268 Mo. 265 | Mo. | 1916
— On July 7, 1914, George P. Wright, prosecuting attorney of Nodaway County, commenced a proceeding by quo warranto, in the circuit court of said county, against the above named defendants, charging that they were unlawfully and wilfully usurping and exercising the functions and prerogatives of directors of school districts numbered 141, 160, 161, 162
On October 12, 1914, respondents filed their return setting out in detail all the different steps and proceedings to establish Consolidated School District No. 162, and tending to show, that they were elected as directors in said consolidated district, as required by law. The facts stated in the return, if.true, show a substantial compliance with the law, in regard to the formation of said district and the election of respondents as directors therein.
Eelator filed a reply, putting in issue the facts pleaded by respondents in their return; and attacked the validity of the Act of 1913, Laws 1913, page 721 and following, upon the alleged grounds, that said act violates section 28 of article 4, of our Constitution, in that, it contains more than one subject, which is not clearly expressed in the title; and that the title to said act is misleading and not broad enough to cover the subjects attempted to be embraced therein. He further charges that said act violates section 53 of article 4 of our Constitution, in that, it is local, special, and applies only to a part of the State; that a general law could be made applicable to the whole State; that it is a Local Option Law, and exempts from its operations portions of the State; that the attempted classification
The court, on the 19th of December, 1914, after hearing tine evidence and argument of the counsel, found th© issues in behalf of respondents and entered judgment in accordance therewith. The cause was duly appealed by relator to this court.
We have simply set out heretofore the substance of £he petition, answer, reply and judgment, as constituting the record proper; and have not set out any of tine evidence and matters of exception, because the alleged bill of exceptions mentioned in the abstract of record does not contain a motion for a new. trial, nor isfere any call therein for same. This matter will be «¡msidered more fully in the opinion to follow.
Appellant, in his abstract of record, where matters ©ff exception are relied on, must show by the record proper that Ms motion for a new trial was filed within the time required by law. He complied with this re(fttÍTeam®nt, as shown by the record. He is likewise required, in his abstract of record, to set out as a part of the hSl of exceptions the motion for a new trial, or by appropriate language call for same therein.
There are numerous other cases decided by this. court, as well as the various courts of appeals announcing the same rule of law. This court has endeavored to impress upon counsel throughout the State the necessity of observing this plain requirement. If members of the bar are heedless in failing to observe the law, in respect to these matters, wjth so many decisions re-' quiring it, they should not expect the court to overlook such errors, when they are patent upon the fact of the record.
On the record thus presented, the trial court, after hearing the evidence and argument of counsel, found the issues in favor of respondents and entered judgment in accordance therewith. As the trial court, on the facts, has found in favor of respondents; and as we are precluded from reviewing same, because no motion for a new trial appears in the bill of exceptions or is called for therein, the judgment below must stand affirmed, unless the Act of 1913, at pages 721 and following, be held as unconstitutional upon one or more of the grounds set out in the reply.
We are relieved of the necessity of considering this question on account of the recent ruling of the Court in Bane in the case of State ex rel. Clark v. Gordon, 261 Mo. 631. Judge Woodson, in speaking for the above court, in his opinion, set out various sections of the act complained of, and in direct terms held that said, act did not violate the provisions of section 28 of article 4 of the Constitution aforesaid. He cites, in his opinion, a large number of authorities sustaining the conclusion reached by him in that respect. In discussing other constitutional questions raised, in respect to said act, Judge Woodson, on page 649, said:
“This act is progressive and in keeping with the forward movement of the State and country at large*273 —bringing home better schools and higher grades of instruction, which the ordinary public schools do not teach, and are incapable of teaching on account of the lack of means to construct appropriate buildings and to employ competent teachers. By this scheme of the Legislature thousands of our children can and will be instructed in the higher branches of education not taught in the ordinary school, who are unable to go to city high schools, colleges and universities away from home.
“The design of the Legislature is good and wise, and before the act conferring this beneficence upon the youth of the country should be declared invalid, the reasons therefor should be so clear and unanswerable that no reasonable doubt should exist as to its unconstitutionality ; and after a careful reading.*of the briefs of the respective parties and having investigated the authorities cited, we are of the opinion that no such reason has been pointed out.”
The language above quoted fully disposes of the foregoing question, and is alike applicable to the other constitutional questions hereafter discussed.
This same class of questions has been often brought before our courts in different forms. At an
“Under the rule thus laid down, the contention of the relator, that the act in question is a local or special, and not a general law, is without foundation. The act in question applies to all the counties in the State as a class, and to all incorporated cities or towns as a class having a population of twenty-five hundred or more inhabitants. All the counties in the State and all cities and towns with the requisite population, may, by complying with its terms, come under its provisions. ’ ’
After an elaborate review of the above law, it was sustained by the court.
The construction of the above law afterwards came before this court in Ex parte Handler, 176 Mo. l. c. 388-9. On page 389, Judge Gantt, in behalf of Division Two, said:
“.The very words ‘local option’ imply the grant of the right to one locality to adopt and another to decline to avail itself of the law. Moreover, it is no objection to a law that it does not operate upon every citizen alike; it is sufficient if it operates equally upon all who in all parts of the State come under the same circumstances and conditions. [Gordon v. State, 46 Ohio St. 607; Santoro v. State, 46 Ohio St. 607.]”
Judge Gantt, in presenting the issue involved, on page 388, said:
“Addressing ourselves now to the two propositions which counsel now urge in addition to those decided in the Maggard-Pond case, the first is that it violates the constitutional provision that all laws of a*275 general nature shall have uniform operation throughout the State; and inasmuch as a different penalty is imposed by the Local Option Law for selling and giving away intoxicating liquors from that inflicted for the sale or giving away of such liquors in other portions of the State, it necessarily offends the principle of uniformity. ’ ’
All of the objections urged against the constitutionality of said act were again overruled in,the Handler case.
In State ex rel. Dome v. Wilcox, 45 Mo. 458, the relator instituted proceedings in the nature of a quo warranto in the Livingston Circuit Court, to determine the right of respondent to the office of school director in the town of Utica; it being a school corporation, organized under chapter 47 of the General Statutes 1865. Eelator sought to oust respondent from office on the ground that said chapter of the above law of 1865 was unconstitutional. Judge Wagner, on page 461, said:
‘ ‘ A question of more grave and paramount importance to the people of this State could hardly he brought in this court. Nearly every town and village hap organized under the law referred to. Acting in accordance with its authority, they have built schoolhouses, employed teachers, incurred debts, and systematized and put in operation rules and regulations, which have greatly redounded to our educational interest. Before a court would he justified in pronouncing against this system, and producing the inextricable confusion which must necessarily follow, it should furnish reasons for its decision, at once clear, cogent, and convincing.” '
The same learned judge, on page 465, said:
“Special statutes relate to certain individual classes or particular localities. Had the act applied to a certain specified town or a single corporation, it would have been special; but such is not the case. It*276 is co-extensive with the State, and its influence is felt in every county and almost every township. It is conceded that it does not include in its- operation every individual nor extend to all the territory, but that is not required. It is as general as is consistent with its scope and design, and no law more general in its nature could be framed to effectuate and carry out the object in view. This is also a sufficient answer to the point raised, that the act is in oppositio'n to the fourth section of the eighth article of the Constitution.”
The above observations of Judge Wagner apply with equal force to the law under consideration here. Similar laws have been passed in this State relating to other subjects which have likewise been sustained.
In 1873 this court was called upon by the General Assembly to express its opinion as to whether or not a township organization law could be legally passed under the Constitution of 1865. Said opinion (Opinion of Supreme Court Judges on Township Organization Law, 55 Mo. 295), on page 297, reads as follows:
“It is a general law made for the whole State, and by the terms of the act itself took effect from and after its passage. Every county in the State may avail itself of thu privileges offered by this law by a majority vote of its people. It is left to the option of the coum ties whether they will organize under the law or not. If a majority vote for it, such vote does not create the law, but places the county so voting within its provisions, and the organization then takes effect, and also the law, as it existed before the vote was taken. The law does not delegate, nor was it the intention of the lawmakers to delegate, legislative authority to the counties. Unless the counties avail themselves of the right to organize they will remain as they were, unaffected by any of the provisions of this statute. It is unnecessary to elaborate this point or to write a lengthy political essay on a subject, which, it seems to us,*277 needs no illustration. It is sufficient to say that we are satisfied that no provision of the Constitution has been violated in the passage of this law. ’ ’
This opinion was signed by Judges Adams, Wagner, Sherwood and Ewing.
We likewise have in this State, and have had for many years, a statute authorizing any county or township, under the circumstances named therein, to adopt a stock law. The same objections were urged to this class of legislation, as are urged in the present case; but this court uniformly held-that the different classes of laws heretofore discussed, are neither special, nor do they violate any provision of the Constitution.
We are of the opinion, that the above contention of relator is without merit, and it is overruled.
*278 “A further objection to the statute is, that it contravenes section one of article fourteen of the Constitution of the United States, which declares that no State shall ‘deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the law.’ Our statute, which allows the State fifteen peremptory challenges in capital cases in cities having over one hundred thousand inhabitants, whilst elsewhere the State is allowed only eight peremptory challenges, was assailed in Hayes v. Missouri, 120 U. S. 68, as being in conflict with the above prohibitions upon state legislation. The Supreme Court of the United States then said: This. amendment ‘does not prohibit legislation which is limited either in the objects to which it is directed or by the territory within which it is to operate. It merely requires that all persons subjected to such legislation shall he treated alike, under like circumstances and conditions, both in the privileges conferred and the liabilities imposed. ’ And again it was said in Missouri v. Lewis, 101 U. S. l. c. 30, speaking of the same constitutional provision: ‘It contemplates persons and classes of persons. It has not respect for local and municipal regulations that do not.injuriously affect or discriminate between persons or classes of persons within the place or municipalities for which such regulations are made.’
“The law in question applies alike to all persons within the territory or locality where it is adopted. There is no discrimination whatever in favor of or against persons or classes of persons within such territory. They are all treated alike. It is true the penalties for violating this law are not the same as those for violating the dram-shop law. They are, indeed, not the same offenses. In the one case the offense is the violation of a law which allows and regulates traffic in intoxicating liquors as a beverage, and in the other ease the offense is for selling such liquors where*279 the sale of it is prohibited by law. But aside from this the law makes no discrimination as to persons in the territory where it takes effect, and that is enough to show that it in no way contravenes the section of the Constitution of the United States before quoted.”
We do not deem it necessary to consider the constitutionality of the above act further. In no uncertain language, the following recent cases have upheld the validity of the proceeding thereunder, to-wit: State of Missouri ex inf. Simrall ex rel. Clements et al. v. Clardy, 267 Mo. 371; State of Missouri ex rel. Hilbert v. Glaves, 268 Mo. 100; State ex rel. v. Gordon, 261 Mo. 631.
It has been the policy of this court, in construing the statutes relating to schools and school districts, to give them a liberal construction, and to uphold the same whenever it can be done without violating the. plain provision of the law.
Having decided the constitutional question adversely to relator, and no error having been found in the record proper, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
— The foregoing opinion of Railey, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.