133 Tenn. 446 | Tenn. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal hy the State of Tennessee from a judgment of the circuit court, sustaining a demurrer to an indictment of the turnpike company. The indictment charged that the company had unlawfully failed, after metaling its turnpike as required by Code (Shannon) section 1764, to spread immediately upon said me-taling a coat of dirt, sand, gravel, or ground rock, and that the company had continued to take toll notwithstanding.
The demurrer attacked the constitutionality of the act which required such a coating he so placed on the roadway, same being Act 1905, chapter 534, amended by Act 1907, chapter 242, and among the grounds of attack were the following:
That the act was void, under article 11, sec. 8, of the Constitution, because an attempt to create an arbitrary and unreasonable class and subject the company to liability as a member of that class, and, further, because violative of article 11 section 8, of the Constitution which provides:
“No corporation shall be created or its powers increased or diminished by special laws but the General Assembly shall provide by general laws for the or*449 ganization of all corporations, hereafter created,” etc.
The form of charter, prescribed by the g’eneral incorporation acts for the appellee company and all other turnpike companies in this State, stipulated that toll might be charged after the pike had been metaled, ‘ ‘ the stone of the last coat to be broken of a size not exceeding one-half pound in weight.”
The above acts which required a different coating by their terms were restricted in application to counties having a population of not more than 42,750 nor less than 42,700, according to the federal census of 1900 or any subsequent federal census. This confined the operative force of the acts to turnpikes in Maury county, at least until the happening of the remote contingency that under some subsequent census some other county having turnpikes in its borders will fall into the class.
"We are of the opinion that it is not competent for the legislature to pass laws thus operating on corporations to increase or diminish their powers or duties, when chartered under the laws of this State, or malee tlieir application or force restricted to less than all the counties of the State, by the use of such a population basis for classification.
It is a mistaken idea, all too prevalent judging from recent legislation, that, because classification on the basis of population is sustainable in respect of legislation on certain subjects, it may be appropriate for all purposes of classification in legislative enactments. This erroneous conception, if further indulged by legisla
Legislative acts made special, by the use of the population standard for classification, may be restricted to affect a certain county or counties in their political or governmental capacity, but where such legislation is designed immediately to affect the rights of the citizen, whether a natural or artifical person, in his or its property rights, without affecting others in like condition elsewhere in the State, it may be unconstitutional. Redistricting Cases, 111 Tenn., 234, 80 S. W., 750.
In article 11 section 8, of the Constitution we have a positive and explicit inhibition on the increase or diminution of the powers of private corporations by special laws. A “special law” is one that relates to particular persons or things of a class to which they legitimately belong, as distinguished from a “general law,” which applies to all persons or things of a class. A law becomes special, in a constitutional sense, when by force of no inherent limitation it arbitrarily separates or segregates some person or thing from those upon which, but for such separation, it would operate. 4 Words and Phrases, Second Series, 635; Van Cleve v. Passaic, etc., Com., 71 N. J. Law, 183, 58 Atl., 571; Applegate v. Taylor, 224 Mo., 393, 123 S. W., 892.
Interdicted special laws are those, the vice of which is that they do not embrace all of the class to which they are naturally related; they create preferences or establish inequalities of burden, “The true principle requires something more than a mere-designation by such characteristics as will serve to classify, for the characteristics which thus serve as a basis for classification must be of such a nature as to mart the objects so designated as peculiarly requiring exclusive legislation. There must be a substantial distinction, having a reference to the subject-matter of the proposed legislation, between the objects or places embraced in such legislation and objects or places excluded.” State v. Hamer, 42 N. J. Law, 440; Alexander v. Elizabeth, 56 N. J. Law, 71, 28 Atl., 51, 23 L. R. A., 525; State v. Railway, 124 Tenn., 1, 135 S. W., 773, Ann. Cas., 1912D, 805; 6 R. C. L., p. 381, sec. 374.
It cannot be that a special law, within the meaning of the above clause, is only such an one as by name designates or identifies the corporation concerned.
The framers of onr Constitution intended to express that the functioning of private corporations thereafter should have relation, so far as place is concerned, to the State and not to territorial limits less than that. There had been experienced in this commonwealth hardships incident to the inequality in the benefits and burdens imposed on private corporations by legislative action. The want of uniformity in laws creating and governing private corporations was the mischief that the constitutional inhibition was designed to correct. No longer was the legislature, by way of the courtesy too often shown to local representatives, -or by way of favor to combinations of men in a particular locality, to be “transformed from a tribunal of the people into a mere shop for seekers after special privilege” in the form of corporate rights peculiar to the seekers themselves, or in the form of corporate burdens on others imposed for their advantage. It was considered that if a proposed enactment was salutary, its benefits should be shared by all in the State interested therein; that if it was unwise, it should not be passed without challenging the attention, judgment, and vote of all the representatives in both branches-of the General Assembly.
Coming to a consideration of the legislative acts under review: How can it conceived that the particular duty attempted to be imposed on turnpike corporations in Maury county, or in counties possible to be covered by the margin of fifty of population, does not sustain as true, substantial and just relation to Giles county or to other counties in the State where turnpikes are operated by corporations'? How is the imposition of the duty respecting the mode of coating pikes reasonably appropriate to the one place, as evincing some intrinsic characteristic or need, and not to the others 1
To so hold would be to run counter to the manifest intent of the framers of the constitution to get away from a patchwork system of corporation laws, and for us to return to the system that formerly existed, which led naturally and inevitably to the granting of special corporate privileges and the imposition of peculiar burdens, and which the constitutional convention was solicitous to abolish.
Clearly the objects sought to be operated on and regulated are not counties of any class, or county concerns, but the effort is to regulate entities by the application to them of a standard that properly relates not to them but to counties.
The only case that has come under our observation where such a segregation of private corporations for regulation was involved is that of Weinman v. Railway Co., 118 Pa., 192, 12 Atl., 288. There an act to provide for the incorporation and regulation of certain railway companies in cities of the second and third class was held to be special and in contravention of the Constitution of that State.
There being no error in the ruling of the circuit judge, an affirmance results.