59 So. 737 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1911
On the 27th day of September, 1911, Law Lamar, Jr., was arrested under a warrant issued by a justice of the peace of Dallas county, upon an affidavit charging that said Law Lamar, Jr., had been guilty of the offense of “selling cotton seed' meal containing 7% per cent, of ammonia for fertilizing purposes, without having attached to the package containing the same the tax tag (Alabama tax tag) prepared by the Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries.” Thereupon the said Lamar filed his petition to the Honorable J. W. Mabry, judge of the city court of Selma, for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that the said complaint and warrant charged no offense; that he Avas therefore illegally restrained of his liberty, and praying that he be discharged. Upon the final hearing of the matter, the said Lamar was ordered to be discharged from custody and from that order the state appeals.
By an act entitled “An act to regulate the sale of cotton seed.meal,” approved November 22, 1907 (General Acts of Alabama, Special Session 1907, page 20), it is provided as folloAvs:
*262 “Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of Alabama, that any person, firm or corporation offering for sale any cotton seed meal in this state, shall be required to have tags attached to each bag with a guaranteed analysis of such meal printed thereon, and, in case of sale in bulk, to have such analysis set forth in the contract of sale stating the per cent, of ammonia, phosphoric acid and potash contained therein: Provided, that no cotton seed meal containing less than 7% per cent, of ammonia shall be sold a.s fertilizers in this state.”
“Section 3. That all cotton seed meal sold in Alabama shall be sampled and analyzed in the same manner as commercial fertilizers are sampled and analyzed, and that the certificate of the state chemist of any analysis which he may make shall be accepted as prima facie correct in all the courts of this state in the trial of any case arising under this act.”
“Section 5. That all cotton seed meal containing 7% per cent, of ammonia which is sold for fertilizing purposes must be registered as other brands of fertilizers under the fertilizer law.”
“Section 7. That all laws and parts of laws in conflict with any of the provisions of this act be, and the same are hereby repealed.”
It was the expressed purpose of the Legislature, in the above-quoted act, shown by section 5, to require the registration of all cotton seed meal intended to be sold for fertilizing purposes as other fertilizers are required to be registered under section 24 of the Code, which is the first section of article 2 of the Code, and which contains the legislative provisions regulating the sale of fertilizers.
It is manifest that the same reasons which impelled the Legislature to provide for the registration of “fertilizers and fertilizer materials,” and which called into
1. The title of the act is “To regulate the sale of cotton seed meal,” and it is therefore as comprehensive as the Legislature can make it. When the title of an act is expressed in general terms, every provision of the act which results, “as a complement of the thought contained in the general expression” is included in and authorized by it. — Leslie v. Bracken, 154 Ala. 151, 45 South. 841. A statute is not violative of the constitntional provision that “each law shall contain but one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title” (section 45), when each of its provisions is referable and cognate to the subject expressed in the title. — Ballentyne v. Wickersham, 75 Ala. 536; Leslie v. Bracken, 154 Ala. 151, 45 South. 841; State ex rel. Meyer v. Greene, etc., 154 Ala. 249, 46 South. 268; Winter v. Sayre, 118 Ala. 35, 24 South. 89. We are therefore of the opinion that section 5 of the above act is referable
2. Appellee contends that, although, under the above section 5 of said act, it may be necessary to register said cotton seed meal when sold for fertilizer purposes, nevertheless the other provisions of the fertilizer law, civil and criminal, have no application to cotton seed meal when so sold. Section 45 of the Code declares that the term “fertilizer material,” used in the above article 2 of the Code, shall not include cotton seed meal, etc. The argument is that, as the above-quoted section 5 of said act only requires said meal, when sold as a fertilizer, to be registered, and does not, in terms, declare that it shall be tagged, etc., therefore, if said meal, when sold as a fertilizer, is held to be subject to the tag tax provided for in article 2 of the Code, it folloAVS that section 5 of said act, so far as cotton seed meal is concerned, repeals section 45 of the Code by implication, and by implication only, and that we must so hold. This may be true, and if the Legislature intended to repeal, and did in fact repeal, section 45 of the Code when it passed said act, in so far as cotton seed meal is concerned, Avhen sold for fertilizing purposes, then it is our duty so to declare.
It may be accepted as true that the repeal of a statute by implication is not favored in laAV, and is only allowed Avhen the íavo subjects are in irreconcilable conflict. — Abernathy v. State, 78 Ala. 411. “When a later act covers the AAdiole subject of earlier acts and embraces neAV provisions and plainly shows that it Avas intended, not only as a substitute for the earlier acts,, but to cover the whole subject then considered by the Legislature, and prescribes the only rules in respect thereto, it operates to repeal all former statutes relating to such
3. It follows, therefore, from what we have above said, that cotton seed meal when sold for fertilizer purposes, must be registered as required in section 24 of the Code, unless section 5 of the act regulating the sale of cotton seed meal is inoperative because of the other constitutional provision that “no law shall be revived, amended, or the provisions thereof extended or conferred, by reference to its title only; but so much thereof as is revived, amended, extended, or conferred, shall be re-enacted and published at length.”
In the case of State v. Rogers, 107 Ala. 444, 19 South. 909, 32 L. R. A. 520, Brickell, C. J., quoting with approval the language of the Supreme Court of New York, in People v. Banks, 67 N. Y. 575, said: “It is not necessary, in order to avoid a conflict with this article of the Constitution, to re-enact general laws whenever it is necessary to resort to them to carry into effect a special statute. Such cases are not within the letter or spirit of the Constitution, or the mischief intended to be remedied. By such a reference, the general statute is not incorporated into or made a part of the special statute. The right is given, the duty declared, or burden imposed by the special statute; but the enforcement of the right or duty, and the final imposition of the bur
“The argument misapprehends the real character of the statute. It belongs to a distinct class of statutes, known or termed as reference statutes, not of infrequent enactment; constitutional limitation not forbidding statutes which refer to, and by the reference adopt wholly or partially, pre-existing statutes. In the construction of such statutes, the statute referred to is treated and considered as if it were incorporated into and formed a part of that which makes the reference.— Turney v. Wilton, 36 Ill. 385; Sedgwick, Stat. & Con. L. p. 229; Sutherland, Stat. Constr. §§ 147, 257; Knapp v. Brooklyn, 97 N. Y. 520. The two statutes co-exist as separate, distinct, legislative enactments, each having its appointed sphere of action; and the alteration, change, or repeal of the one does not operate upon or affect the other.” — Phoenix Assurance Co. v. Montgomery Fire Department, 117 Ala. 631, 23 South. 843, 42 L. R. A. 468; Savage v. Wallace, 165 Ala. 572, 51 South. 605.
At the time of the adoption of the act under consideration, there was in existence a general “fertilizer law,” the same law Avhich yet exists; and certainly, under the above authorities, in adopting section 5 of the said act, the Legislature made a valid requirement that all cotton seed meal sold for fertilizing purposes must be registered as other brands of fertilizer under the fertilizer law. In other words, in adopting the act approved November 22, 1907, regulating the sale of cotton seed meal, the Legislature, by writing section 5 into the act, in fact wrote every requirement of section 24 of the Code into the act. — Phoenix Assurance Co. v. Montgomery Fire Dept., supra; Savage v. Wallace, supra.
As was said by counsel for the appellee in his able brief, “the meaning of the law is the law itself,” and section 5 of the act under consideration is meaningless, unless it is construed in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion. “A law respecting public rights and interests should be liberally construed, so as to make it effective against the evil it was intended to abate, when this can be done without depriving any individual of his just rights”' — is a doctrine Avhich was announced by Manning, J., in Ex parte Plowman, 53 Ala. 440; and, while the doctrine was, in that case, announced with reference to public officials, it was the same doctrine which had always been held by the courts, in construing statutes intended to protect the public against frauds and impositions. — 36 Cyc. pp. 1173, 1174, and cases cited.
Section 24 of the Code, without its companion sections found in article 2 of the Code and the criminal statutes enacted for the purpose of prohibiting the violation of the provisions of the fertilizer law, would amount, practically, to nothing. With them, it'consti
5. It follows, therefore, that, in our opinion, cotton seed meal, when sold as fertilizer, must be registered as provided in section 24 of the Code, and that it must also be 'tagged as provided by the fertilizer law. Section 6881 of the Code provides that any person who sells, exchanges, or offers for sale or exchange, any bag, package, or barrel of fertilizer, which has not been tagged as provided by law, must, on conviction, be fined not less than $50 for each offense. As the affidavit in this case, in express terms, charges Law Lamar, Jr., with a violation of the above section, we are therefore of the opinion that the trial court erred in holding that, under the Constitution of the state, the affidavit and warrant were void. The judgment of the court below will therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded.
On Application for Rehearing.
Undoubtedly, as stated by counsel for appellant in their briefs on this application for a rehearing, section 5 of the act of 1907 construed in the above opinion
We state with equal certainty that sections 32 and 34 of the Code mean exactly what they say, nothing more and nothing less. Section 32, in plain English, requires all manufacturers and manipulators of fertilizers, who have registered their brands in compliance with the requirements of the fertilizer law, to obtain tags from the Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries, and to tag such fertilizer or fertilizer material. Section 34 expressly declares that it shall not be lawful for any manufacturer or company, either by themselves or their agents, to sell or offer for sale in this state any fertilizers or fertilizer materials that have not been registered with the Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries as required by the- fertilizer law.
Section 6881 of the Code, in plain, unambiguous English, declares that any person who sells, exchanges, or offers for sale or exchange, any bag, package, or barrel of fertilizer, which has not been tagged as provided by law, must, on conviction, be fined not less than $5(1 for each offense.
As Ave find nothing in the argument of counsel in their briefs on this application for a rehearing shaking-in any way the views expressed by us in the original opinion rendered by us in this cause, the application for a rehearing is overruled.
Overruled.