46 So. 268 | Ala. | 1908
These appeals, involving identical questions, were argued and submitted together, and are presented from judgments denying peremptory writs of mandamus to compel the judges of probate of Morgan and Jefferson counties to issue to the respective petitioners licenses to sell spirituous, vinous, or malt liquors. The petitioners assume that what are commonly called the state prohibition law and the local option law aré barriers to the granting of the relief sought, unless these laws are constitutionally invalid. The petitioners therefore assail both enactments upon grounds of asserted unconstitutionality, and these objections will be stated and the points taken decided in so far as they attack the state prohibition law, omitting entirely consideration of those assigned against' the validity of the local option law, for the reason that section 13 of the former act, if otherwise valid, became effective in Morgan and Jefferson counties, where election were held prior to December 12, 1907, on January 1, 1908. In denial of the correctness of this conclusion, counsel for the appellants insist that the term “election,” as used in section 13, contemplates a “valid” election, under a valid, as distinguished from an “invalid,” election resulting in those counties, if the local option law is unconstitutional.
As here important, section 13 reads: “Provided that in all counties in which an election shall have been held on or before the 12th day of December, 1907, under the
It is conceded that elections under the local option law were held, in Morgan and Jefferson counties, on or before December 12, 1907, and that the majority vote in each Avas against the sale of liquors in those couuties. It folloAVS, Ave think, that the condition to the going into effect on January 1, 1908, of the state prohibition law in
In entering upon a properly invited investigation of the constitutionality of legislative acts, this court has, as it should, borne constantly in mind: First, that the Constitution is a limitation, not a grant, of power; second, that its mandates are the supreme law to the legislative, executive, and judicial departments of this government ; third, that the propriety and wisdom of enactments by the lawmakers are questions peculiarly and exclusively within the decisive right of that department, and, if the. act under investigation contravenes no provision of the organic law, the judiciary is without rightful power to review the legislative determination of the wisdom and propriety of the addon taken, and, fourth, that every enactment is presumptively constitutional, and therefore valid, and he who assails it assumes the. obligation to demonstrate beyond a reasonable doubt its violation of the fundamental law.
The state prohibition law is a product of the special session, 1907, of the Legislature, which convened in obedience to the proclamation of the Governor. This law was not within those subjects of legislation specifically enumerated in the proclamation as requiring, in the judgment of the executive, the more immediate action of the Legislature. The matter of the prohibition or regulation of the sale of intoxicants jvithin the state at that special session was subject to the conditions defined by-section 76 of the Constitution of 1901, which is: “When the Legislature shall be convened in special session, there shall be no legislation upon subjects other than
The word “House” repeatedly occurs in the organic law, and, as far as we are now advised, has reference, in varying senses, to three entities, viz., the place of legislative session, the total elected membership of the one or the other branch of that department, and the body, whether upper or lower, as legally constituted to perform its legislative functions. An examination of the whole instrument, in obedience to the well-recognized rule of construction, shows, , we think, a clear purpose, on the part of the makers of the Constitution, to leave no doubt in which of the two latterly mentioned senses the term, in the connection employed, was intended to be used. Section 52 provides that a “majority of each House shall constitute a quorum to do business. * * *” Certainly the word “House,” as thus employed, means the entire membership of each body. It denotes the maximum number of members of each body of which a majority shall constitute the House for the transaction of business. After so expressly providing, and unless a greater proportion of the respective membership of the branches is required by unmistakable language, the term “House” can only intend such number present or voting,
It is furt her urged that the term “legislation,” as employed in section 76, embraces every constitutionally required step in the enactment of a proposed law, and hence that the provision for a two-thirds vote of each House applies to forbid even the introduction of a hill not within the subjects specifically designated in the proclamation, unless that proportion of the respective
Section 66 provides: “The presiding officer of each House shall, in the presence of the House over which he presides, sign all bills and joint resolutions passed by the Legislature, after the same shall have been publicly read at length immediately before signing, and the fact of reading and signing shall be entered on the journal; but this reading at length may be dispensed with by a two-thirds vote of a quorum present, which fact shall also be entered on the journal.” An examination of the Senate journal for the twelfth day of the special session shows that the Senate met pursuant to adjournment, with the president pro tern, presiding; that the entire membership of the Senate was present; that the ordinary routine of procedings in that body was had; and that before any adjournment or recess a message from the House of Representatives was received by the Senate, transmitting' for the signature of its presiding officer 10 bills, among them this bill under consideration. Immediately succeeding this message, under the heading “Signing of Bills,” appears this recital: “The president pro tern, and presiding officer of the Senate, immediately after their titles had been publicly read at length by the Secretary, signed the above House bills, the titles of which are set out in the foregoing message from the House. The reading of said bill having been dispensed with by a two-thirds vote of a quorum of the Senate present.”
Counsel for the appellants take the objection that the “fact” of the signing of this bill in the presence of the Senate does not appear from the journal. This objec
Again, it is insisted that it does not appear by the journal, quoted above, that of the 10 bills coming over from the lower branch the reading at length of the prohibition bill was dispensed with. It is true the recital in the journal is that this action was taken with respect to “said bill”; the singular, instead of the plural, being used. There is no merit in the point. The word “said” is a word of reference, and means, as here used, “before mentioned,” “aforesaid.” The word “bill” cannot be interpreted independent of the word “said,” and, when so considered, “bill,” though employed in the singular, is colored by the antecedent to which “said” refers it. The reference is to the above House “bills,” and among them is the prohibition bill. The error in the use of the singular for the plural is self-correcting when the clause of which the phrase containing “bill” is considered as a whole. The period used after “House” will not be permitted to separate the phrase from its relation to the subject-matter to which it obviously refers.
The title of the bill in question is: “An act to prohibit the manufacture, sale, barter, exchange, giving away to induce trade, the furnishing at public places or otherwise disposing of any alcoholic, spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, intoxicating bitters or beverages, or other liquors or beverages by whatsoever name called which if drunk to excess will produce intoxication, except the sale of alcohol in certain cases upon certain conditions, and except the sale of wines for sacramental purposes.” Section 1 declares., in the broadest terms, the unlawfulness of such dealing or use, as the title pre
, The Constitution, by section 45, provides that: “Each law shall contain but one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title. * * *” In Ballentyne v. Wickersham, 75 Ala. 536, this court, through Staone, J., construed and defined the provision “which shall be clearly expressed in its title,” and laid down the generally recognized and unquestionably sound rule for guidance in dealing with the sufficiency of titles to legislative enactments to be: “That the title of a bill may be very general and need not specify every clause in the statute. Sufficient if they are all referable and cognate to the subject expressed. And when the subject is expressed in general terms, everything- which is necessary to make a complete enactment in regard to it, or which results as a complement of the thought contained in the general expression, is included in and authorized by it. * * *
The subject of this bill, and its only subject, is the prohibition of prescribed dealing with certain liquors and beverages. There is no mistaking the subject treated by the act as announced by the title. The exceptions provided in the body of the act, and to which general reference is made in the title, are necessarily cognate to the subject of the enactment. The office of the exception is to take out of the influence of section 1 of the act certain classes of dealings that, without these exceptions, would fall within the provisions of section 1. These exceptions do not enlarge the scope, purpose, or subject of the act. They add nothing thereto. Indeed, it would be a patent contradiction to say that an exception, which reduces the whole, affects to add thereto. — State, v. Schlitz Brewing Co., 104 Tenn. 715, 59 S. W. 1033, 78 Am. St. Rep. 941.
Perhaps, after what we have said in this connection, it is unnecessary to treat the point to be now stated. However, we do so: Counsel for appellants assert that, because the exceptions created by the act provide the methods whereby those exceptions may be availed of without violating the major purposes of the act, the act contains the subject of regulation, whereas the title only foreshadows legislation in prohibition of dealings in intoxicants. The case of Miller v. Jones, 80 Ala. 89, decides that “regulation” and “prohibition” are distinct and incongruous subjects of legislation. But this holding is not impinged here. The title of the act purports to announce that the act to follow will treat of prohibition of the sale, etc., of liquors, except in certain cases. These exceptions, which, as indicated, merely limit the field of operation of the prohibition declared, are created
It is further objected that the act is invalid because it is a local, and not general, law, as those laws are defined in section 110 of the Constitution. The argument in support of this objection takes the form of an insistense that Covington v. Thompson, 142 Ala. 98, 38 South. 679, and other decisions of this court following it, a resume of which will be found in the recent case of the State ex rel. v. Weakley, 153 Ala. 648, 45 South. 175, are unsound, and that those cases should be overruled. It seems to be, in effect, conceded by counsel for appellants, as is indeed the case, that, unless these adjudications are overruled, they are decisive, on this point, of the constitutionality of the act. After a careful reconsideration of these cases and of the arguments assailing them on these appeals, we reaffirm the principle controlling the questioned cases, and adopt them as authority for our conclusion that the state prohibition law is a general, and not a local, law. The reasoning of the leading case will suffice without rehearsal here.
It is perfectly apparent, from the whole act that the Legislature in good faith, wrote to a state-wide prohibition of certain dealings in intoxicants. On January 1, 1909, a reasonably near and definite date, the law will be actually effective from border to border of the state. While in 1908 the law will not be operative in every county in the state, but will, beginning with the succeeding year, be operative throughout the whole state, merely postpones for such definite and reasonably limited period the partial effectiveness of the law, vet the law is a state law, applicable in due season to every coun
That the police power of a state may be appropriately exercised in the prohibition of dealings in intoxicants has been too long settled to now admit of further consideration with a view to its denial.
The other questions argued by counsel pertain to the administrative features of the prohibition law, not leading to constitutional invalidity, which will be properly reviewed when a violation of the provisions of the law, in a concrete case, is presented.
We therefore hold that the act is not subject to the objections to constitutionality urged on either of these appeals.
The respective judgments appealed from are hence affirmed.
Affirmed.