120 So. 142 | Ala. | 1928
We consider only subdivision (d) of the Act of September 7, 1927 (Acts 1927, pp. 669, 670), amending section 6248 of the Code of 1923. That subdivision, with so much of the context as is necessary to its understanding, reads as follows:
"6248. Who may Practice as Attorneys. — Only such persons as are regularly licensed have authority to practice law. For the purposes of this section of the Code, the practice of law is defined as follows: Whoever, * * * (d) As a vocation, enforces, secures, settles, adjusts or compromises defaulted, controverted or disputed accounts, claims or demands between persons with neither of whom he is in privity or in the relation of employer and employé in the ordinary sense; is practicing law."
The act then proceeds:
"Any person, firm or corporation who is not a regularly licensed attorney who does an act defined in this section to be an act of practicing law, is guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction must be punished as provided by law."
Appellant agreed that he was "engaged in the business of conducting a commercial collecting agency as a vocation within the city of Birmingham, Jefferson county, Alabama, in which vocation he was holding himself out to the public as being ready, able and willing to represent out of court any one in the adjustment, collection or compromise of any defaulted, controverted or disputed account, claim or demand, which he may have against any one else, with neither of whom defendant was in privity, or in the relation of employer or employé in the ordinary sense," and that "while acting in said business defendant by solicitation secured from Odum, Bowers White, a corporation, in the city of Birmingham, Jefferson county, Alabama, a defaulted, disputed or controverted account, claim or demand of said corporation against one J. W. Jackson, in the sum of fifty-six dollars and a half," which said claim Jackson disputed, and which defendant by demand and negotiation proceeded to collect, retaining a part of the sum so collected as compensation for his services rendered in adjusting and collecting said claim. Appellant, on the admission of these facts, thus stated in brief, was convicted, and a fine assessed against him.
The constitutionality of the act as applied to the facts of appellant's case is questioned on numerous grounds. We state our conclusion as to one of them. The rest we leave for consideration when, if ever, it may become necessary to pass upon the constitutional validity of the punishment the act purports to visit upon violations of its several other subdivisions.
The act is not expository within the condemnation of the decision in Lindsay v. U.S. Savings Loan Ass'n,
We do not think it necessary to state our consideration of the question whether the enactment of this proposed law was without the power of the Legislature, for the reason that it discriminates unjustly amongst persons entitled to equal opportunity before the law, as appellant alleges. In re J. L. Dorsey, 7 Port. 293. There is a more obvious objection to the act. Section 45 of the Constitution prescribes that "each law shall contain but one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title." It was held in Wood v. McClure,
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chapter 260 of the Code (sections 6220-6260, including 6248) under the title "Attorneys at Law." In the amendatory act no change is made in these requirements for a license. In subdivision (d) the act merely extends the inhibition of the original section to persons who would follow the business of collecting claims out of court. To practice law is to exercise the calling or profession of the law, usually for the purpose of gaining a livelihood, or at least for gain. To engage in the business of collecting claims by demand or negotiation out of court is not to practice law. There is no more necessary relation between the two than there is between the practice of law and scores of other things which lawyers, in common with other folks, must do in order to be able to follow their different vocations. The act under consideration, section (d), involves a radical change of meaning in the collocation of words "practice law." To collect claims out of court, that is, without recourse to legal remedies, and to practice law connote very different things to the lay mind, and we have stated the steps necessary to the making of a licensed lawyer, in order to show how broad is the technical difference between the two. The opinion in Ex parte Cowert, supra, presents a close analogy. The language of that case (page 100 [9 So. 225]) we think may be fairly paraphrased as follows: No man to whom is presented a proposition to amend a statute declaring that regularly licensed attorneys alone have authority to practice law, would for a moment conceive the proposition to involve an inhibition against the collection of claims by demand or negotiation out of court by anyone but a licensed attorney. Montgomery v. State,
"Two subjects of legislation cannot be germane where it is necessary to change the meaning of words to place them in the same class or category, and where provisions applicable to the one are incongruous when applied to the other."
The same court, in State v. Sugar Refining Co.,
"An act to amend certain sections of a general law is limited in its scope to the subject-matter of the sections proposed to be amended. In such case the introduction of any new substantive matter not germane or pertinent to that contained in the original sections cannot be regarded as an amendment thereto, but must be regarded as independent legislation upon a matter not expressed in the title of the act, and, therefore, void. The amendment of an act in general or a particular section of an act ex vi termini implies merely a change of its provisions upon the same subject to which the act or section relates."
This statement of the last-mentioned case is familiar law in this state, and is reproduced from the courts indicated in order merely to show the full meaning and purport of the decision in Beary v. Narrau, supra. These decisions of the Supreme Court of Louisiana on the point here at issue were quoted and approved by the Supreme Court of Iowa in State v. Bristow,
The conclusion is that the act under which appellant was convicted is, so far as it affects his case, null and void, because violative of section 45 of the Constitution. The judgment of conviction is reversed, and it is ordered that appellant be discharged.
Reversed and rendered.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER, THOMAS, and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.
BROWN and FOSTER, JJ., dissent.