49 Ala. 507 | Ala. | 1873
— There are but two questions presented by the argument of the counsel for the appellant. The first involves the constitutionality of the act entitled “ An act to secure complete records in the courts of this State,” approved December 10, 1868. Pamph. Acts 1868, p. 404. The second is, that the remedy of the appellee to enforce the liability of the county, if the act is not unconstitutional, is by mandamus to the Commissioners’ Court, and not by a suit prosecuted in the ordinary mode against the county.
The constitutionality of the statute is assailed on two distinct grounds. It is said the last clause, in declaring that the commissioners may recover on the bond of any delinquent officer, as prescribed in section 169 of the Revised Code, the
In the view we take of the case, it is not necessary for us to express an opinion on the validity of the clause of the statute authorizing suit on the bond of the officer, whose delinquency resulted in subjecting the county to liability for the completion of records which he ought to have completed. Neither the right and duty of the appellee, nor the liability of the appellant, is deduced from that clause. The concession of its unconstitutionality would not vitiate the preceding part of the statute, rendering it the duty of the clerk to complete the records, and making his compensation a county charge. The rule is, that if some of the provisions of a statute are violative of the Constitution, while others are consistent with it, the latter will be maintained, if they can be separated from, and stand without the unconstitutional parts of the law. The courts will treat the unconstitutional parts as if they were stricken out of the statute. Mobile & Ohio R. R. Co. v. State, 29 Ala. 573; Ex parte Pollard, 40 Ala. 77. In the application of this rule, it is not material that the constitutional and unconstitutional provisions are mingled in the same section, as they are said to be in this statute. The division of statutes into sections is purely artificial; and one section may, and often does, contain provisions distinct and separable. The inquiry is, not as to the location of the several provisions, but whether they are so essentially and inseparably connected, that if the unconstitutional provision is stricken out, that which remains is not complete in itself, and capable of operation according to the legislative intent. Cooley’s Con. Lim. 177-78; Mayor, &c. v. Dechert, 39 Md. 369.
It will not be denied that public convenience, and private right and interest, depend on the completion and preservation of the records of the proceedings of the courts of record of the State. Throughout the State they import absolute verity; and in all other states of the Union the Constitution accords them “ full faith and credit.” They are elements, of the title to a large part of the property of the State. They are the conclusive evidence of the termination of controversies, precluding future litigation. The legislature, impressed with a sense of the necessity of securing these records from the dangers of loss and mutilation, to which they are subject while dependent on the original files only; and of reducing them to an orderly,
The objection, .that the statute refers to more than one subject, and that the subject is not clearly expressed in the title, cannot be sustained. It is said there is nothing in the title indicating that the statute intended to authorize the county to recover of the delinquent officer the sum paid for the completion of the records. We have proceeded on the concession that the constitutionality of this clause could not be vindicated, and
It is also argued that the title of the statute does not express any purpose to create a charge upon the county for the completion of the records, and that, therefore, the subject of the statute is not clearly expressed in the title. It was said by the late Chief Justice Walker, in discussing this question: “It is impossible to prescribe any standard of particularity for the legislature. The Constitution has not attempted to do so. It exacts from the legislature an announcement in the title of the subject, but does not dictate any degree of particularity. This is a matter left to legislative discretion. The object of the constitutional provision was to prevent deception by the inclusion in a bill of matter incongruous with the title. The evil contemplated was not the generality and comprehensiveness of titles. Those faults do not tend to mislead or deceive.” Ex parte Pollard, 40 Ala. 98. In accordance with this exposition of the constitutional restriction are the subsequent decisions of this court. Gunter v. Dale County, 44 Ala. 639; Ex parte Upshaw, 45 Ala. 234. In the latter case, it is said the constitutional limitation must not be construed to forbid the incorporation into a law of everything needful to the proper operation of the subject to which it is limited. The mode of completing the records must be prescribed; if their completion is secured, compensation to him who is charged with the duty of completing them, and the mode of obtaining it, are all congruous, and all essential to the consummation of the purpose expressed in the title of the statute.
3. Prior to the Code there was no statute subjecting counties to suit. The only remedy to enforce a liability against them was by mandamus to the Commissioners’ Court. Tarver v. Commissioners’ Court, 17 Ala. 527. The Code corrects
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.