99 Ky. 66 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1896
dflivered the opinion of the court.
By an act to prohibit the sale of spirituous, vinous or malt liquors in Logan county, adopted' in March, 1886, and
The penalty for the first violation of this law was a line of not less than fifty dollars nor more than two hundred .dollars, and for subsequent infractions thereof a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than three hundred dollars, and confinement in the county jail not less than thirty nor more than ninety days. The appellant was convicted of selling malt liquors in violation of this law, under a warrant issued by and trial had before a justice of the peace, and fined one hundred dollars. On appeal to the circuit court he moved to dismiss the prosecution because the justice had no jurisdiction to try him. His motion was overruled, and from the judgment rendered against him, after trial in that court on the justice’s warrant, he has appealed.
It is not contended by his counsel that the special law conferring the jurisdiction was in contravention of any law in existence, wTien the act w7as passed. Except the provision in the body of the act conferring jurisdiction on justices of the peace, it is suggested, is not expressed in the title, and this position is wholly untenable The provision for the enforcement of the law in the tribunals designated is not foreign to but is naturally embraced in the subject-matter suggested in the title.
It is admitted that there was no inhibition against such special legislation in the former Constitution, and that even the general law7 limiting the jurisdiction of justices to cases where the penalty could not exceed twenty dollars, contained the proviso “unless the jurisdiction thereof is specially conferred.” (Section 2, article 20, chapter.28, General Statutes.)
Section 142 of the Constitution, so far as it relates to this question, reads as follows: “The jurisdiction of justices of the peace shall be co-extensive with the county, and shall be equal and uniform throughout the State.”
The general law on the subject, now section 1093, Kentucky Statutes (act of June 10, 1893), provides that “justices shall have jurisdiction, exclusive of circuit courts, in all penal cases, the punishment of which is limited to a fine not exceeding twenty dollars, and jurisdiction concurrent with circuit courts of all penal cases, the punishment of which is limited to a fine not exceeding one hundred dollars, or imprisonment not exceeding fifty days, or both.”
If, therefore, effect be given the plain letter of the Constitution and the statute in conformity thereto, the jurisdiction of the courts in question must be found, and found only, in the general law on the subject.
It may not be that the constitutional provision requiring uniformity of jurisdiction did of itself effect a repeal of the various acts conferring these special and irregular jurisdictional powers, but certainly when the legislature came to revise and amend the statutory laws on the subject-matter now involved, to the end that they should “conform to and effectuate the Constitution,” as was enjoined in section 245 of that instrument, there can be no doubt of the effect of such revision and amendment on all laws, inconsistent therewith.
If some of these special prohibitory laws confer exclusive jurisdiction on justices of the peace the result will not be, as feared by the attorney for the State, that offenders will go untried,, but rather it would seem that the courts of general jurisdiction created by the very act which withdraws jurisdiction from the special tribunal .may be found sufficient to afford the remedy.
It is said, however, that section 61 of the Constitution expressly continues in force the prohibitory laws then in existence. That section provides as follows: “The General Assembly shall, by general law, provide a means whereby the sense of the people of any county, city, town, district or precinct may be taken as to whether or not spirituous, vinous or malt liquors shall be sold, bartered or loaned therein, or the sale thereof regulated; but nothing herein shall be construed to interfere with or to repeal any law in force relating to the sale or gift of such liquors. All elections on this question may be held on a day other than the regular election days.” ,
Here, it will be seen, is found nothing more than a provision against a possible misconstruction of the intent of the framers of the Constitution in directing a general law to be enacted by a succeeding legislature. Strictly speaking, no law is here continued in force; but, so far as this section—
Infused with the hope that for all special laws general ones were to be substituted under the better system about to be provided, the framers of the Constitution'yet did not intend at once to interfere with the various prohibitory enactments throughout the State by the bare adoption of a section demanding the enactment of a general law.
But that such general law was to take the place of all special ones we can not doubt. Each designated locality, under the requirements of this section, was to be given the right of regulating the traffic in question under a consistent and uniform law. If the sale was prohibited it was to be because of this law,and no other; and penalties for selling were to be imposed in virtue of its provisions, and no other. They would, therefore, be uniform throughout the State.
Within the spirit of the Constitution, if not within its very letter, the law must inflict like penalties for like offenses; and surely there must come a time when the penalty for selling liquor in one locality may not be by a small fine only, and in another the same offense be punished by a fine of hundredsof dollars,and an imprisonment of manymonths in the county jail.
We may well denounce as a delusion the crowning boast of the Constitution — that systematic uniformity in the administration of the laws has been provided for with approximate perfection — if these monuments of local inconsistencies shall continue to mar the symmetry of our statutes.
While the general law, known as the local option law, seems to come short of effecting the intention of the framers of the organic law on the subject of uniformity, in that in
However, the effect of the adoption of the general law providing for taking the sense of the people on the subject indicated need not now be determined. The question was not raised in the court below, and is not discussed by counsel here.
It is sufficient to say, for the purposes of this case, that section 61, prescribing its own construction or providing against its misconstruction, and declaring that it, of itself, is not to interfere with any law relating to the sale or gift of such liquors, does not determine what effect is to be given other sections of the Constitution, or other general laws enacted or to be enacted by the General Assembly; and certainly does not keep alive extraordinary features of special laws conferring unusual jurisdiction on inferior tribunals in violation of the plain letter of the Constitution, and the general laws providing for the required uniformity.
General laws may not affect the repeal of special ones under the circumstances considered in Commonwealth v. Cain, 14 Bush, 533, and other cases relied on by the appellee,because “both laws may be upheld and construed as forming one consistent whole;” but it would be a strikingly “inconsistent whole” if the equal and uniform jurisdiction of justices of the peace demanded by the organic law is to be unequal and varying in all the magisterial precincts affected by these very numerous local acts.
Reversed, with directions to dismiss the prosecution.