality by licensing certain trades and occupations when carried on therein. Such a purpose is obviously appropriate to municipalities of a higher grade. It is obviously inappropriate to the lowest grade of municipalities, viz., townships. It is, therefore, not rendered special because it does not include townships.
Municipalities of high grade, such as boroughs, towns and cities, exhibit ■ different characteristics, which may not distinguish them from each other with respect to the propriety of legislation for revenue from licensing trades and occupations, but which may properly distinguish them with respect to the amount of license fees which they may be empowered to exact and the amount of penalties they may inflict for failure to take out license.
When, therefore, the legislature enacted a law appropriately regulating the matter of license in municipalities of the grade of boroughs and limited to that grade, we should assume that, with respect to municipalities of higher grade, it was of opinion that some other regulation was required, not in respect to the power conferred, but to the mode and details of the execution of the power, for in that regard there is a manifest distinction in the grades of municipalities which would justify a difference in legislation. Whether such legislation has been enacted in respect to the higher grades of municipalities we need not inquire. We could not compel its enactment and perceive no reason why the constitutional requirement may not be satisfied either by the passage of one general law covering all classes of municipalities or of several co-related laws adapted and appropriate to different classes, if such classes are properly distinguished from each other.
In the Supreme Court the act in question was also attacked upon the ground that its title did not sufficiently express its object to satisfy the constitutional mandate on that subject. The objection is pressed here upon grounds which do not seem to have been presented below.
The contention is based upon the well-settled doctrine that a grant of authority to a municipality to license merely confers only a power of police regulation but no power to impose a license fee for revenue. North Hudson County Railway v. Hoboken, 12 Vroom 71; Muhlenbrinck v. Commissioners, 13 Id. 364; Clark v. New Brunswick, 14 Id. 175; Flanagan v. Plainfield, 15 Id. 118; Morgan v. Orange, 21 Id. 389; Mulcahy v. Newark, 28 Id. 513.
But as was well said by Mr. Justice Dixon, in Mulcahy v. Newark, ubi supra: “Authority to exact license fees may be
"Whether, however, the power granted to a municipality is to be classified under the police powers or under the taxing powers, it is, in either case, to be exercised by means of the issuing of a license.
Now the title of the act in question does not indicate a mere intent to grant power to license. It is declared to be an act respecting licenses, and' as there are licenses of two sorts, viz., those designed merely as means of regulation and those designed to raise revenue, it may well be deemed to express an intent to legislate in respect to either class of licenses or both of them. A restricted construction should not be applied if it would render a legislative act obnoxious to constitutional prohibition, if a broader but yet reasonable construction would avoid such an objection.
But it is suggested that upon a construction of this title which makes it applicable to one or both of the two classes of licenses, the act which in its body applies only to one of those classes cannot be supported under the case of Beverly v. Waln, 28 Vroom 143. A contention of that sort can only be based upon a misconception of what was decided in that case. The title of the act then under consideration ran thus: “An act relating to the cost of improving sidewalks in the cities of the state.” The enactments of the body of the act operated only upon cities of the third class. There were many constitutional questions raised in the case, only one of which was dealt with in the opinion of Mr. Justice Eeed. An examination of that opinion will show that the act under review was declared to be invalid because the title was construed to declare that its object was to legislate in respect to all the cities of the state. In that view the title was false and deceptive, and upon well-settled doctrine thus failed to accord with the constitutional requirement on the subject. Such
This construction of the decision in Beverly v. "Wain puts it in harmony with all our adjudged cases on the subject of the constitutional mandate iu respect to the title of legislative acts, except perhaps one such case.
In Walter v. Town of Union, 4 Vroom 350, Mr. Justice "Van Syckel, speaking for the Supreme Court, declared the true rule to be that “ the degree of particularity which must be used in the title of an act rests in legislative discretion and is not.defined by the constitution,” and that while “there are many cases where the object of the act might with great propriety be more specifically stated, yet the generality of the title will not be fatal to the act if, by fair intendment, it can be connected with it.”
That decision has been repeatedly approved in the Supreme Court and in this court. Doyle v. Newark, 5 Vroom 236; Van Riper v. North Plainfield, 14 Id. 349. In Richards v. Hammer, 13 Id. 435, the doctrine was applied and Chief Justice Beasley took occasion to distinguish the decision in the case of Rader v. Union, 10 Id. 509, which had been claimed to be adverse thereto. Richards v. Hammer was affirmed (15 Id. 667), but without consideration of the point now under discussion. But in Bumstead v. Govern, 18 Id. 368, a similar point was involved and a general title held to be sufficient, although it did not indicate the means or method of attaining the object expressed, and that decision was affirmed upon the opinion of the Supreme Court. Govern v. Bumstead, 19 Id. 612.
If the decision of the question in Coutieri v. New Brunswick, 15 Vroom 58, is supportable, it must be on the ground that the title of the act under review in that case was false and deceptive because importing a regulation of a class of
The title of the act now under review expressed its object to be to legislate respecting licenses in certain municipalities. Nothing in it indicates an intent to legislate as to both kinds of licenses, viz., licenses under the police power and licenses under the taxing power. Legislation upon the latter class of licenses was included in the expressed object, and the title was neither false nor deceptive.
The judgment of the Supreme Court must be affirmed.
For affirmance — The Chancellor, Chiee Justice, Dixon, Garrison, Ludlow, Yan Syokel, Adams, Bogert, Hendrickson, Nixon. 10.
For reversal—None.