143 So. 198 | Ala. | 1932
In order that the insistences of respective parties may be clearly understood, we hereby transmit the agreed statement of facts upon which the case was tried and determined in the court below, together with briefs of counsel.
This February 2, 1932.
C. R. BRICKEN, Presiding Judge.
The question is: Did the trial court commit error in granting the writ of mandamus and ordering the writ to issue, commanding respondent, as treasurer of Walker county, to pay the warrant for $15 allowed, drawn, and payable to relator and petitioner as probation officer and clerk of the domestic relations court of Walker county?
The demurrer of respondent, among other things, was on the following ground: "Because that portion of section 2, which provides that the County shall pay to the Probation Officer, fifty cents for each day said prisoner is confined under sentence for violating section 2 of the Acts of 1919, on February 18, 1919, is violating section 45 of the Constitution of Alabama, in that the duties required by the said section as to allowances are not a part of, embraced in, cognate or germane to, the caption of said act."
The demurrer was overruled, and, upon the petition, answer, and evidence, the writ of mandamus was ordered as prayed, and the costs in that behalf incurred were taxed against respondent.
The act (Acts of 1915, p. 560), or so much thereof in section 1 as may fix a charge upon the counties of fifty cents per day, upon the sentence of the derelict, to be paid out of the general fund to a probation officer to be expended, etc., and "whether the county did or did not collect the same upon the said sentence, is foreign to the title of the said act," was condemned in Board of Revenue and Road Com'rs of Mobile County v. State ex rel. Roberts,
The Attorneys General, in opinions to county officials on this point (under the Acts of 1915, p. 560; Acts of 1919, page 176), formerly advised the nonliability of the county, unless the sum ordered paid was actually received by the county from the hire of said convict. Report of Attorney General, 1924-26, p. 314; Report of Attorney General, 1924-26, p. 336; 2 Opinion Attorney General, page 229, to Director of Child Welfare Department, of date of June 28th, 1927; Report of Attorney General, 1928-1930, page 183.
The opinion, however, to the county board of revenue of Tuscaloosa county, on July 10, 1931, under section 4480 of the Code and Gen. Acts 1927, pp. 52 and 54, was to the contrary.
It has been frequently announced that the courts will presume such an act as constitutional, unless it appears to contrary effect, when the meaning of the act is looked to as a whole and under existing law (Sadler v. Langham,
And under the amended statute, this court has treated the same as valid and constitutionally enacted; and the several acts on the subject have been construed and applied in pari materia. State ex rel. Sellers v. Murphy, Judge,
Adverting to the statute of 1915, page 560, which was condemned in Board of Revenue, etc., v. State ex rel. Roberts,
We are of opinion, and so hold, that the act (Acts 1919, p. 176) in respects here challenged by demurrer is not to be condemned for duplicity; that the matter embraced in its section 1 is cognate and germane and offends no provision of section 45 of the Constitution. Fuqua v. City of Mobile,
Would it "be illegal to pay said sum" by reason of other provisions of the Constitution?
Thus we are brought to a consideration of the last objection urged against that statute; that it is offensive to section 94 of the Constitution, which forbids the Legislature to authorize any county to lend its credit or to grant public money or thing of value in aid of, or to any individual, etc. Southern Railway Co. v. Hartshorne,
"In adjudicating the constitutionality of a statute, it is the duty of the courts, in deference to the legislative department of the government, to so construe both the constitutional and the statutory provisions, if possible, that the statute may be upheld; but a constitutional provision, protective of the rights of persons and property, and remedial in its nature, is not to be construed so literally or strictly as to defeat the purposes for which it was intended; and a new provision, incorporated in a revised constitution, is to be construed in connection with the facts of public history, showing the causes in which it originated, and the mischief it was intended to remedy and prevent."
" 'In no project originated by individuals, whether associated or otherwise, with a view to gain, are the municipalities named permitted to participate in such manner as to incur pecuniary liability. They can neither become stockholders, nor furnish money or credit for the benefit of the parties interested therein.' Operation should be given to the provision in the constitution co-extensive with the evils to be prevented. A loan of credit, or grant of money or thing of value in aid of an individual or corporation, in any mode, directly or indirectly, falls within its operation."
In Ala. State Bridge Corp'n v. Smith,
The phase of the subject here pertinent had been adverted to in 13 R. C. L. 1191, § 222, as follows: "* * * it has been held that a statute which provides that the fine imposed on the husband for abandoning his wife shall be paid to the wife or to the guardian or custodian of his minor child or children, is violative of a constitutional provision that 'no appropriation for private or individual purposes shall be made.' It has also been held that a statute which empowers the court, instead of imposing a fine, to require the defendant to pay a certain sum weekly to his wife, or custodian of his minor child or children, and to release the defendant from custody upon his entering into a recognizance to comply with the order, is invalid under a constitutional provision that 'no power of suspending laws shall be exercised except by the legislature.' Ex parte Smythe,
The agreed statement of facts discloses that no fine has been paid or earned by the husband; that the county has received and will receive nothing for the hire of the convict to the state board of administration, and that there are no net earnings to which the county *250 will be entitled; that compensation for the support of the wife and children, if it is to be made, must be at the rate provided by the statute from the general funds of that county not otherwise appropriated. This would be an appropriation of the county's funds, "or grant of public money" for private or individual purpose, "in aid of, or to any individual" that was within the interdiction of section 94 of the Constitution under the judgment rendered by the circuit court.
The petition should have been denied by the lower court on the pleading and agreed statement of facts showing that there were no available funds, and the county could not appropriate them under section 94 to individual aid. That is to say, if, on the other hand, there were such earnings paid to the county for services of that convict (delivered to the state board of administration under Gen. Acts 1927, pp. 52, 54), such moneys would have been available for the support (under sections 4480, 4481, Code) of the wife and children, either or both, as the case was; otherwise the general fund of the county was not available to that end — in aid of the individuals at interest.
The county had the election to punish the convict at "hard labor" pursuant to his conviction and judgment, or to deliver him for such purpose to the state board of administration. Having voluntarily elected and pursued the latter course of punishment of the convict, under the statute (Gen. Acts 1927, page 54) the county was entitled (under section 6 of said act) to have that board account for that labor and pay over the "net earnings" to the county for the beneficiaries under the statute.
Thus we are brought to the instant facts, where the county had no such earnings from the labor of that convict. If so, it must audit and pay the same; if not, it cannot use the general funds of the county for the aid of individuals, though they be the prisoner's immediate dependent family.
This construction and administration saves any portion of the statute from constitutional inhibitions (section 94, Const.), as where there are no "earnings" of the convict that have accrued (1) directly to the county by it putting the convict to hard labor (chapter 157, Code § 4479 et seq., and other statutes as to hard labor of county convicts); or (2) where the convict was voluntarily delivered by the county to the state board of administration, and there from his punishment at hard labor no "net earnings" accrued, no payment can be exacted of the county's general fund.
We may observe as to such "earnings" or "net earnings" of that convict, under section 4480 et seq., Code, that such special fund is impressed by the statute and the nature of the punishment imposed thereunder, and, when collected by the county, is impressed with or for the "use of defendant's wife, or his child, or children, or both," and shall be "expended or disbursed for such use," as directed by the statute. Such earnings do not become a part of the general fund of the county, nor of the special or fine and forfeiture fund of that county, as is generally provided for "net earnings" of county convicts. Gen. Acts 1927, p. 54, § 6. Such earnings, when collected by the county, are within the influence of chapter 157 of the Code, "Husband and Wife," page 445, §§ 4479-4481; and, when not so collected, may not be paid out of the general fund of said county (for the benefit of the convict's family) which is not available for such purpose, and to so do would be offensive to section 94 of the Constitution.
Under the agreed statement of facts, the county should not be compelled by mandamus to pay out its general fund contrary to the provisions of section 94 of the Constitution, to the end indicated by the instant ruling.
The writ was improperly granted by the circuit court.
ANDERSON, C. J., and BROWN and FOSTER, JJ., concur.
GARDNER and BOULDIN, JJ., dissent.
KNIGHT, J., not sitting.