45 Ala. 220 | Ala. | 1871
The whole case made in the bill depends upon the validity of the act of the legislature of the provisional government of this State, which was adopted on November 24th, 1866 ; by which the limits of said city of Huntsville were extended so as to include the lands of complainants. — Acts 1866-1867, No. 16, p. 28. If this act is a valid law, the bill was properly dismissed ; but if it was not valid, then the property of the appellants, which was ¡taxed, did not come within the incorporate limits of said city qí Huntsville, and the tax was illegally levied, and the
Heretofore, this court has treated the legislative enactments of the provisional government of this State as legal, so far as they have not been repealed or superseded, or were not in contravention of the constitution and laws of the United States. — Johnson v. Reynolds, June term, 1870; Texas v. White, 7 Wall. 700, 720, 721 to 725. But the case has been otherwise with the constitution formed by the convention of the 12th day of September, 1865. That instrument has never been recognized by the government of the United States or adopted by the people of this State, as its constitutional law. The admitted high respectability of the authority that called that convention, and the ability and patriotism of the eminent men who composed it, were not enough to purge it of the irregularity which was fatal to its validity, and its work was not received and ratified as the fundamental law of the State. Until this is done, this court has no sufficiently well settled authority to supply this deficiency. This court can only know that to be the constitution of the State, which has been so ordained and established by the people, in some legitimate way, and accepted as such by the general government. So far as the constitution of 1865 is concerned, this has not been done, in any regular and approved manner. — Cooley, p. 32, § IY.
The act of secession did not abrogate the constitution of the State which existed before its date. After the overthrow of the rebellion, that constitution was the only limit of the legislative power in this State, save the constitution and laws of the United States. In the case of Mauran v. Insurance Co., Mr. Justice Nelson, speaking for the court, says : “ We agree that all the proceedings of these eleven States, either severally or in conjunction, by means of which the existing governments were overthrown and new governments erected in their stead, were wholly illegal and void, and that they remained after the attempt at separation and change of government, in judgment of law, as completely under all their constitutional obligations as before.” — 6 Wall. 1, 13, 14. The ordinance of secession
To avoid revolutionary excesses, which spring out of an irregular exercise of popular power, it is safest and best to proceed by the prescribed way. Then, law rules and not passion and prejudice. What the legitimate powers of a popular convention are, will possibly never be settled, so as to suit and harmonize with all the arguments upon this subject; but the better opinion is, that a convention becomes revolutionary and illegal, which attempts in an irregular way to overturn and disregard the settled and fundamental law of the State. At the same time it may be admitted, that the people of the State, when in their proper and normal relation to the Union, can amend or revise their existing constitution or establish a new one, in such manner as they may think fit under the limitations imposed by the constitution and laws of the United States. Eor this purpose, the sovereign power is vested in them. They must then, within these limits, be the judges of the power and the manner of its use. But when this normal relation of those acting, does not exist, or has been disturbed, the people of the State can not act without a limit, and may be controlled by the government of the nation, as has been done in our own instance. Hence, then, conventions of the people of the State may become lawless,
This restriction out of the way, there can be no reasonable doubt of the power of the general assembly to extend the boundaries of an incorporated town or city. The policy of such extension is not a question that the courts can consider. This is vested exclusively in the legislative branch of the government. The power to incorporate certainly exists in the general assemblyand this includes the power to fix the boundaries of the town or city thus incorporated. And this power is not limited to a single exercise of its functions. The power that can fix the boundaries once, may repeat this act as often as the public convenience may require it. It may therefore extend a boundary already fixed. And when such extension of boundaries is accepted and ratified by the corporate body, it becomes a part of the town or city limits.
The law of the Code in reference to incorporations, and the change of corporate boundaries can not be applied as a limit to the legislative power of the State over corporations, The legislature may act independently of such laws. Nothing short of the constitution of the State, and the supreme law of the land, is a restriction On the legislative branch of the State government. — Cooley, 87, et seq. ; Dorman v. The State, 34 Ala. 216.
Under this view of the law, the decree of the chancellor was correct. It is therefore affirmed. Let the appellants pay the costs of this appeal, in this court, and in the court below.