85 F. 27 | 8th Cir. | 1898
after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
This case presents but a single question, and that is whether or not the áet 'of the general assembly of the state of Missouri concerning drains and sewers for cities, which was approved on March 18, 1893 (Sess. Laws Mo. 1893, p. 101), violates section 7, art. 9, of the constitution of that state, which reads:
“The general assembly shall provide, by general laws, for the organization and classification of cities and towns. The number of such classes shall not exceed four; and the power of each class shall be defined by general laws, so that all such municipal corporations of the same class, shall possess the same powers and be subject to the same restrictions.”
When the act of 1893 was passed, the general assembly had already complied with this provision of the constitution. It had provided by general laws for the organization and classification of cities and towns
It is contended, for instance, in support of this law, that no act of the general assembly could violate section 7, art. 9, of the constitution, unless it was a special law, and fell under the ban of section 53, art. 4, of the same constitution, also, which provides that “the general assembly shall not pass any local or special law * * * regulating the affairs of counties, cities, tQwnships, wards or school districts, # * * incorporating cities, towns or villages, or changing their charters”; and many cases have been cited to show that the act of 1893 is not a special law. The argument is, the act of 1893 cannot violate section 7 unless it is a special law. It is not a special law, therefore it does not violate section 7. It is unnecessary for us to review the vast array of authorities presented in support of the minor premise, because we are unable to concede the soundness of the major premise of this syllogism. A law which suspended within the reach of every city of the fourth class every municipal power which it is competent for the general assembly to confer, and provided that each city might have any of these powers which it specified and elected by a majority vote of its citizens to adopt, would doubtless be, in form, a general law; but it would certainly be a palpable violation of section 7. An act which submitted to the choice of every city of the fourth class a dozen municipal charters, each of which conferred different powers from any of the others, and provided that each city of that class might have the powers bestowed by any one of these charters upon condition that it would specify and accept the charter of its choice by a vote of the majority of its qualified electors, would undoubtedly be a general law in form, but would not define the powers of any of the cities at that class, so that all such municipal corporations of the same class sJiould possess the same powers, and be subject to the same restrictions, (¿eneral laws of this character would naturally result in the possession of different powers subject to different limitations by municipal corporations of the same class, and it was undoubtedly to prevent this very contingency that the framers of this constitution added to the prohibition of special or local laws regulating the affairs of cities, incorporating cities, and changing their charters, contained in section 53 of article 4, the mandate and prohibition of section 7. The provisions of section 53 required the powers of cities to be conferred by general laws. But section 7 went further, and commanded that they should be so bestowed and defined that all of the same class should always have the same powers, and be subject to the same limitations. This is the interpretation of these provisions of section 7 which has been adopted by the supreme court of Missouri, whose decision upon that question is controlling in this court. Madden v. Lancaster Co., 27 U. S. App. 528, 535, 536, 12 C. C. A. 566, 570, and 65 Fed. 188, 192. In Murnane v. St. Louis, 123 Mo. 479, 489, 27 S. W. 711, Judge Barclay, while deliver
Another proposition advanced in support of this act which is pressed upon us with great zeal is that its local option feature wTas not an unlawful delegation of legislative power; that after the passage of the act, and before any city exercised its option, all the cities of the fourth class had the same powers, and were subject to the same restrictions; and that the term “adopting the provisions of this act” meant nothing more than accepting its privileges. We do not -propose to test the constitutionality of this law by its verbiage, but by its substance and effect. Its terms are only important as they are an index to the intent and purpose of its makers. So far as the term “adopt iug the provisions of this act” indicates more clearly than such an expression as “accepting the privileges of this act” the intention of the legislature that this law should never have any life or effect unless and until the voters of some city adopted it, and their further purpose that whenever any vigor and efficacy were injected into it it should evade or violate the provisions of section 7, this expression has pregnant significance. But, in our opinion, the constitutionality of this act depends upon no such narrow issue as the use of one or the other of these expressions. The serious objections to it are broader, and lie deeper. They rest in the effect it produced and in the evident intent which inspired it.
Nor is it easy for us to perceive turn the inquiry whether or not the local option feature of this law constitutes an unlawful delegation of legislative power is anything more than an academic question in this case. The general rule is well settled that it is always competent for a court to consider the consequences of any act of the general assembly in order to arrive at the intention of its framers. Lamar Water & Electric Light Co. v. City of Lamar, 128 Mo. 188, 210, 26 S. W. 1025 and 31 S. W. 756. Unless we grossly mistake the meaning of language which seems to us to be too terse, apt, and clear to require construction, section 7 of article 9 of the constitution of Missouri makes the possible consequences of a law' affecting the powers of municipal corporations the sole test of its validity. It reads: “The number of each class shall not exceed four; and the power of each class shall he defined
Counsel for the appellant endeavor to support the proposition that this law is valid because every city of the fourth class had the same powers, and was subject to the same restrictions between the time of its passage and the time when it first had operative force by the vote of the citizens of Westport by a review of authorities which have sustained local option liquor laws (State v. Pond, 93 Mo. 606, 6 S. W. 469; G-roesch v. State, 42 Ind. 547; Paul v. Gloucester Co., 50 N. J. Law, 585, 15 Atl. 272; State v. Gerhardt [Ind. Sup.] 44 N. E. 469 ; State v. Forkner [Iowa] 62 N. W. 772), laws regulating the relations of the citizens to the state (Dunne v. Railway Co., 131 Mo. 1, 32 S. W. 641; State v. Nelson, 52 Ohio St. 88, 39 N. E. 22), enabling acts and acts prescribing the method of the exercise of powers granted to municipalities (Opinion of Supreme Judges on Township Organization Law, 55 Mo. 295; State v. Wilcox, 45 Mo. 458; Miles v. Freeholders, 52 N. J. Law, 302, 19 Atl. 718; Fellows v. Walkers, 39 Fed. 651; Water Co. v. Neosho, 136 Mo. 498, 38 S. W. 89; In re Cleveland, 52 N. J. Law, 188, 19 Atl. 17; Board of Law Library Trustees of Orange Co. v. Board of Sup’rs of Orange Co., 99 Cal. 571, 34 Pac. 244; Hellman v. Shoulters, 114 Cal. 136, 44 Pac. 915, and 45 Pac. 1057; Brown v. Holland [Ky.] 30 S. W. 629). A careful examination of each of these cases and many others, however, has failed to convince us of the validity of this act. Only one of the cases cited — Brown v. Holland, supra — involved the constitutionality of a law under a provision identical with that under consideration. In that case the constitution of Kentucky con
The act of 1893, however, falls under none of these categories. It attempts to confer strictly corporate municipal- powers. The two-thirds vote by which its provisions may be adopted constitutes no part of the exercise of the powers it attempts to bestow. The entire exercise of those powers is committed to the acting municipal authorities of the city. The power t.o determine whether or not these authorities shall have those powers is committed to another agency,— to the qualified voters of the city. The first section of the act provides that, “when the result of such election shall be ascertained, the same shall be declared by the mayor of such city by proclamation,
The proposition that this act is valid because it defined and granted the same powers to all the cities of the fourth class until it was adopted by one of them, stripped of the ingenious and persuasive arguments which the learning and ability of counsel have woven about it, is nothing more than the averment that it is valid because it created no diversity of powers and restrictions before it had operative force and effect. It had no effect upon the powers of the cities of the fourth class to construct sewers until some one of them had adopted it. If no one of them had ever adopted it, it never would have created any diversity of powers, or had any effect upon those powers. But the moment the breath of life was breathed into it by its adoption by the city of Westport, the moment it had any effect whatever upon the powers of the cities of tire fourth class to construct sewers, in that moment it created that diversity of powers and restrictions which the mandate of section 7 required the general assembly to prevent, and the question recurs: May a law which would violate this provision of the constitution if the general assembly gave it its predestined effect by the force of its own terms escape its ban by an entire suspension of its operative force until the happening of some future event or contingency? In other words, may a legislature do by indirection that which the organic law forbids it to do directly? May it make an unconstitutional law constitutional by suspending its operative force and effect until some chosen agent elects to give it life? Does the provision of the constitution under consideration mean that the power of each class of municipalities shall be defined by general laws, so that all municipal corporations of the same class shall possess the same powers, and be subject to the same restrictions, before those laws go into operative force and effect only, or while they are in force and operation as well? An interpretation of section 7 that it requires the general assembly to provide by general laws that the powers and restrictions of municipal corporations of the same class shall be identical only before, and never during, their effective operation, renders that provision of the section nugatory, and flies in the teeth of the maxim that “all the words of a law must have effect, rather than that part should perish by construction.” Knox Co. v. Morton, 32 U. S. App. 513, 518, 15 C. C. A. 671, 675, and 68 Fed. 787, 790; City of St. Louis v. Lane, 110 Mo. 254, 258, 19 S. W. 533. If the framers of this constitution had intended to ingraft upon this provision such a suicidal exception, it would have read, “The power of each class shall be defined by general laws, so that all such municipal corporations of the same class shall possess the same pow
Here, also is the answer to the argument that, since the powers and restrictions of all the members of the fourth class of municipal corporations would be Ihe same if none of them or if all of them adopted the provisions of this law, the act could not be made unconstitutional by its adoption by some and its neglect by others. The provision of section 7 is not iiiat the power of each class shall be defined by general laws, “so that all such municipal corporations of the same class shall possess the same powers and be subject to the same restrictions,” except in cases in which some of these municix>al corporations shall adoj)t those laws and some shall not. It contains no such exception. It seems to have been framed and adopted with the delibérale' intention to prevent the very possibility of diversity of powers. It is broad, clear, and without exception, and it commands the general assembly in unmistakable terms to define the powers of municipal corporations so that those of the same class shall possess at all times and under all eireumsianees the same peiwers and be subject to the same resirie-fiems. The act of 1893 not only failed to avert, but it actually produced, the diversity of powers and restrictions among municipal corporations of the fourth class which this provision of the constitution reepiired Ihe general assembly to prevent. Moreover, this law fails to define the power of the members of the fourth class of municipal corporations relative to the subject of which it treats as required by the provision of section 7 under consideration. That section requires this power to be defined by the law. To define is “to fix, establish, or prescribe authoritatively.” 2 Cent. Dict. p. 1503. “Define,” 2. This law leaves the voters of the various municipalities to “fix, establish, or prescribe* authoritatively” what power their respective municipal authorities shall have under it, and, constitutes the records of their respective cities the only evidence! of the extent of the power vested in them under this law. To state these; facts is to demonstrate the propositiem that here is no definitiem by general law of the power of municipal corporations of the fourth e-Jass to construct sewers at the expense of the property benefited, few an examination of the law gives no information whether any of the members of that class have aelopted its provisions or acquired the powers it offers. It does not seem doubtful to us that an act which offers municipal power to the members of a class of municipal corporations
“This act shall be enforced in any city whenever the common council of any such city embraced within its provisions shall adopt the same by a majority vote of all the members.” Sess. Laws Minn. 1895, c. 228, § 146.
The supreme court of Minnesota held this law to be a violation of the constitution of the state. Judge Canty, in delivering the opinion of the court, said:
“Is such a general local option law one having a uniform operation throughout the state? 1-Iow can a law which goes into effect in one city, and does not go into effect in another city of the same class, have a uniform operation throughout the State? It seems to us that the legislature cannot bring about diverse charter powers in different cities by enacting any such local option law which may result in giving different cities different charter' powers, unless the same result can be accomplished by a direct, unconditional law. The mere possibility that all the cities of the class may adopt the law will not save it. It must appear at the time the law is passed that it will have a uniform operation throughout the state; that is, that it will take effect in all cities of the class, and that the class is a proper one. The uniform operation of the law cannot be left to any future contingency.” State v. Copeland, 69 N. W. 27, 28.
The constitution of the state of Florida provided:
“That the legislature shall not pass special-or local laws in any of the following enumerated cases; * * * regulating county, township and municipal business; regulating the election of county, township and municipal officers.” Article 4, § 17.
■ “In all eases enumerated in the preceding section, and in all other cases where a general law can be made applicable, all laws shall be general and of uniform operation throughout the state.” Article 4, § 18.
*37 “The legislature shall establish a uniform system of county, township and municipal government.” Article 4, § 21.
Prior to 1879 two classes of municipal corporations had been established in that state, consisting, respectively, of those which had and those which had not 300 registered voters. In that year the legislature of Florida passed an act authorizing radical changes in the established form of municipal government in cities having 1,600 or more registered voters, and provided therein that any city containing 1,600 or more registered voters might, by the passage of an ordinance, declare its acceptance of the act, and thereupon the changes authorized should take effect in that city on and after its next annual election. The supreme court of that state declared the act void, and said:
“The local option authorized makes it a matter of discretion with all cities containing 1,GC0 registered voters or more to remain in the class of cities containing 300 voters, with a municipal government prescribed for that class, or to be embraced in the class of cities containing 1,000 or more registered voters, under another and different municipal government for that class. In the event all the cities with 1,600 or more registered voters should accept this act as the law of their organization, the law might, in fact, have a uniform operation. That uniform operation, however, would be the result of chance, and not of the operation of a fixed rule prescribed by the legislature, while the constitution contemplates no such contingency. The government in each class must be the same, and such must be the result of the action of the legislature, independent of the contingency of local discretion or option in the premises. The legislature must itself, independent of acceptance by such cities, so frame its enactment that (as expressed by the supreme court of Illinois) there shall not be dissimilarity in character of organization or powers in municipalities of the same class.” McConihe v. State, 17 Fla. 238, 268.
In another case the same court declared “the legislature must so act as to itself establish — First, a system of. municipal government; and, second, the system .must be a uniform system.” State v. Stark, 18 Fla. 255, 265. Eeason and authority alike constrain us to answer the crucial question in this case in the negative, and our conclusion must be that a law which would violate the provisions of section 7, art. 9, of the constitution, if the general assembly gave it its predestined effect by the force of its own terms, cannot escape its ban by a suspension of its operative force until the happening of some future event or contingency.
Counsel for the appellant have invoked with much urgency the unquestioned rule that, where the constitutionality of an act of the legislature is doubtful, the law should he sustained. The rule has no application to this case, because, after a deliberate and careful consideration of the question at issue, all doubt has disappeared from our minds, and we are bound to remember that under our form of government the people have fixed in general terms in their organic law the boundaries of the powers of its legislative, executive, and judicial departments alike, have imposed upon the judiciary the grave duty of determining when those limits have been passed, and that when the discharge of that duty shall be abandoned the fabric of constitutional government must fall, and the lives and property of the citizens must become subject to the arbitrary will of the representatives of some of the great departments of the government. The court below, in the discharge of this important duty, came to the conclusion that the gen