4 Mo. App. 259 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1877
delivered tbe opinion of the court.
The relator applies for a mandamus to compel the city auditor of St. Louis to audit and allow his account for one month’s salary as reporter of the decisions of the St. Louis Court of Appeals. The respondent, in his return upon the alternative writ, denies that there is any such office as the relator claims to hold, and affirms that the act of the General Assembly, approved April 24, 1877, attempting to create it, is unconstitutional and void. A demurrer to the return places the whole controversy upon the validity of the act.
The personal interest of the relator in obtaining pay for his services seems a matter of small moment compared with the importance to the public at large of the principal questions whose solution is necessary to the determination of this controversy. The extent of the powers left in the Legislature, with the forms essential for their exercise, since the introduction, with our new Constitution, of some novel restrictions and limitations, are matters of vital interest to every citizen. But no phase of the common concern can possibly transcend one which brings' into view the absolute needs of an efficient administration of justice over one-fourth of the wealth and population of the State.
The petition alleges, and the return does not deny, that since the organization of this court 563 causes have been disposed of on written opinions, of which eighty-six- in all have been taken by appeal -to the Supreme Court. There have thus accumulated, in a little over a year, 477 final expositions of the law, which are of binding authority on seventeen courts of record, embodying all the original civil, criminal, and probate jurisdiction throughout the counties composing the Court of Appeals’ district. For these courts the opinions thus delivered are as .Conclusively the law as are the adjudications of the Supreme Court or the statutes enacted by the General Assembly. It is not possible for them, however learned and able their judges may be, to
The written opinions of the St. Louis Court of Appeals are filed in the clerk’s office, where they become permanent records. In a very few years they may be numbered by thousands, instead of hundreds. Will finite memories among courts or counsel be capable of recalling, whenever demanded, the points decided in a given connection, the precise cases in which they arose, the manner of their judicial treatment, and the exact degrees of resemblance between different cases, as new combinations' in controversy appear from time to time? If so, the litigants in St. Charles, Warren, Lincoln, and St. Louis Counties may provide themselves, at whatever expense, as each Circuit Court term approaches, with duly certified transcripts of all the opinions theretofore delivered by this court touching the various branches of .judicial enquiry within which their controversies may fall. But if, as a more reasonable proposition, .even St. Louis lawyers and judges may find it impracticable to ferret out,
If all the adjudications of the St. Louis Court of Appeals were subject to review by a higher tribunal, the importance of these considerations might not be so apparent. No decision would then be final, or binding on inferior courts, until’after such review. But, practically, about seven-eighths of all the litigation in our great centre of trade and population finds its last resort in this tribunal. To that extent, then, the Supreme Court Reports throw no light whatever on the. ways of our jurisprudence. Those volumes continue, and will yet continue indefinitely, to enlighten and guide our courts by new applications of judicial wisdom to the ever-accruing complications of business, property, and social relations in a great State. But as to all those similar, and yet unlike, complications — of almost equal number in a given time — whose judicial treatment can never appear in them, the courts of St. Louis and adjoining counties, without similar publications, would be far worse off than if this court had never been created.
No comparison, in this connection, can be made between the Court of Appeals and the. general term of the St. Louis Circuit Court, with reference to its former capacity as an intermediate appellate tribunal. Three vital distinctions exclude all analogy ■
1. The general term was, in no case whatever, a court of last resort.
2. Its opinions were not binding authority on any other court.
Experience has been showing, for some centuries, what the present universal practice attests, that the only effectual way in which the rulings of superior courts can be made available for guidance and for uniformity of action in inferior tribunals is by published reports of the decisions, with appropriate syllabi, classified under alphabetical headings, so that light upon any particular subject may be found when wanted. No other method has ever been recognized as worthy of consideration. The whole controversy before us, then, seems narrowed down to the question whether the General Assembly has constitutional authority, by legislation, through the only practicable channel, to give full efficacy, upon the footing of accustomed standards, to one of the organic provisions for a judicial department of the State government.
Section 15 of the schedule, under article 15, State Constitution, says: “The General Assembly shall pass all such laws as may be necessary to carry this Constitution into full effect.” The Constitution elsewhere declares that a Court of Appeals shall be established, with certain powers and duties, and provides for the election of its judges. But if no further legal provision were made, the court would never become an operative agency in public affairs. It must have a place to sit in, with stationery, fuel, furniture, and other conveniences. It must have ministerial officers,
We consider this constitutional grant, or rather command, unquestionably ample to sustain the enactment to which the respondent objects. But, were it literally absent from our organic law, there is abundant authority for holding that, under the general grant of legislative authority, the Legislature may adopt any measure, not specifically forbidden, for the purpose of aiding or amplifying the operation of a constitutional provision. Since, however, the respondent urges certain specific constitutional objections to the act in question, we will here consider them.
We are informed that the act is “ local and special,” and' therefore void under section 54 of article 4 of the Constitution, because “notice of the intention to apply therefor” was not “published in the locality where the matter or
Counsel for the respondent urges as a distinctive feature; stamping the act under consideration with the impress of a, local and special law, the payment of the reporter’s salary by the counties composing the district. The distinction is-fanciful rather than real. Nothing in the Constitution makes a law any more or less local and special, or, if really local and special, any more or less objectionable, because of the source from which expenses are to be paid. The same sort of argument would apply to the case of stationery, or any other necessary convenience recognized as proper to be furnished for the court. As well might objection be made against a law regulating the payment of court fees by the suitors therein. A measure being put in-operation as constitutionally competent and proper, the payment of its attendant expenses, from whatever source not expressly forbidden, is a mere incident. The Constitution of Georgia provides that “all bills for raising revenue or appropriating money shall originate in the House of Representatives.” The charter of a town originated in the Senate, and authorized the imposition of taxes on the townspeople. It was held valid. Said the Supreme Court: “In such a case taxing is not the end; it is a mere incident.” Harper v. Commissioners, 23 Ga. 569. The respondent’s counsel, in an able and exhaustive brief, refers us to a number of cases decided in New York, where the Constitution directs that no private or local bill shall embrace more than one subject, etc. We have carefully examined every case in which an act was adjudged to be local, within the meaning of the restriction. They all relate, without-exception, to courts or municipal corporations created by the Legislature itself. No one of the acts was passed in pursuance of a constitutional direction, or in aid of a special constitutional instrumentality. In Williams v. The People,
In Phillips v. The Mayor, etc., 1 Hilt. 483, an amended charter of the city of New York was considered with reference to the same constitutional restriction. The court held that “a statute cannot be termed local or private which provides for the government of a considerable portion of
In The State v. Lean, 9 Wis. 279, it was held-that “ the character of an act of the Legislature, whether it be a. general law or not,” * * *' “ is determined by the greater or less extent to which it affects the people, rather than by the extent of territory over which it operates; Therefore, a law operating in a single county, but affecting the rights of all the people therein, is a general law.”
For similar reasons in Burnham v. Acton, 7 Rob. Pr. 395, an act creating a metropolitan sanitary district and board of health for New York City and County was held to-be “ not a private or local law, and therefore not exposed to the constitutional objection.”
Said the - court, in West v. Blake, 4 Blackf. 236:“ Statutes incorporating counties, fixing their boundaries, establishing court-houses, etc., for public uses, all operate upon local subjects. • They are not, however, for that reason special or private acts.” See, also, Bretz v. The Mayor., etc., 6 Rob. Pr. 327; Single v. The State, 24 Ind. 28; The People v. Stephens, 2 Abb. Pr. 348.
We are of opinion that “An act to provide for reporting and publishing the opinions of the St. Louis Court of' Appeals,” approved April 24, 1877, cannot be called a local or special law, within the meaning of the Constitution, but is in all respects valid; not merely because it transcends no constitutional limitation, but because it was manifestly passed in the exercise of a competent legislative discretion, in obeying a positive constitutional requirement.