229 Mo. 364 | Mo. | 1910
— On the application of the Attorney-General a writ of certiorari issued to the respondents, judges composing the county court of Jackson
In obedience to the writ, respondents have sent up the records called for, by which it appears that on the 24th day of February, 1890', the county court of Jackson county divided Kaw township into eight justice-of-the-peace districts, defining their metes and bounds, and that on May 3, 1910, the court made and entered of record an order dividing Kaw township into six justice-of-the-peace districts.
As if in response to the writ, respondents have also sent up transcripts of the record containing various other orders relating to the same subject at different periods and different terms of that court -between the February term, 1890, and the May term, 1910, besides certain ordinances of the city council.
' I. A motion is filed by the Attorney-General to strike out all that part of the return showing the proceedings of the court between the dates and terms last mentioned, and the other extraneous matter. That motion is sustained. There can be no return to a writ of certiorari except the record called for by the writ. In response to an alternative writ of mandamus or preliminary rule on an application for a writ of prohibition the respondent is called on to show cause why the writ should not issue, but not so in the case of a writ of certiorari. In such case the writ is peremptory from the first and the only duty .that devolves on the court to which it is addressed is to send up the record called for, the validity of which when it comes is to be adjudged by what it shows on its face.
The dividing of the State into political subdivisions, and the dividing of counties into districts for the election of officers called for by the law of the State, is legislative in its character, and, as such, devolves on the legislative department of the State government, and it cannot be exercised otherwise unless by express grant of power or delegation of authority. Under the provisions of section 3 of article 4 of our Constitution, the duty of dividing a county into representative districts, when it is entitled to more than one representative, is imposed on the county court, and under section 6 of article 4 the duty of dividing the county into senatorial districts, when it is entitled to more than one Senator, is devolved on the circuit court, but those are express constitutional grants of authority, without which those duties would devolve on the General Assembly, and they are granted in that article of the Constitution under the title “Legislative Department,” showing that the framers of the Constitution understood it to be work legislative in its character. A full discussion of that feature of the case will be found in the opinion of this court by Judge Graves in the case of State ex rel. Attorney-General v. Patterson, decided at this term, and reported at page 373 of this Report.
- But this case differs essentially from the case just mentioned because there is no constitutional authority conferred on the county court to divide a county into districts for the election of justices of the peace. All the authority that the county court has or ever had for dividing a township into justice-of-the-peace districts is contained in five lines of section 6090', Revised Statutes 1889, and is in these words: “In all municipal townships that now contain or may hereafter contain
The contention of respondents is that the date specified in the statute, March 1, 1890, is the first date on or before which the county court could act, but not the last. The fault of that argument is that it reads into the statute words that are not contained therein and very greatly enlarges the power granted. It is argued that unless we give the statute that interpretation we must condemn it as unconstitutional. If the statute confers the power to act but once and at a certain time, we cannot add to it a power to act often and at many times, even if it were necessary to do so in order to avoid condemning it as obnoxious to the Constitution. There is a subsequent clause in the same section which relates to the election of justices of the peace, providing that they shall be elected at the general election in 1890 and every four years thereafter, but there is nothing to indicate that the districts are to be defined first in 1890 and every four years thereafter or at any time thereafter. The specification in one clause of the section that the dividing of the county into districts shall be done at a certain date, and the specification in a clause immediately following in the same section that the election to supply those districts with justices of the peace shall be held at a certain date and every four years thereafter, indicate that the Legislature intended the one act to be final, the other recurrent.
We hold that the county court of Jackson county had no power to divide Kaw township into justice-of-the-peace districts at its May term, 1910, and therefore the motion of the Attorney-General to quash the record of that court of date May 3, 1910, relating to the dividing of that township into justiee-of-the-peace districts, is sustained, and the record is quashed.