100 So. 514 | Miss. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Forrest county dismissing a petition for mandamus to compel the sheriff and tax collector of said county to issue to the appellant, J. L. Roseberry, a privilege license for a two-ton motor truck for a consideration of ten dollars, which had been tendered to the said tax collector in payment for such license, and by him refused.
The legislature at its 1924 session passed an act (chapter 116, House Bill No. 755) entitled:
“An act to amend chapter 120 of the Laws of 1920 as amended by chapter 133, Laws of 1922, so as to equalize the registration fees and privilege taxes on motor vehicles and motor cycles for using the public roads and streets, to regulate the use of tags, and to provide for the payment of the fees and taxes derived, into the state highway fund, and the county road fund.”
After providing a detailed schedule of taxes for every kind of motor vehicle, the act, as it appears in the enrolled bill, contains the proviso “that in all eases the maximum tax for all automobiles, trucks, trailers, and semi-trailers shall be ten dollars per annum,” and it was in virtue of this proviso that the appellant sought to compel the issuance to him of an annual license upon the payment of the sum of ten dollars.
Sections 2 and 3 of the act (chapter 116, Laws of 1924) read as follows:
“Sec. 2. There is hereby levied the following annual privilege taxes for the privilege of using the public roads or streets:
“2. On each commercial motor vehicle:
“(a) On each motor truck equipped with pneumatic tires the following shall be charged:
For school trucks, used exclusively as such...........'............. $ 10 00 per annum
For one ton or less carrying capacity ........................ 10 00 per annum
For one and one-half tons carrying capacity ...................... 20 00 per amium
For two tons carrying capacity. ... 40 00 per annum
For two and one-half tons carrying capacity ...................... 50 00 per annum
For three tons carrying capacity... 82 50 per annum
For three and one-half-tons carrying capacity ...................... 112 50 per annum
For four tons carrying capacity... 172 50 per annum
For four and one-half tons carrying capacity ...................... 225 00 per annum
For five tons carrying capacity.... 300 00 per annum
For six tons carrying capacity..... 400 00 per annum
“On each motor truck equipped with two or more cushions, or semi-pneumatic tires which have a resiliency that is more than fifty per cent, of the resiliency of pneumatic tires, the rate shall be one and one-fourth times the above schedule: Provided, this increased rate shall not apply on trucks of one ton or less carrying capacity:
“Provided that it shall be unlawful to operate any truck of more than six (6) tons carrying capacity on any road, bridge or highway in the state.
1 ‘ On each motor truck equipped with two or more solid tires the rate shall be one and one-half times the above schedule; provided this increased rate shall not apply on trucks of one and one-half tons, or less, carrying capacity.
“(b) On each trailer and each semi-trailer the tax shall be in accordance with the following schedule;
For three tons carrying capacity.... 25 00 per annum
For four tons carrying capacity.... 40 00 per annum
For five tons carrying capacity...... 50 00 per annum
‘ ‘ (c) On each motor vehicle weighing over two thousand five hundred pounds and used for the transportation or delivery of persons for hire, in addition to the tax herein provided, there shall be paid in each county in which such motor vehicle operates three miles or more, four dollars for each passenger carrying capacity.
‘1 On each motor vehicle, whether domiciled in the state or not, which is used for the transportation or delivery of persons, for hire, on the public highways in any county in the state, and on which has not been paid all of the taxes as required elsewhere in this section, there is hereby levied a mileage tax on each such motor vehicle, to be paid in each county in which such vehicle operates oftener than once every two weeks, to be paid as follows:
For each passenger carrying capacity, for each mile of distance traveled.........$1 00 per mile
££(d) On each commercial motor vehicle used for the transportation of freight and property, for hire, the rate shall be one and one-half times the amount herein specified for trucks.
£ £ On each commercial motor vehicle whether domiciled in this state or not, used for the transportation or delivery of freight or property for hire, on the public highways in any county in the state, on which has not been paid all of the taxes as required elsewhere in this section, there is hereby levied a mileage tax on each such vehicle to be paid in each county, in which such vehicle operates oftener than once every two weeks, to be paid as follows:
For each one-half ton carrying capacity, for each mile of distance traveled ... .$1 00 per mile
‘£ The actual weight of the load continually hauled, and not the rated capacity of the vehicle, shall be considered as the basis of the collection of additional taxes under
“3. On each motor vehicle used for the transportation of persons, there shall be charged a tax of ten cents per horse power generated by the motor propelling such vehicle, and forty cents per hundred pounds based on the gross weight of the vehicle:
“Provided, that in all cases the maximum tax for all automobiles, trucks, trailers and semi-trailers shall be ten dollars per annum. ’ ’
The contention of the appellant is that, since the enrolled act imports absolute verity, the language of the proviso as it appears therein must control and strike down the provisions of sections 2 and 3 of the act which aré in conflict therewith,' since the language of the proviso is clear and unambiguous, and since the proviso is last in order of arrangement, and consequently destroys the preceding clauses of the same statute with which it is in conflict. The appellee contends that the use of the word “maximum” in this proviso is a manifest clerical error, and that it is perfectly clear from the whole act that the word “minimum” was intended instead of the word “maximum,” and that to construe the entire act in consonance with the literal wording of this proviso would absolutely destroy all other provisions of sections 2 and 3 of the act, defeat the manifest legislative intent and policy lead to an absurdity, and be a judicial determination that the entire enactment was a piece of legislative folly.
It has been held by this court in a long line of cases, beginning with Green v. Weller, 32 Miss. 650, that the courts will not look to the journals of the two houses of the legislature to ascertain the true facts, but that the enrolled acts of the legislature, when signed by the speaker of the House of Representatives and president of the Senate, and approved by the Governor, and deposited in the office of the secretary of state, are records which import absolute verity, and are conclusive evidence of the due enactment of the statutes contained in them,
It is a fundamental rule of statutory construction of universal application that the controlling purpose is to ascertain and give effect to the intention and purpose of the legislature. This intention and purpose is to -be deduced from the whole and every part of the statute taken together — from the words and context — and such a construction adopted as will best effectuate the intention of the lawgiver. Green v. Weller, 32 Miss. 650.
Lewis’ Sutherland, Statutory Construction (2 Ed.), sections 410, 411, in discussing the effect of mistakes in legislative enactments, and the right of the courts, to give effect to the obvious intent of the legislature, announced the following rules:
“Legislative enactments are not any more than other writings to be defeated on account of mistakes, errors, or omissions, provided the intention of the legislature can be collected from the whole statute; . . . Where one word has been erroneously used for another, or a word omitted, and the context affords the means of correction, the proper word will be deemed substituted or supplied. This is but making the strict letter of the statute yield to the obvious intent. . . . Where the provisions of a law are inconsistent and contradictory to each other, or the literal construction of a single section would conflict with' every other following or preceding it, and with the entire scope and manifest intent of the act, it is certainly the duty of the courts, if it be possible, to harmonize the various provisions with each other; and to effect this it may be necessary, and is admissible, to depart from the literal construction of one or more sections,” but, “to enable the court to insert in a statute omitted words or read it in different words from those found in it, the intent thus to have it read must be plainly deducible from other parts of the statute. ’ ’
“We must hold either that the legislature, in amending section 2985 of the Code by an act approved March 9, 1888, nullified the section, by making it senseless and uncertain, so as to be unenforceable, or that it committed a clerical mistake in striking out two words more than was intended, viz., the words ‘an attack.’ The latter is the more probable, and to read the section as amended, retaining those two words will accomplish what was manifestly the legislative purpose, and leave the law in force. We therefore adopt that view.”
In the case of Adams v. Railroad Co., 75 Miss. 275, 22 So. 824, the court announced .the following rule:
“In the construction of a statute the object is to get at its spirit and meaning, its design and scope; and that construction will be justified which evidently embraces the meaning and carries out the object of the law, although it be against the letter and the grammatical construction of the act. ... In determining the proper construction of a statute, the entire legislation on the same subject-matter, its policy and reason, as well as the text of the particular act, must be looked to.”
In the case of Ott v. Lowery, 78 Miss. 487, 29 So. 520, Chief Justice Whitfield used the following language:
“This court has furnished some most striking illustrations of construing a statute according to its spirit when that is clearly against the mere letter. ... Illustrations from other courts might be. indefinitely added. ’ ’
In the case-of State v. Traylor, 100 Miss. 544, 56 So. 521, by a divided court, the rule announced in the foregoing cases was departed from, but in the case of State v. Ware, 102 Miss. 634, 59 So. 854, the Traylor case was in effect overruled, and the court there approved and adopted the language of Justice Smith in his dissenting opinion in the Traylor case, as follows:
‘ ‘ Criminal statutes must be strictly construed, and the courts have no power to add to or take from them, or, for that matter, to add to or take from any other statute; but this does not mean that such statutes are to be construed with such technical strictness as to defeat the purpose of ascertaining the true meaning thereof. The rule is universal, so far as I am aware, that the true meaning of statutes, when ascertained, will be enforced by the courts, even to the extent of correcting errors in the language in which they are couched.”
The rule invoked by the appellant that, as between conflicting sections of the same act, the last in order of arrangement will control, has no application, where the intention and purpose of the whole act is clear and unmistakable, and to accept the literal wording of the latter provision would destroy a legislative policy, nullify the main provisions of the act, and entirely defeat the manifest intention and purpose of the lawmakers.
Section 71 of the Constitution of 1890 provides, in part, as follows:
“Every bill introduced into the legislature shall have a title, and the title ought to indicate clearly the subject matter or matters of the proposed legislation.”
It has been held by this court that this constitutional provision that “every bill . . . shall have a title” is mandatory, while the provision that the title “ought to indicate clearly the subject-matter of. the proposed legislation” is only admonitory or advisory. In the case of the City of Jackson v. State, 102 Miss. 663, 59 So. 873, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 1213, in discussing the effect of the word “ought” in this provision, in connection with the holding of the court in the case of Levee Commissioners v. Insurance Co., 96 Miss. 832, 51 So. 2, the court used the following language:'
“We think an examination of this case will show that the act there discussed had no title at all, but if it may be construed to hold that the courts are empowered to nullify acts of the legislature because, in the opinion of the court, the title does not indicate all it should indicate, we decline to follow it. The unwisdom of this rule is demonstrated by the criticisms of the title of the act, the subject of this litigation. The court was entirely warranted in holding that the act reviewed in Levee Commissioners v. Insurance Co., supra, had no title at all.
The case of City of Jackson v. State, supra, was cited with approval and followed in the case of State v. Phillips, 109 Miss. 22, 67 So. 651, L. R. A. 1915D, 530, and we think these cases are decisive of the question now presented, and that the act is not violative of the provisions of section 71 of the Constitution.
The judgment of the court below will therefore be affirmed.
Affirmed.