69 So. 461 | Ala. | 1915
Appellees are exercising authority as a board of public safety for the city of Montgomery by virtue of an act entitled: “An act to amend an act entitled ‘An act to provide and create a commission form of municipal government and to establish same in all cities of Alabama which now have or which may hereafter have a population of as much as twenty-five thousand and less than fifty thousand people, according to the last federal census, or any such census which may hereafter be taken; to regulate the .selection and election of commissioners and their terms of office and recall from office, to fix their powers, duties and compensation, to punish improper conduct in connection with elections and petitions hereunder; to abolish police commissioners, aldermen and certain other city officials, and otherwise provide for the creation and maintenace of said commission form of government/ approved April 6, 1911.”
This amendatory act was passed over the Govern- or’s veto February 5, 1915. Acts 1915, p. 52. This proceeding, an information in the nature of quo warranto, attacks the constitutional validity of the last-act on various grounds.
No legislative powers, unless the fixing of salaries for its officers and agents be such, are given to the board. Its function is to exercise control over the personnel and practical operations of the departments committed to its care.
The main argument on this branch of the case is that the provision for a board of public safety with the powers indicated is a radical departure from the fundamental theory and principle of the commission form of government which, counsel say, consists in the concentration of all municipal powers in a few persons who must be elected by the people and kept directly under their control by various provisions such as the recall, initiative, and referendum, and others calculated to taire city government out of politics and to prevent corruption in administration. Hence the conclusion is drawn that the change ingrafted upon the previous government by the creation- of an independent board of safety,
The most general and comprehensive idea expressed in the title of this act, the expression of legislative purpose to which all else in the title may be, and to which all else in the body of the act must be referred, is “to provide and create a commission form of municipal government.” It is the settled construction of the constitutional rule that so long as the generality of the title is not made a cover for legislation incongruous in itself, and which by no fair intendment can be considered as having necessary or proper connection between its parts, there is no cause of objection. — State v. Street, 117 Ala. 203, 23 South. 807. Counsel for relators would have the court make to the details of this statute a Procrustean application of a certain conception that has been evolved by their own learned reflection upon ideals of government. But we have been unable to find any authoritative hard and fast definition of the commission form of government that descends into all the details of the plan, nor do we believe any such definition exists in the popular mind. The general idea suggested by the phrase is that of a concentration of all the powers of municipal government in a few persons; of a government by a committee chosen from the community at large, rather than by a mayor and the old familiar board of aldermen, which experience teaches are too often chosen that their first consideration may be given to the interests of parties and the restricted constituencies by which they are elected. It may be conceded that the plan, as thus far developed, usually, though not universally, incorporates popular
“The distinction is this: That a law applying to a certain class of cities, fixed by previous legislation, into which other municipal corporations may enter, and from which they may pass into other classes, by increase of population, is not special, but general, since the grade of any particular city is not designated by the act, but depends upon its growth in population, as it may, by such growth, pass from one grade or class to another.” — State v. Ellet, 47 Ohio St. 90, 23 N. E. 931, 21 Am. St. Rep. 772.
Numerous examples of the application of this principle may be found at page 874 of 21 Am. St. Rep., and elsewhere, in judge Freeman’s note to State v. Ellet. The leading brief against the present act employs harsh language in attributing unworthy motives to its framers, and folly, ignorance, and inattention to the Legisla-, ture in its passage. But these suggestions, proceeding, so far as we are informed by the record before us, wholly and [done upon the single fact that the act in its pres
Counsel have argued the question whether the provision of the act that “no person shall be eligible to the office of president or member of the board of commissioners of any such city * * * ■ who shall, either by election or appointment, have held the office of president or member of the board of commissioners of any
We have thus considered the questions raised by the record, and it results from what we have said that we are in accord with the views which have found able expression in the opinion of the learned special judge who heard the case in the court below, and that the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.