162 Ind. 193 | Ind. | 1904
For the purpose of supporting its common schools by tbe purchase of grounds and the erection of buildings thereon, the school city of Rushville, with the,
The decision-on the demurrer is the error assigned.
Section one of the act of March 9, 1903 (Acts 1903, p. 347), under which the school city proceeded in issuing its bonds, is as follows: “Be it enacted by the General As
The main objection taken to this statute by the appellees is that it is local and special, and therefore void under the provisions of article 4, §22, of the state Constitution. The appellants answer that the act is general, and that the classification of cities named in it is a proper one. They also deny that the appellees have such an. interest in the subject of the statute as authorizes then! to contest its validity.
The latter position is clearly untenable. The appellees are directly interested in the question of the constitutionality of the act. The appellants assert a right under the statute to compel the appellees to pay to them the amount of their bid for the bonds, or, upon failure of the appellees to do so, to retain as a forfeiture the deposit of $1,750 which accompanied appellees’ bid. If the statute is valid, these claims may be well founded and enforceable. If it is void, because in conflict with the Cohstitution, the appellees can not be required to take and pay for the bonds, nor can the appellants lawfully retain the sum deposited by the appellees. The agreement between the parties contemplated the delivery to the appellees of valid obligations of the appellant school city to the amount of $35,000. Unless such obligations can be delivered, the appellees, as such purchasers, can not be required to accept and pay for them.
It is not true, as asserted by appellants, that the school city and all its property owners and taxpayers are estopped to deny the validity of the bonds, and therefore that the rights of the appellees could not be prejudiced by the fact that the statute under which they were issued was void. The contrary has often been decided in this State and in
The payment of the bonds, if issued without authority, could be enjoined at the suit of any taxpayer, or, if sued upon, the corporation could resist their collection on the ground that they were illegally issued. This being the case, the bonds would have no legal value in the hands of a purchaser, and an agreement to buy and to pay for them would be without consideration. Hnless the appellees are permitted to reject the bonds if they were issued without authority of law, they will be compelled to pay more than, $35,000 for securties for which the school city is not liable, and the collection of which can not be enforced by legal process. It is very evident that the appellees have an interest in the question of the validity of the bonds which entitles them to challenge the constitutionality of the statute under which they were issued.
The deposit of the check for $1,750 by the appellees at the time they made their bid did not constitute such a voluntary payment as deprived them of the right to demand its return, and to recover it upon discovery of the fact that the proposed issue of the bonds would be void. Gist v. Smith, 78 Ky. 367; Gwin v. Smurr, 101 Mo. 550, 14 S. W. 731; Louisiana v. Wood, supra; Read v. Plattsmouth, supra.
The act of March 9, 1903, supra, purports to be a general law. It attempts to make a classification of cities and towns, and its operation is confined to the class so created. That class embraces cities and towns having a population of not more 'than 4,545 nor less than. 4,540 according to the last preceding census. At the time of the enactment of the statute only one city in the State came within the prescribed description. The point to be determined on this ajapeal is whether this act is, in fact, general, or whether it is-local and special, within the meaning of the Constitution.
The views of counsel for appellants are thus stated in. their brief: “The act itself is general in form, as it provides 'that the board of school trustees for any school corporation in any city or town in this State.’ No city or town is excluded. The only limitation is that such city or town should have a certain population under the last preceding United States census. This creates a class of cities. It is true that under the United States census of 1900 the city of Rushville is the only city that meets the requirements of the statute, and can avail itself of the provisions of the act. But will this court say that under any future census there may not be ten or twenty cities that will have all the qualifications required by this act ? - The organic law of the State, the aid of which is invoked by the appellees to have this law destroyed, divides our government into general heads, to wit, the administrative, judicial, and legislative, and defines their general powers. The legislative is the only power in the State that can enact laws. The wisdom or frailty of their declared laws can only be measured or tested by limits imposed and prescribed by the Constitution. The intention of the legislators at the 'session of 1903 to create general classes for the support of common
Under the Constitution of this State, cities and towns may be classified upon the basis of differences in population, and laws applicable to a single class may be regarded as general in their character, and not local or special. But the classification must be natural and reasonable, and not arbitrary. It must be founded upon real and substantial differences in the local situation and necessities of the class of cities and towns to which it applies. Where such a classification excludes from its operation cities and towns differing in no material particular from those included in a class, the statute can not be upheld. It is obvious that cities having a population of 100,000 or more may require larger and more varied powers than such as contain a population of 10,000 or less. The political needs of the larger community may be of a different nature, and the forms' and methods by which its affairs must be administered may be more extensive, complicated, and elaborate than those required in a municipality of smaller population.
But can it be said that cities and towns having substantially the same population should be placed in different classes, and each class governed by a different set of laws ? What reason requires that such distinctions should be made ? Why should cities having a population not exceeding 4,545 nor less than 4,540 be placed in a separate class from cities having a population of not more than 5,000 nor less than 4,000 ? It is not possible that the political necessities of one of these classes 'founded on population alone could be different from those of the other. Why should the school corporation of a city of not more than 4,545 inhabitants nor less than 4,540 be authorized to issue bonds for the support of its public schools without submitting the question of the expediency of incurring the debt to the electors of the city, while the school corporation of every other city in the State incorporated under the general law
Let it be supposed that the act of March 9, 1903, suprti, is' valid, what provision of the Constitution can not be rendered nugatory by similar evasions ? If cities and towns may be classified according to trifling differences in population, so may counties and townships. By means of statutes, general in form, but local and special in purpose, resting entirely upon slight differences in population, every provision of article 4, §22, of the Constitution may be successfully evaded.
Inferior in dignity and force of obligation only to the Constitution of the United States and the acts of congress and treaties made under it, the state Constitution is the supreme law of the commonwealth. It is to be interpreted and applied in a reasonable manner; it is to be observed and obeyed, and not evaded and defeated by distinctions and ‘ classifications which rest upon no rational or natural basis, and which deceive no one. When it declares
In Gulf, etc., R. Co. v. Ellis, 165 U. S. 150, 159, 17 Sup. Ct. 255, 41 L. Ed. 666, the court say: “But arbitrary selection can never be justified by calling it classification. The equal protection demanded by the fourteenth Amendment forbids this.”
In State v. Loomis, 115 Mo. 307, 314, 22 S. W. 350, 21 L. R. A. 789, quoted with approbation in Gulf, etc., R. Co. v. Ellis, supra, it was said by Blade, J.: “Classification for legislative purposes must have some reasonable basis upon which to stand. It must be evident that differences which would serve for a classification for some purposes furnish no reason whatever for a classification for legislative purposes. The differences which will support class legislation must be such as, in the nature of things, furnish a reasonable basis for separate laws and regulations. Thus the legislature may fix the age at which persons shall be deemed competent to contract for themselves, but no one will claim that competency to contract can be made to depend upon stature or color of the hair. Such a classification for such a purpose would be arbitrary and a piece of
Again, in State, ex rel., v. Hammer, 42 N. J. L. 435, it was well said by the chief justice: “Plainly, a law may be general in its provisions, and may apply to the whole of a group of objects having characteristics sufficiently marked and important to make them a class by themselves, and yet such law may be in contravention of this constitutional prohibition. Thus, a law enacting that in every city in the state in which there are ten churches, there should be three commissioners of the water department, with certain prescribed duties, would present a specimen of such a law, for it would sufficiently designate a class of cities, and would embrace the whole of such class, and-yet it does not seem to me that it could be sustained by the courts. If it could be so sanctioned, then the constitutional restriction would be of no avail, as there are few objects that can not be arbitrarily associated, if all that is requisite for the purpose of legislation is to designate them by some quality, no matter what they may be, which will so distinguish them as to mark them as a distinct class. But the true principle requires something more than a mere designation by such characteristics as will serve to classify, for the characteristics which thus serve as the basis of classification must be of such a nature as to mark the object so designated as peculiarly requiring exclusive legislation. There must be substantial distinction, having’ a reference to the subject-matter of the proposed legislation, between the objects or places embraced in such legislation and the objects or places excluded. The marks of distinction on which the classification is 'founded must be such, in the nature of things, as will, in some reasonable degree, at least, account for or justify the restriction of the legislation.” See, also, Board, etc., v. Spangler, 159 Ind. 575 State, ex rel., v. Parsons, 40 N. J. L. 1; Dixon v. Poe, 159 Ind. 492, 60 L. R. A. 308; Common
The constitutional question presented in this case was not involved in any of the following: City of Indianapolis v. Navin, 151 Ind. 139; City of Indianapolis v. Wann, 144 Ind. 175; Consumers Gas Trust Co. v. Harless, 131 Ind. 446; Young v. Board, etc., 137 Ind. 323; Gilson v. Board, etc., 128 Ind. 65, 11 L. R. A. 835.
For the reasons stated, we are constrained to hold the act of March 9, 1903, supra, unconstitutional, because special and local. The complaint, therefore, was sufficient, and the demurrer to it was properly overruled.
We find no error. Judgment affirmed.