46 So. 451 | Ala. | 1908
By an act of the General Assembly approved November 27, 1900, article 3 of chapter 142 of the Code of 1896 — relating to county courts and the proceedings therein — was repealed so far as the same applied to the county of Coffee. — Acts 1900-01, p. 18. The county court being a creation of statutory law, it was competent for the General Assembly to abolish it. The effect of the enactment was to leave the county of Golfee without a county court.
By an act approved February 8, 1901, entitled “An act to establish the county court of Coffee for Coffee county with criminal jurisdiction in misdemeanor cases,” “an inferior court of record, to be called the ‘County Court of Coffee,’ ” was established, with “exclusive jurisdiction to try cases of misdemeanors in the county of Coffee.” — Acts 1900-01, p. 861. Amongst other things it is provided in said act that prosecutions may be commenced in said court “in the same manner as is now provided by law in the county courts of the state.” It is also provided that all indictments preferred by the grand juries of the county after the passage of the act shall be returned by the cleric of the circuit court to the judge of the county. The act provides for trial by jury, and requires that the county court shall conform to the rules of practice of the circuit court. By an act approved September 29, 1903, the last-named act was amended. Loc. Acts 1903, p. 398. The main features of the amendatory act are those conferring on the county court jurisdiction, concurrent with that of justices of the peace and of the circuit court, in all civil actions wherein the sum in controversy does not exceed $500 (excepting cases of libel, slander, assault and battery, and ejectment), providing that all appeals from judgments rendered by justice courts shall be taken to the county court, and conferring on the judge of said court
At the second session of the Legislature held in 1907 an act entitled “An act to repeal an act entitled ‘An act to establish the county court of Coffee for Coffee county with criminal jurisdiction in misdemeanor cases,’ approved February 8, 1901, and all subsequent and amend-atory acts relating to said court, and to transfer all the civil and criminal proceedings therein pending, together with all the dockets,. papers and books relating to said cases in said county court of Coffee to the circuit court of Coffee county, Alabama,” was passed and approved on the 1st day of August, 1907. This act is assailed as having been enacted in violation of section 106 of the Constitution of 1901, in that the notice of the intention to apply for its passage is insufficient. That section of the Constitution is mandatory, and expressly requires the courts to pronounce void every special, private, or local law which the journals do not affirmative show was passed in accordance with its provisions. — Wallace v. Board of Revenue, 140 Ala. 502, 37 South. 321; Kumpe v. Irwin, 140 Ala. 460, 36 South. 1024.
The notice given of the intention to apply for the passage of the law, in respect to the transfer of causes pending in the county court, is in this language: “To provide for the transfer of all actions and proceedings at law and all indictments and criminal proceedings in the county court of Coffee at the time of the repeal of the act establishing the county court of Coffee county,
Indulging the presumption that all persons know the law, it would seem to follow that the notice given was only intended to embrace, and in reality it only embraces, the transfer of actions civil which might have been originally commenced in the circuit court, and cases appealed from justice courts, and such criminal causes as were pending on indictments or on appeal from justice courts. In this view, the notice the public was charged with, by the publication, should be likewise limited. But, if the notice must be construed as conveying the intelligence that causes pending in the county court, commenced originally in that court, and of which the circuit court has not original jurisdiction, would be transferred to the circuit court, then it shows that the act intended to be applied for, if enacted, would be violative of the Constitution. Sections of the Constitution, ubi supra; Alford v. Hicks, 142 Ala. 355, 38 South. 752.
There can be no question that the matter contained in section 6 is of the substance of the enactment, and in the light of the view first taken (that of presumption) is a departure from the notice — is not expressed in the notice. In the light of the second view, the notice showed that the act proposed to be enacted would be unconstitutional; and, taking either horn of the dilemma, upon the considerations adverted to, as well as on the authority of the cases of Hooton v. Mellon, 142 Ala. 245, 87 South. 937, Alford v. Hicks, 142 Ala. 355, 38 South. 752, Norville v. State, 143 Ala. 561, 39 South. 357, and State v. Speake, 144 Ala. 509, 39 South 224, it must be held that the act here assailed is an ineffectual effort to repeal the act establishing the county court of Coffee county and the act amendatory thereof, and that that court is still in existence.
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to pass upon the point made in respect to section 4 of the bill. It
Affirmed.