158 Ind. 141 | Ind. | 1902
By an act of the legislature of this State, passed in 1895, entitled, “An act to establish a superior court for the counties of Lake, Porter, and LaPorte, defining its authority, and jurisdiction, providing for the appointment, election, commission, and compensation of the judge thereof, and for clerk and sheriff, compensation of same, and places and times of holding said court, and declaring an emergency,” a superior court was created for the counties of Lake, Porter, and LaPorte. Acts 1895, p. 210. Section 5 of this statute provided that the clerk of the circuit court and the sheriff of the county of each respective county in which the court was held should attend the sittings thereof and discharge all of the duties pertaining to their respective offices, as they were required to do by law in the circuit court, and that they should be controlled in all things by the law pertaining to their government, in the circuit court. When tested by the criterion provided under the terms of §6 of the act, it is evident that the legislature has fixed the city of Hammond, in Lake county, and the city of Michigan City in LaPorte county, as the place in each of these respective counties, instead of the county seat thereof, for holding the sessions of said court. By §9 the court,
By an amendatory act approved March 8, 1897 (Acts 1897, p. 236), §§5 and 9 were amended, — §5 to the extent of the following provision: “And the clerk and sheriff, as and for compensation for the services provided for in this act, shall receive $600 each per annum in addition to the salaries otherwise provided for said officers, which sum shall be payable out of the fees collected by them.” Section 9 was amended to read as follows: “The said court shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit courts of its respective counties in all cases at law and equity whatsoever, and in criminal cases, and actions for divorce, and in all other causes, matters and proceedings of which such circuit court now or may hereafter have jurisdiction except probate matters and cases involving the title to real estate.”
By a subsequent statute enacted on March 7, 1899 (Acts 1899, p. 564), §§7, 15, 16, and 19 of the original act of 1895 were amended, and §§5 and 9 as amended by the act of 1897 were again amended. By this amendatory act of 1899, §19 of the original statute was amended to read as
Adhering, as we do> to the decision in Woods v. McCay, 144 Ind. 316, whereby, as previously stated, the validity of the original act of 1895 was upheld, so far at least as it pertained to the establishment of the court in controversy, and in fixing its jurisdiction as well as the several places in each of the respective counties where its sessions were to be held, it follows that this superior court is a legally created tribunal, whose jurisdiction, under §9 as amended by the act of 1899, is equal to that of the circuit courts of this State. Having reached this conclusion, we may proceed to examine and determine the several questions presented in this appeal. It appears that by virtue of §19 of the original act, as amended by the act of 1899, the board of commissioners of Lake county is proposing to construct a house or build
The second paragraph of the complaint states the facts generally; that the plaintiff is a taxpayer of Lake county; that the defendant, the board of commissioners, is about to purchase a lot at Hammond, and build a court-house there
The first proposition advanced by counsel for appellant is that §19 of the original statute, as amended by the act of 1899, can not be construed so as to empower the board of commissioners of Lake county to construct the proposed building for the purpose of holding the sessions of the court therein. That courts like the one in question may be established in this State, and their jurisdiction defined by the legislature, is no longer a debatable question. As previously asserted, we have under consideration a legally constituted judicial tribunal, invested by law with a jurisdiction on a parity with that of the circuit court. The absolute necessity that this tribunal in each of the counties where it is authorized to sit should be provided with a suitable house where its sessions can be held and the business thereof conducted, and where its necessary ministerial officers can be accommodated in the discharge of their duties, is certainly evident. This necessity the legislature seems to have recognized, for by §19 as amended, it expressly enjoins on the hoard of commissioners of each of the respective counties the duty to provide a suitable and convenient place at the town, or city, fixed for holding the sessions of the court. It is disclosed that it is the will of the legislature that in Lake county the court shall sit at the city of Hammond, instead of at the regular county seat, and hence, in the discharge of the duty enjoined, the board of commissioners of Lake county must be controlled by this legislative will, unless the
Counsel for appellant assert that, if the statute should be so construed as to authorize the board to build a court-house at Hammond, it might decide to build one at the unnecessary expense of $100,000 or over, and thereby impose burdensome taxation upon appellant and other taxpayers of Lake county. But counsel seemingly have overlooked the fact that, under the law as it now exists, the board of commissioners of Lake county is not the sole arbiter in respect to the cost of a suitable public building to be constructed for the use of the court in question. By a statute entitled “An act concerning county business”, approved March 3, 1899, some four days prior to the passage of the act amending §19, the board of commissioners is devested of the power which it formerly possessed in regard to the amount of money which it might
It is next contended that §19, as amended by the act of 1899, violates §19 of article 4 of the State Constitution, which reads: “Every act shall embrace but one subj ect and matters properly connected therewith; which subject shall be embraced in the title.” The contention is that there is nothing in the title of the original act to indicate that it was the purpose of the legislature to provide for a suitable room or rooms for holding the particular court in the city or town as designated. The subject of the original act as expressed in its title is to establish a superior court for the counties of Lake, PoTter, and LaPorte. To provide in the body of the act for a suitable building in which the court might sit is certainly a matter connected with the subject of legislation, and germane thereto. It was not necessary for the title to go into details and advise all concerned in respect to what matters were properly connected with the proposed legislation. It can not be successfully affirmed that to provide for securing a place in which the sessions of the court might be held — which was certainly an essential matter pertaining to that tribunal — is a subject distinct and separate from its creation.
It is disclosed that the provisions of §5 of the original statute .by subsequent amendments have been extended and made to provide that the clerk and sheriff shall each be paid from the fees collected by them an additional annual compensation of $600 for their required services. Appellant, therefore, claims that this is special or local legislation in regard to the compensation of county officers, and hence it violates §22, article 4 of the Constitution; thereby the whole act is rendered invalid, and must be declared void in its entirety. There is no merit or force in this contention, for it is evident that if what appellant claims were conceded to be true, that the provision of §5 authorizing additional compensation to be paid to the two officials mentioned is invalid,
If the particular provision in §5 in respect to the compensation of the sheriff and clerk was eliminated, these officials would, nevertheless, be required to render the services in question, as they did under the section as originally enacted, without additional compensation. We may, however, suggest that counsel for appellant seem to entertain an erroneous view in regard to §22, article 4 of the Constitution as amended in 1881. This court has held that this section as it now stands permits, in a sense, the enactment of local or special laws in relation to fees and salaries; that is to say, that such laws may be so made “as to grade the compensation of officers in proportion to the population and necessary service required.” State, ex rel., v. Boice, 140 Ind. 506; Legler v. Paine, 147 Ind. 181. As the question is here presented, it is not essential, under the circumstances, that the validity of the salary features of the section in question be determined. That matter is properly left for decision until it may be raised and presented by those more necessarily concerned and interested than is appellant.
It is next and lastly insisted that the statute in question operates as a “piece meal” method to remove the seat of justice from Crown Point to the city of Hammond, and therefore violates §10, article 1, of the Constitution of the United States, which inter alia provides that “No state shall pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts.” If appellant’s assertion could be said to he true, he has not shown, under the facts, that he has any contract which would be im
It certainly can not be said that the commissioners under the provisions of the statute of 1824 were authorized to enter into any contract in respect to the location of a county seat, or were empowered to make the location thereof depend on any donations which might be made by those who desired to secure the seat of justice at a certain point. While we are clearly of the opinion that appellant’s learned counsel are mistaken in their claim that the act in controversy in any manner operates in its enforcement to remove the county seat from Crown Point, or that any federal question whatever is involved, still, as they have earnestly argued the question, we have deemed it proper to show by the authorities under the facts that, even though what they assert were true, their client has no grounds upon which to base his contention that a federal question is in any way involved in this case.
It follows from what we have said, and we so conclude,
Judgment affirmed.
Gillett, J., did not participate in this decision.