181 S.W.2d 479 | Ark. | 1944
Appeal is from a Randolph Circuit Court judgment that Act 73, approved February 19, 1943,1 invades Amendment No. Fourteen to the Constitution. We agree that it does.
The Act, initially, directs appointment (and later election) of road overseers ". . . in any of the counties . . . having a population between 18,300 and 18,350, or which may hereafter contain a population of not less than 18,300 nor more than 18,350."
According to the 1940 Federal Census, Randolph County had a population of 18,319 — nineteen more than the minimum, and thirty-one less than the maximum, mentioned in the Act. No other county falls within the so-called "classification."
By mandamus it was sought to compel the County Judge to make appointments pending the election.
Appellant thinks the decision in Murphy v. Cook,
Substance of the Murphy-Cook case is that a law applicable to counties within which there are cities having a population of 5,000 or more2 is not predicated upon a static condition, nor is it so arbitrarily circumscribed as to infringe rules of construction previously announced as controlling. See Lemaire v. Henderson,
The general principle was stated by Chief Justice HART in Simpson v. Matthews,
A quotation from Ruling Case Law, cited in State ex rel. Atty. Gen. v. Lee,
When we apply this rule to the instant case there can be but one answer: the Act was designed to favor Randolph County. Restrictions have the inevitable and intended result of excluding other counties.
Of course it may be argued that elasticity is found in the provision for reception of counties that may "hereafter" fall within the circumscription. Practical operation, however, is to establish a system of road overseers by a process which excludes seventy-four other counties from the public policy so declared.
If we should reverse the judgment in this case, effect would be to say that the General Assembly, in adopting Act 73 and similar measures, has found a permissible point of penetration into Amendment No. Fourteen.
Our view is that the so-called "classification" is but an attempt by technicality to evade what the courts have heretofore said the people meant when by amendment to the Constitution they struck at the evil flowing from local and special laws.
Affirmed.