47 Minn. 272 | Minn. | 1891
Appeal from an order overruling a demurrer to the complaint in an action brought to restrain and enjoin the individual defendants, officers of the defendant village, containing over 3,000 inhabitants, from issuing or selling or disposing of certain municipal bonds. Two questions are presented for consideration, — one being as to the constitutionality of an act of the legislature entitled “An act relating to villages of over three thousand (3,000) inhabitants, and providing for municipal courts therein,” now found as chapter 146, Laws 1891; and the other involving the construction of a portion of section 8 of subchapter 9 of the act, which subchap-ter is devoted exclusively to the matter of local improvements and special assessments.
1. It is first contended by the plaintiff that the act is in violation of that portion of the fourth article of the constitution which reads as follows: “ Sec. 33. The legislature is prohibited from enacting any special or private laws in the following cases; * * * (9) For incorporating any town or village.” It has not been claimed that the law in question should have been made so general in its. application as to include all villages within the limits of the state,, nor has it been urged that the law-makers were without power to. properly classify villages, and then to legislate for each distinct class but the position that this act is contrary to the constitutional provision has been made to depend upon the language used in section 4 of subchapter 2, in respect to the first election. It is there provided that the first election shall be held on the 12th day of May, 1891, and the line of argument is that by reason of this language the act has been confined in its application to such villages as pos
2. Having disposed of the first question before mentioned adversely to plaintiff’s views, we have now to discuss the second, presented by the appeal. By the terms of section 8 of subchapter 9— devoted wholly to the subject of local improvements and special assessments as before stated — it is provided: “Sec. 8. After the expiration of said thirty (30) days, the council shall issue improvement bonds, covering all the assessments except such as the owners shall have already paid, as provided in the preceding section. Such bonds shall be signed by the president and recorder, be sealed with the corporate seal of the village, and contain such recitals as may be necessary to show for the payment of which improvement they were issued, and the number and amounts of such bonds. Said bonds shall be semi-annual interest coupon bonds, divided into five (5) equal series, payable, respectively, in one, (1,) two, (2,) three, (3,) four, (4,) and five (5) years from date, and shall draw interest at a rate not exceeding seven (7) per cent, per annum, payable semiannually. Said bonds shall be semi-annual interest coupon bonds, payable at the option of the village after five (5) years, and abso-' lutely at the expiration of seven (7) years, from their date, and shall draw interest at a rate not exceeding seven (7) per cent, per annum. The village recorder shall carefully prepare a statement of the special assessments on which the bonds are issued, and record the same, together with a copy of said bonds, in his office.”
It will be observed that there are in this section two independent and apparently irreconcilable clauses in respect to the character of the so-called “improvement bonds” authorized to be issued. By the first of these clauses the bonds shall be made payable in five equal
In support of this proceeding it was claimed upon the argument that under well-known rules of construction these seemingly repugnant sentences in section 8 might readily be harmonized, and effect given to both, by construing the word “shall,” appearing in each, as meaning “may,” and, in addition, by connecting the two clauses with the conjunction “or,” the result of such construction being in justification of the course actually pursued by the municipal officers. It was also argued that, if this position was not sustainable, and both clauses thus given effect, the last in order — the one under which it was proposed to issue the bonds — must be upheld, and the first disregarded, on the ground that where distinct clauses of a statute are irreconcilable, and one must be declared nugatory, the clause or provision last in order must be taken as expressive of the legislative will, and is to govern. The rules of construction invoked by defendants’ counsel in support of their demurrer are well recognized, but the true rule to be applied here is that, where the first clause of a section conforms to the obvious policy and intent of the legislature, it is not rendered inoperative by a later inconsistent clause, which does not conform to this policy and intent. In such cases the later clause is nugatory, and must be disregarded. This rule is recognized in substantially the same language in Dickerson v. Nelson, 4 Ind. 280; State v. Williams, 8 Ind. 191; Kansas Pacific Ry. Co. v. Commissioners, 16 Kan. 587; Sams v. King, 18 Fla. 557. And see End. Interp. St. §. 183; South. St. Const. § 221.
The demurrer to the complaint was therefore properly overruled.
Order affirmed.