42 N.J.L. 486 | N.J. | 1880
The opinion of the court was delivered by
An act concerning cities, approved March 12th, 1880, (Pamph. L., p. 258,) declares that it shall be lawful:
The common council of the city of Trenton, deeming it to be among the municipalities thus designated, passed an ordinance for the issue of bonds to fund its floating debt, by virtue of these provisions, whereupon the prosecutor, a citizen and tax-payer in Trenton, sued out a writ of certiorari, to test the legality of the corporate proceedings.
The contention of the prosecutor (inter alia) is that this statute is special and local, and contravenes the constitutional amendment found in Paragraph 11, Section 7, Article IV., which forbids the passage of private, special, or local laws, to regulate the internal affairs of towns.
Under this clause of the constitution, it has already been decided, in this state, that a law, to be neither special nor local, need not apply to all towns—that it will be general if it apply to a class of towns. Thus, cities have been held to be included among “ towns,” as here intended, (Van Riper v. Parsons, 11 Vroom 1; Pell v. Newark, 11 Vroom 550,) aud so are townships said to be (11 Vroom 555) and, doubtless, a law embracing all cities or all townships, would be constitutional; for these bodies, because of their marked peculiarities, are, by common consent, regarded as distinct forms of municipal government, and so constituting classes by themselves. But it has further been considered that these classes, also, may be subdivided by the legislature, so that a law will be general which yet touches only a subdivision. As, however, this power of subdividing by legislation would, if unrestricted, include the power to legislate for every individual singly, since no two individuals are exactly alike, the constitutional prohibition required that some limit, excluding special and local legislation, should be placed upon its exer
The. question to be determined concerning the law now under review, therefore, is whether, since it does not relate to all cities, it affects a class of cities constituted upon this principle—whether the basis of classification is some peculiar feature to which the provisions of the law are naturally related.
The basis of classification is a minimum of population. The powers to be conferred by the statute concern the issue of bonds for the purpose of funding floating debts. • Now, I am unable to see a.ny natural connection between the number of people in a city and its right to fund its floating debt. It is true that there may be some propriety in denying this authority to very small municipalities and granting it to larger ones, but the same may be said of almost every power usually possessed by cities. And it is manifest that if the classification made by .a statute is to be justified or not, by considering whether it is proper to apply the peculiar provisions of the law to the particular individual or individuals designed to be affected,, then laws will be upheld or overthrown, not as the courts shall decide them .to be general or special, but as they shall deem them wise or unwise. No rule heretofore laid
In Pennsylvania, under a constitutional provision similar to ours, a statute has been adjudged valid which divided the cities of the state into three classes—the first, of cities containing over three hundred thousand inhabitants ; the second, •of those containing from one hundred thousand to three hundred thousand, and the third, of those containing from ten thousand to one hundred thousand. Wheeler v. Philadelphia, 77 Penna. St. 338; Kilgore v. Magee, 85 Id. 401.
But that statute is distinguishable from the one now before ns, inasmuch as that classification was made for all the purposes of municipal legislation, and could therefore be regarded as a general classification, while in the present law, the grouping of cities is for a special purpose only—to confer on some a power of funding debts not granted to others; and hence, in this aspect, the law is special. If it be sustained, the classes into which towns may be divided, on this simple basis of population, will be as numerous and diversified as the purposes of the legislature, and all the evils sought to be averted by the abolition of the power to legislate for individuals, will return under the form of class legislation. I see no view in which this law will appear to be general.
There are two cases in this court which may be suggested as resting upon a different notion, viz., Rutgers v. New Brunswick, ante p. 51, and Skinner v. Bogert, ante p. 407. But neither of these decisions is adverse. In the first case, the relator claimed salary, as judge of the District Court of New Brunswick, on the ground that a supplement to the act under which he was appointed, which purported to abolish his office, was in violation of the constitutional amendment already mentioned. The act constituting District Courts provided for them in all cities having over fifteen thousand inhabitants. The supplement abolished them in all cities having less than twenty thousand. The court decided that if the original act was valid, on the same principle, the supplement was, and if the latter was not, neither could the
In my judgment, this statute is void, and the ordinance passed by virtue of it should be set aside.