117 P. 104 | Mont. | 1911
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
By an Act entitled “An Act to create the county of Lincoln, designate its boundaries and provide for its organization and government,” being Chapter 133 of the Laws of 1909, the legislative assembly erected a certain portion of Flathead county into the county of Lincoln. Section 3 of the Act reads as follows:
“That the town of Libby, situate within the boundaries above mentioned, shall be the county seat of said county of Lincoln, until the county seat of said county shall be designated as hereinafter provided. And for the purpose of definitely fixing and creating the county seat of the county hereby created, the board of county commissioners of Lincoln .county shall cause to be inserted in the official ballots, when printed for the general election held the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November A. D. 1910, at the foot of the names of the candidates, or nominees thereon, the following: ‘For the county seat of Lincoln county-,’ and the electors, when voting at the said general election at the time hereinbefore mentioned shall declare their vote upon said proposition by inserting in the blank space upon their ballots herein provided for, the name of some one town within said county of Lincoln, and when the name of a town shall be so inserted in the space by an elector, and the ballots have been cast as provided by law, the name shall be deemed a vote for the designated town as the place of the permanent county seat of Lincoln county, and upon a canvass of the said ballots the town having the highest number of ballots shall be declared by the canvassing board the county seat of Lincoln*408 county, which result shall be entered in the office of the county clerk and recorder of said Lincoln county, and from the date of such declaration of result, the town selected shall be and remain, until lawfully changed, the county seat of Lincoln county. All laws' of a general nature applicable to the several counties of the state of Montana, and the officers thereof, shall be made applicable to said county of Lincoln, and the officers who may hereafter be elected, or appointed, therein, except as otherwise provided in this Act.”
At the general election held in November, 1910, the town of Eureka received 653 votes for the county seat, and the town of Libby received 638 votes; and thereupon the board of county commissioners, sitting as a board of canvassers, found and declared that the town of Eureka was the permanent county seat of Lincoln county. The respondent, who is the clerk of the district court of the county, refused to remove his office from Libby to Eureka and this proceeding in mandamus was instituted to compel him to do so. He has filed a motion to quash an alternative writ heretofore issued, and also a general demurrer to relator’s affidavit for the writ, and the matter has been submitted for final decision.
It is contended that that portion of the Act providing for an election to determine the location of the permanent county seat is unconstitutional, for the reason that it conflicts in its provisions with section 26 of Article Y of the Constitution. That section, in so far as it is invoked, reads thus: “The legislative assembly shall not pass local or special laws * * * locating or changing county seats.” It is said that that portion of the Act providing for an election is both local and special in its provisions, and we could readily agree with the conclusion, if the provisions referred to related to a county seat already located or to a county fully created. As will hereafter be shown, however, being a part of the Act creating the county, they cannot be regarded as local or special within the meaning of those terms as employed in thd Constitution, if it be admitted that the legislative assembly has the power to create a county by special Act. In the ease of Holliday v. Sweet Grass County, 19 Mont. 364,
It will be noted that the assertion in Sackett v. Thomas, to the effect that the legislature has the undoubted right to create new
The courts have met with no little difficulty .in' dealing with questions kindred to that which we are considering. While recognizing the principle of local self-government, some courts have placed their decisions on the ground that in creating a municipal subdivision of the state, an emergency arises which must be met by the legislature in order to fully exercise its undoubted sovereign power of creation. They have therefore designated county officers first appointed as temporary or provisional officers, as distinguished from permanent officers, who may only be selected by the people themselves. But it is simply begging the question to say that; the legislature has power to name “temporary” officers, but no power to name “permanent” officers. In our judgment, however, the particular designation is immaterial. The fact remains that a so-called temporary officer can hold until the next general election, and while he is in office his status is in no way distinguishable from that of' an
The last legislative assembly passed a general law (House Bill No. 12, approved March 9, 1911) providing “for the designation of temporary county seats and for the location of permanent county seats in new counties or in counties in which the permanent county seat has not been located.” Prior to the passage of this measure, there was no general law by which a so-called temporary eouifty seat could be located, changed, or removed. Consequently, if the legislature had exhausted its power in naming one place, even though it was designated as only temporary, it became in fact permanent. While it is argued by respondent’s counsel that the act of fixing a county seat at a permanent place (the legislature having designated a temporary place) amounts to “changing” or “removing” the county seat, we are not able to agree with the suggestion. The words
The motion to quash the alternative writ is denied, the general demurrer to the relator’s affidavit is overruled, and it is ordered that a peremptory writ of mandate issue, commanding the respondent to remove his office to the town of Eureka, and there maintain the same-.
Writ granted.
Concurrence Opinion
: I concur in the result reached by Mb. Justice Smith, but again I am forced to acquiesce in a doctrine to which I do not subscribe, solely upon the ground of stare decisis.
Since our Constitution was adopted, thirteen new counties have been created, every one by a special Act of the legislature; property rights to the extent of millions of dollars have been acquired; and to reverse the former decisions of this court and hold at this late day that every such Act is unconstitutional and void would result in such chaos that it ought not to be done under the circumstances presented by this record, and under the conditions which now prevail.
In Holliday v. Sweet Grass County, mentioned above, this court, without any apparent consideration of the question— which does not appear to have been urged' — -and without the citation of any authority or the advancement of any argument, said: ‘ ‘ Creating a new county by a special Act is not forbidden by the state Constitution.” The authority of that decision was recognized in State ex rel. Sackett v. Thomas. I believe that the
Rehearing
(Submitted June 12, 1911. Decided July 1, 1911.)
Lincol/n, County Act — County Seat — Permanent Location — Special Laws — Constitution—Statutory Construction — Intent of Legislature — Part of Statute.
Lincoln County — Permanent Location of County Seat — Special Law — Tin-constitutionality.
1. Held, under section 26, Article Y, of tbe Constitution, that the legislature may not, in a special Act, creating a county, refer the location of its permanent county seat to a vote of the people of the county, but can do so only by a general law of uniform operation throughout the state; and that, therefore, that portion of the Act creating Lincoln County (Laws of 1909, Chapter 133, sec. 2), making it incumbent upon the county commissioners to submit the permanent location of the county seat to a vote of the electors, offends against the special and local law clause of the Constitution, supra, and is void.
Mb. Justice Smith dissenting.
Interpretation of Statutes — Intent of Legislature — Part of Statute.
2. In the interpretation of a statute the courts must look to the statute itself, its history, or both, for the key to the legislative intent, a thing within the intention of its makers being as much within the statute as if within the letter.
Constitution — Special Laws — Prohibition Absolute.
3. The prohibition against local or special laws, in section 26, Article V, of the Constitution, is absolute.
Same — Special Laws — What not Excuse for Enactment.
4. Failure on the part of the legislature to pass a general law on a given subject does not justify the enactment of a special one which is prohibited.
delivered the opinion of the court.
The facts are stated fully in the opinion heretofore filed and need not be repeated. Further consideration of the question involved leads us to the conclusion that the effect of our former decision is to nullify a plain provision of our state Constitution.
It will not do to say that the inhibition in section 26, Article Y, is aimed only at Acts which seek to locate county seats after they have been once located. A county seat once permanently located cannot be located again. It may be changed or removed, but the removal is covered by another provision of the Constitution. “Locate” and “remove” do not mean the same thing, and when both terms are employed in the Constitution they must be given effect. If the. legislature may by special Act.
But it has been urged upon us most earnestly that, since the Act under consideration does not designate a permanent county seat in terms, but only provides the means by which such permanent county seat is to be located, it is not within the meaning of the prohibition contained in section 26, Article Y. A review of the history of Montana will aid materially in ascertaining the meaning to be given to the provision of the Constitution here involved.
Both parties to the controversy concede that the legislature may by special Act create a county and name a provisional county seat. "Whether that conclusion is right or wrong is not involved here; but, for the purposes of this case, we "must assume that such authority is not denied to the legislature, and upon that assumption, determine the only question involved, viz.: May the legislature refer the location of a permanent county seat to a vote of the people of the county by a special Act, or can it be done only by a general law of uniform operation throughout the state?
The legislative history of Montana is divided into three distinct periods, viz.: (1) From the organization of the territory in 1864, to July 30, 1886; (2) from July 30, 1886, to the admission of the state, in November, 1889; and (3) from the date of admission to the present time.
In the meantime the county seat of Edgerton county was changed by special Act from Silver City to Helena (Laws 1867, p. 101); and on December 20 of the same year, and by another special Act, the name of Edgerton county was changed to Lewis ■and Clark. (Laws 1867, p. 130.) At the same session the •county seat of Missoula county was changed by special Act from Hell Gate to Missoula Mills. (Laws 1867, p. 107.) At the same session the county seat of Deer Lodge county was changed from •Silver Bow to Deer Lodge. (Laws 1867, p. 102.)
These are only a few of the special laws enacted in the early days of our territorial existence; but it will be observed that the legislature, having been left free to enact special laws, exercised its authority freely and upon a great variety of subjects. At the close of this first period, however, the Congress of the United States passed an Act entitled “An Act to prohibit the passage of local or special laws in the territories of the United States, to limit territorial indebtedness, and for other purposes.” (Approved July 30, 1886.) The Act prohibits territorial legislatures from passing local or special laws upon any of twenty-four enumerated classes of subjects, among which are: For granting divorces, changing the names of persons or places, laying out roads or highways, and locating or changing county seats. (Act July 30, 1886, c. 818, 24 Stat. 170; Comp. Stats. 1887, p. 31.)
2. Tinder ike Organic Act as Modified by the Act of July 30, 1886. During this period but two counties were created. The Act creating Park county, approved February 23, 1887, pro
When the Constitution was adopted, twenty-three of the twenty-four subjects contained in the Act of July 30, 1886, were incorporated in section 26, Article Y, with ten other similar subjects. The Act of July 30, 1886, prohibited the territorial legislature from incorporating cities or towns by special Act. Section 26, Article Y, of the Constitution, does not contain that prohibition ; but in other respects the Constitution follows the exact language of the Act of Congress in prohibiting the legislature from passing any local or special laws for granting divorces, changing the names of persons or places, locating or changing county seats, etc.
3. Under the Constitution. Since the adoption of the Constitution, eleven counties had been created when the Act now under consideration was before the legislature. The provisions of the several Acts creating Flathead, Teton, Carbon, Granite, Sweet Grass, and Sanders counties are similar, and similar to the provisions of the Act now under consideration. A temporary or provisional county seat was named, and provision made for an election by the voters of the respective counties to finally fix and determine the location of a permanent county seat. In the Acts creating Yalley, Ravalli, Broadwater, and Rosebud, a temporary or provisional county seat was named, and the Act in each instance provides that the place so named shall be the county seat, “until some other place within said county shall be designated as such in the mode and manner provided by law” (Yalley County Act [Laws 1893, p. 202]); or “until some other place * * * shall be designated as provided by law” (Ravalli County Act [Laws 1893, p. 209]; Broadwater County Act [Laws
It will be observed that during the first period above, the territorial legislature had resorted to each of three methods for locating permanently county seats: (1) By permitting the voters to determine the question by ballot, as in the original counties and Meagher county; or (2) by naming the permanent county seat in the Act creating the county, as in Dawson, Silver Bow, Yellowstone, and Fergus; or (3) by locating the permanent county seat by a separate special Act, as in Custer county. But no matter which method was employed, the subject was controlled by a special Act in every instance, and this fact is peculiarly pertinent when we undertake to analyze the Act of
We are not left in doubt altogether or entirely free to speculate as to the intention of the Congress in passing this measure; for, aside from the manifest purpose contained in the concluding clause of section 1, the legislative history of the Act precludes the possibility of a doubt. The bill for the Act (H. R. 5179) was introduced in the House of Representatives by William M. Springer, of Illinois. It was referred to the committee on territories, of which Mr. Springer was a member, favorably reported, and the report adopted. The Congressional Record discloses that when the bill was up for final passage in the House, its author, Mr. Springer, said: “Mr. Speaker, the provisions of this bill are copied verbatim, from the Constitution of the state of Illinois, and similar provisions will be found in the Constitutions of most of the states of the Union. The bill simply prohibits the passage, in the cases enumerated, of local or special laws in the territories. I think one of the greatest abuses in the territories has been the passage of laws of this character. This bill, if passed, will require general laws on these subjects, instead of special ones. The subject has been discussed in most of our states in the formation of our state Constitutions, and wherever provisions of this character have been adopted the most salutary results have followed. I think the same benefits should be extended to the territories.” (Yol. 17, Cong. Ree. 4062.) There was not any further discussion of the measure on its merits in
In State ex rel. Hay v. Hindson, 40 Mont. 353, 106 Pac. 362, this court announced the universal rule of statutory construction
It might appear that undue prominence has been given to the Act of July 30, 1886, and the manifest intention of the Congress in passing it; but not so. When, our constitutional convention assembled in 1889, it took the provisions of the Act of July 30, 1886, bodily and incorporated them in section 26 of Article V, without the change of a word, eliminating only one provision, that against'the incorporation of cities and towns. This is conceded by counsel for relator in their original brief. If the framers of our Constitution meant anything, then, by thus borrowing from the Act of the Congress the matters contained in the prohibition in section 26, Article Y, they meant to give the same effect to this part of the Constitution as was given to the Act of the Congress. They meant that the same purpose which prompted the enactment of the one likewise prompted the other. They meant that the same intention should be a part of each, and the Congress having manifested its intention that the location of a county seat should be governed exclusively by general laws, the framers of our Constitution intended that the same rule should prevail under statehood. That intention is manifested also by the terms of the Constitution itself. Many of the older states have constitutional prohibitions similar to those contained in section 26, Article Y, of ours. In the Constitution of Florida, there is a section (Article III, sec. 20) enumerating a list of subjects upon which the legislature is forbidden to pass local or
But there is not any difference in meaning between the language in the Florida or Iowa Constitution and that in our own Constitution above. "When the framers of our Constitution said the legislature shall not pass special laws for granting divorces or locating county seats, they knew that these subjects must of necessity be dealt with by law, and in prohibiting special laws they impliedly commanded that they be dealt with only by general laws. When a special law is prohibited, a general law only can be enacted, for there are not any other kinds. Viewed in the light of the history surrounding its origin, the concluding prohibition of section 26, Article V, of our Constitution above, means just what the Florida Constitution means. “In all eases enumerated all laws shall be general and of uniform operation throughout the state.” That the prohibition in
Under a Constitution the meaning of which cannot be distinguished from our own, or from the Act of July 30, 1886, the supreme court of West Virginia,' in a case involving the same question as is now* before us, held that the constitutional prohibition is not limited to forbidding a special law which in terms definitely locates a county seat, but is intended to forbid as well special legislation which seeks to accomplish the purpose by submitting the matter to a vote of the people; in other words, the constitutional prohibition is aimed against the kind of legislation employed for the purpose. (Groves v. County Court, 42 W. Va. 587, 26 S. E. 460.)
The framers of our Constitution declared in most vigorous terms that the legislature shall not pass local or special laws upon any subject, if a general law can be made applicable, and by prohibiting special laws upon the particular subjects enumerated in section 26, Article V, they declared that general laws 'can be made applicable to all of those subjects, one of which is locating or changing county seats.
The cases which recognize the right of the legislature by special Act to designate a temporary county seat for a newly created county make a clear distinction between a temporary or provisional county seat and a county seat actually located. (Doan v. Board of Commissioners, 2 Idaho, 781, 26 Pac. 167; Attorney General v. Board, 64 Mich. 607, 31 N. W. 539.)
We assume, for the purposes of this case, that the legislature may by special Act create a county and name a provisional county seat, but beyond that it cannot go, so far as any question involved here is concerned. But it is suggested that the failure of the legislature to pass a general law for the location of county seats would defeat the will of the framers of the Constitution in drafting section 26, Article Y, and the will of the people in adopting it, by continuing the provisional county seat for an indefinite period of time, and this may be so; but the same thing may also occur in many other instances. Our Constitution contains at least seventeen distinct provisions, in each of which the legislature is commanded to do some particular Act; but there is no means of coercing the legislature, and its failure to respond in these particulars, or in any of them, to that extent defeats the will of the framers of the Constitution and the people. But for such failure, if any, on the part of the lawmakers, the people always have a means of redress at the polls. But the fact, if it is a fact, that the legislature has been derelict in failing to pass
It is also suggested in the brief of counsel for relator that, if this Act cannot be upheld as one providing for a vote to locate the permanent county seat, it can be upheld as one providing for a vote upon the question of a temporary county seat; but this cannot be so. Such a conclusion would be directly antagonistic to the manifest intention of the legislature. Section 3 of the Act creating Lincoln county provides for submitting to the voters the question of the location of a permanent county seat, and it was upon that question that the people voted, not upon the question of a temporary county seat.
The Act creating Lincoln county, in so far as it attempts to make provision for the permanent location of the county seat, is unconstitutional and void, being a local and special Act directly prohibited by section 26, Article Y of the Constitution. This conclusion does not interfere in the least with the application of the principle of local self-government. We do not hold that the people of Lincoln county may not by vote determine where the permanent county seat shall be located. We do say that if they proceed to that end, it must be done under a general law of uniform operation.
The motion and demurrer are sustained, and this proceeding is dismissed.
Dismissed.
When this case was first decided, I was inclined to the view that the provision of the Act permitting the voters of Lincoln county to locate the permanent county seat is not open to the objection that it is special legislation within the purview of the Constitution; but, upon examination