144 Ala. 509 | Ala. | 1905
This is a petition for a mandamus to issue to the Hon. D. W. Speake, as Judge of tbe 8th judicial circuit to require him to enter on tbe minutes of the circuit court of Morgan county an order requiring tbe clerk of said court to deliver to tbe judge of tbe county court of said county all indictments presented or filed in tbe circuit court against persons charged with misdemeanors in Morgan county.
Tbe relator rests the right to have the mandamus awarded upon an Act of the General Assembly entitled “An Act to regulate the trial of misdemeanors in Morgan county.” This Act was approved February 23rd, 1899, and is found in the Local Acts session 1898-99 n. 1502, The act provides in its.first section, that the county court of Morgan county shall have concurrent jurisdiction
Section 2 of the act provides, that the clerk of the circuit court shall immediately after the passage of the act enter on a hook or docket to be kept for that purpose in the county court of said county, all cases of defendants charged with the commission of misdemeanors which are pending in the circuit court of said county, and said county court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of said cases so transferred, and of all papers, bonds and writs of every description in anywise connected with or relating to said cases.
Section 3 of the act provides that, at each and every succeeding term of the circuit court-, held after the passage of the act, for the county of Morgan, the presiding judge thereof shall enter on the minutes of said circuit court on the day óf adjournment an order requiring the clerk of the circuit court to deliver to the judge of the county court of said county all indictments presented or filed in the circuit court against persons charged with the commission of misdemeanors , and after the making of such order, the jurisdiction to try such causes shall vest in the county court.
The record shows that L. P. Troup as county solicitor of Morgan county on the 2nd day of January, 1905, during the regular term of the circuit court held for Morgan county, made a motion praying the Hon. D. W. Speake the presiding judge to cause to be entered on the minutes of said court an order as required by section 3 of the act above set out.
It is further shown that on the day the court finally adjourned, to wit, February 3rd, 1905, the said motion was by the court overruled and dismissed.
Juclge Speake has appeared, waived the rule ni si and filed his answer. He predicates his refusal to make the order prayed for, upon the ground that the act of February 23rd, 1899, was repealed by an act of the legislature approved September the 14th, 1903, which repealing act is found at page 239 of the Local Acts of the legislature session 1903.
The relator challenges the validity of the act of September the 14th, 1903, and insists that it offends sections
The act of September 14th, 1903, is designated in the Journals of the Legislature as House Bill 449, and as it appears on page 239 of the Local Acts 1903, is entitled, “An act to repeal an act entitled an act to regulate the trial of misdemeanors in Morgan county, approved on the 23rd day of February, 1899, and to provide for the transfer to the circuit court of Morgan county of all causes and all papers and books relating thereto, now remaining undetermined on the docket of said county court of oMrgan county, wherein indictments have been preferred by the grand jury in said county.”
House Bill No. 449 was introduced in the House of Representatives by Mr. Callahan on the 9th day of February, 1903, see House Journal, p. 445, and as introduced its title was as follows, to wit: “H. B. 449. To •repeal an act entitled an act tio regulate the trial of misdemeanors in Morgan county, approved on the 23rd day of February, 1899, and to provide for the transfer to the law and equity court of Morgan county of all causes and all papers and books relating thereto, now remaining undetermined on the docket of said county court of Morgan county wherein indictments have been preferred by the grand jury of said county.”
Here follows the notice that was given of the introduction of the bill which is in words and figures as follows: “Notice is hereby given that at the présent session of the Legislature of Alabama, which began on the 13th day of January, Í903, and after this notice shall have been published in a newspaper of Morgan county once a week for four consecutive weeks, a bill will be introduced in said Legislature to be enacted into a law, for the purpose of repealing an act of the Legislature of Alabama, providing for the trial of misdemeanors in the county court of Morgan county, by jurors. Said bill will provide substantially in addition to its purpose stated above, that all of the causes of every kind and description, pending-in said court at the date of the approval of said act, where jury has been demanded, together with all papers, records, processes and everything
The body of the bill as introduced, provided substantially that the causes and papers and>books relating there-( to should be transferred to the law* and equity court of Morgan county.
The bill passed the House on the 12th day of'February 1903, House Journal, p. 613, and reached the Senate on the 16th day of February, 1903, Senate Journal, p. 420, «and was referred to the Judiciary Committee. — Senate Journal, p. 421. On the 5th day of September, 1903 H. B. 449 was called on ¡the third reading in the Senate, at which time the following action with reference to it is shoAvn by the original Senate Journal: “Mr..Lynne offered the folloAving amendment: Amend the caption of said bill and section 2 «and 3 of the same by striking-out the words ‘law and equity’ where they occur in said capition and sections, and inserting in lieu thereof the word ‘circuit’. Amend said bill by striking out section 5 of the same.” The amendment was adopted on a yea and nay vote. The bill as amended was. then passed Senate Journal, p. 862. On the 8th day of September, ■ 1903, the House received a message from the Senate to the effect thait the' Senate had amended H. B. 449 as shoAvn and as amended had passed it. — House Journal, p. 1321. The House thereupon concurred in the amendment made by the Senate to the bill.
That the act is a local law cannot be questioned, and to give it Aulidity as a legislative enactment it must be made to appear that section 106 of the Constitution Avhieh relates to the publication of notice of the intention
It is manifest that ithe bill which was introduced into and passed the House as H. B. 449 had for its purpose, aside from the repeal of the act referred to in it, the-transfer of all misdemeanor cases, pending in the county court of Morgan county, wherein indictments had been preferred, to a law “and equity court of Morgan county which was, according to the notice given, to be created by the Legislature. Indeed, the court to which the causes wcuip to be transferred was as important and as much the substance of the law as was the repeal of the law and the transfer of the causes.
It may be, that the notice published contained the substance of the proposed law, and was sufficient to advise the public of the intention ito apply for the passage of a law which would provide for the transfer of all causes pending in the county court wherein indictments had been preferred, to the court of law and equity to be created. And it is possibly true, that with a law of this description the people would have been satisfied; but we submit, no such law was enacted. The amendment to the bill in the- Senate, made a radical change in the proposed law. .The notice published was not calculated to warn the people of Morgan county that the docket of the circuit court would be, perhaps-, burdened by transfer, with causes that were pending in a court of competent jurisdiction to try them. Reasons may have existed which would have made such a law as was proposed desirable, but which would have had no influence with respect to ithe law that was enacted. It "may be that the thought and prospect of getting an additional court, such as the people were advised by the notice would be
As was said in the case of Wallace v. Board of Revenue, 37 So. Rep. 321; “It was always supposed that the people to be immediately affected by local legislation, ought to have notice of an intention on the part of any one desiring to apply to the legislature for such legislation. Any notice, therefore, which falls short of advising the public of the substance of such legislation, would be deceptive and misleading, and deprive those opposed to it, of a fair opportunity to protest against and oppose its enactment.”
The court to which the cases were to be transferred, we repeat, was of the very essence and substance of the proposed law.
The law enacted should conform substantially to the one advertised, and it seems to us that, in enforcing section 106 of the Constitution, if we should approve such radical changes in the law advertised and the one enacted as were wrought by the legislative proceedings with respect to the enactment involved in this case, we would make ithat section of the Constitution a delusion and a snare and destroy its usefulness.
The conclusion is, that the act of September 14th, 1903, page 239 of the Local Acts of the Legislature, 1903, was passed without sufficient notice as required by section 106 of the Constitution and that it is, therefore, without force and effect.
The conclusion renders consideration of the other objections urged to the act unnecessary.
It follows that the writ of mandamus will be awarded as prayed for, unless the respondent shall upon notice of this decision grant the order of transfer asked for by the relator.