176 Ind. 182 | Ind. | 1911
This action for mandate was brought by the relator under the provisions of an act approved March 6, 1911 (Acts 1911 p. 541), to compel appellee to appear and preside over the Shelby Superior Court, it being alleged in the complaint that holding said court by appellee is specially enjoined by an act approved March 1, 1911 (Acts 1911 p. 103), and that such duty results from the fact that appellee holds the office of judge of room number five of the Superior Court of Marion County. Appellee’s demurrer to the complaint for want of facts was sustained. The relator failed and refused to plead further, and judgment was rendered in favor of appellee.
The errors assigned call in question the action of the court in sustaining said demurrer.
Said demurrer for want of facts is governed by an act approved March 4, 1911 (Acts 1911 p. 415), which amended
It is the better practice to set out said reasons immediately following the cause of demurrer, on the same paper, and that .the party filing the demurrer for want of facts, or his counsel, sign, it at the close of the reasons set forth, so that the cause of demurrer and the reasons stated why the complaint is insufficient constitute one instrument or writing, and may be signed and filed as one pleading.
This is not the first time the legislature has used the word “define” or “defining,” instead of the word “create” or “establish,” in an act creating new judicial districts. Acts 1885 p. 119; Acts 1889 p. 50; Acts 1905 p. 119.
The word “constitute” instead of the word “create” or “establish” has also been used in the titles of acts creating new judicial circuits. Acts 1867 p. 84; Acts 1871 p. 63.
The act approved March 6, 1873 (Acts 1873 p. 87), which abolished the common-pleas courts and established a number of new judicial circuits did not have the word “create” or “establish” in its title. The title of said act reads as follows: “An act to divide the State into circuits for judicial purposes, fixing the time of holding courts therein, abolishing the courts of common pleas, and transferring the business thereof to the circuit courts, and providing for the election of judges and prosecuting attorneys in certain eases. ’ ’
By an act, entitled “An act concerning the courts in the counties of Howard, Tipton, Grant and Delaware, and declaring an emergency, ’ ’ approved March 1, 1909 (Acts 1909 p. 79), the legislature abolished the Howard Superior Court, established the Delaware Superior Court, and created a new judicial circuit consisting of the county of Howard.
The constitutionality of none of these acts has been assailed on the ground that the word “create” or “establish” was not used in the title.
In the case of Hargis v. Board, etc. (1905), 165 Ind. 194, we said: “The title of an act is to receive a liberal construction if necessary to sustain the legislative intent. If the words used in a title, taken in any sense or meaning they will bear, are sufficient to cover the provisions of the act, the act will be sustained even though such meaning may not be the most common meaning of such words. These rules, however, are to be used to effectuate, not to defeat, the legislative intent. 26 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.) 583-590; 1 Lewis’s Sutherland, Stat. Constr. (2d ed.) §§121, 127-129,
To define is “to fix, establish or prescribe authoritatively.” Century Dict. See, also, Robert J. Boyd, etc., Co. v. Ward (1898), 85 Fed. 27, 28 C. C. A. 667, 675. The word “define” is frequently used in legislation to mean create, establish, enlarge or extend. In re Fourth Judicial District (1893), 4 Wyo. 133, 137, 32 Pac. 850, and cases cited; People, ex rel., v. Bradley (1877), 36 Mich. 447; Commissioners, etc., v. Bailey (1874), 13 Kan. 600, 607, 609; State, ex rel., v. Commissioners, etc. (1899), 41 Kan. 630, 634, 21 Pac. 601; State, ex rel., v. Burr (1907), 16 N. Dak. 581, 113 N. W. 705; State, ex rel., v. Ely (1907), 16 N. Dak. 569, 113 N. W. 711, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 638; Walters v. Richardson (1892), 93 Ky. 374, 20 S. W. 279; Gould v. Hutchins (1833), 10 Me. 145, 154.
In the case of People, ex rel., v. Bradley, supra, in construing the word “define,” as used in the title of an act, it is said: “"While the word ‘define’ may be, and frequently is, used in the sense and for the purpose claimed, and while we might concede such to be the general and more popular use of the word, yet it is not used exclusively in such a sense. It has a broader and different meaning. It is frequently used in the titles of acts, and but seldom in the narrower sense, or as merely defining powers previously given.
It is evident from what we have said, and from the authorities cited, that appellee’s objection to said act, on account of the use of the word “defining” in the title of said act is not tenable, but that the title of said act is broad enough to cover said act, even if it creates a new superior court, or a new superior court district, or both.
It is next insisted by appellee that said act if valid creates a new and independent court in Marion and Shelby counties,
A superior court consisting of three judges was established in Marion county by authority of an act passed in 1871 (Acts 1871 p. 48). Said act provided that said court should have a seal, “which shall contain on the face, the words, ‘ Superior Court of County, ’ filling the blank according to the name of the county.” It was held that said court, although presided over by more than one judge, was only one court. Richcreek v. Russell (1904), 34 Ind. App. 217, 230.
In 1907 (Acts 1907 p. 360, §1462 Burns 1908) an act was passed providing that said court “shall consist of five judges.” At the same session of the legislature it was enacted that “in all counties of this State, having a superior court of two or more judges, such court shall be divided into rooms and such rooms numbered consecutively, beginning with No. 1, and the judges of said courts shall be nominated and elected by rooms: Provided, that any one of said judges shall have full power and authority to sit as judge in the other rooms of said court.” Acts 1907 p. 42, §1463 Burns 1908. The effect of the act was to divide the Superior Court in Marion County into five rooms or divisions, and require that the judges be nominated and elected by rooms or divisions; but notwithstanding this any one of the judges was authorized to sit as judge in the other rooms or divisions. Whether the judges would have had this power in the absence of a provision authorizing it, we need not determine.
6. The proper answer to these questions depends on the construction that must be given to said act of 1911. Said act is vague and uncertain in some of its provisions, and if words are taken in their plain, exact and literal sense some provisions may be contradictory. But as said by the court in the case of Clare v. State, supra, page 25: “We do not understand that this court is bound, in the interpretation and construction of a statute, to take the words used therein in their plain, exact and literal sense. On the contrary, the true rule is, and always has been, as recognized in many decisions of this court, to make the legislative intention in the enactment of the particular statute, the chief guide of the court in its interpretation and construction. If the object, purpose and intention of the legislature, in the enactment of the particular statute, can be fairly ascertained and arrived at, then it is the duty of the court to overlook and disregard all apparent inaccuracies and mistakes in the mere verbiage or phraseology of the statute, and, if possible, to give force and effect to the evident reason, spirit and intention of the law. This, we think, is the true and only safe rule for the guidance of the courts in all statutory exposition and construction, and as such it has been recognized and acted upon by this court, in a large number of its reported decisions. We cite only a. limited number of these decisions. Mayor, etc., v. Weems [1854], 5 Ind. 547; Shoemaker v. Smith [1871], 37 Ind. 122; Garrigus v. Board, etc. [1872], 39 Ind. 66; State, ex rel., v. Tucker [1874], 46 Ind. 355; State, ex rel., v. Mayor, etc. [1867], 28 Ind. 248; Zorger v. City of Greensburgh [1877], 60 Ind. 1. It has been well said that it is the duty of courts to execute all laws according to their true intent and mean
It was said by the court in the case of Storms v. Stevens (1885), 104 Ind. 46, 50, that “In the construction of statutes, the prime object is to ascertain and carry out the purpose and intent of the legislature. To do this, the words used in the statute should be first considered in their literal and ordinary signification. But if by giving them such a signification the meaning of the whole statute is rendered doubtful, or is made to lead to contradictions or absurd results, the whole statute must be looked to, and the intent as collected therefrom must prevail over the literal import of terms and detached clauses and phrases. Mayor, etc., v. Weems [1854], 5 Ind. 547; Smith v. Moore [1883], 90 Ind. 294, 305, and cases there cited.”
In the case of State Board, etc., v. Holliday (1898), 150 Ind. 216, 233, 42 L. R. A. 826, this court said: “Sutherland, Stat. Constr. §218, says: ‘When the intention can be collected from the statute, words may be modified, altered or
In the case of City of Indianapolis v. Huegele (1888), 115 Ind. 581, 588, this court said: “So, it has been said, that it is an established rule, applicable to the construction of all remedial statutes, that cases within the reason, though not within the letter of a statute, shall be embraced by its provisions, and that cases within the reason, though not within the letter, shall be taken to be within the statute. State v. Canton [1868], 43 Mo. 48; People, ex rel., v. Lacombe [1886], 99 N. Y. 43, 1 N. E. 599; Middleton v. Greeson [1886], 106 Ind. 18.” The following authorities are to the same effect: State, ex rel., v. Insurance Co., etc. (1888), 115 Ind. 257, 264, and cases cited; Middleton v. Greeson (1886), 106 Ind. 18, and cases cited; Miller v. State, ex rel. (1886), 106 Ind. 415, 423, 424; Krug v. Davis (1882), 87 Ind. 590, 595, 596; Warren v. Britton (1882), 84 Ind. 14, 22, 23; McComas v. Krug (1882), 81 Ind. 327, 332, 333, 42 Am. Rep. 135; City of Evansville v. Summers (1886), 108 Ind. 189, 193; Hargis v. Board, etc. (1905), 165 Ind. 194-196.
Keeping in view this purpose of the legislature, and said rules governing the construction of statutes, it is manifest that the legislature by said act intended to provide a superior court in Shelby county, to be called the Shelby Superior Court, and to continue the Superior Court of Marion County, divided into rooms or divisions numbered from one to five inclusive, and presided over by its five judges, as it existed when said act was passed, with the same jurisdiction it then
There is no provision in said act of 1911 repealing said act of 1871 under which the Superior Court of Marion County was created, nor is there any thing in said act of 1911 from which it can fairly be inferred that the legislature intended to abolish said court and create another court. On the contrary, although it is provided in §20 of said act of 1911 that “all laws and parts of laws inconsistent with, the provisions of this act are hereby repealed,” it is expressly provided in said section of said act that “nothing in this act shall be so construed as to affect any of the existing laws pertaining to the courts of Marion county, Indiana, except in so far as the provisions of this act shall affect the terms and proceedings of the Superior Court of Marion County in room number five of said county. ” It is evident therefore, that any provision of said act of 1911, which but for said provision in §20 would affect the Superior Court of Marion County, affects only room five of said court as to its terms and proceedings.
Appellee concedes that the legislature has the power to create a superior court in Shelby county, consisting of five judges, and by attaching such' county to Marion county form a superior court district of the two counties, and require the five judges of the existing Superior Court in Marion County to hold such superior court in the added county of Shelby, as well as the superior court in Marion county, during the remainder of the terms of such judges.