19 Iowa 43 | Iowa | 1865
Article 3, § 30, of the Constitution of Iowa, is as follows : “ The General Assembly shall not pass local or special laws in the following cases: For the assessment and collection of taxes for State, county or road purposes; for laying out, opening and working roads or highways; for ¿changing the names of persons; for the incorporation of cities and towns;.for vacating roads, town plats, streets, alleys or public squares ; for locating or changing county seats.
In all the cases above enumerated, and in all other cases where a general law can .be made applicable, all laws shall be general, and of uniform operation throughout the State." * * * *
■ The evils resulting from local and special legislation, which prompted this constitutional inhibition, were numerous, and are proper to be considered in determining the true construction of this clause of that instrument. Among these evils was the granting of exclusive privileges to certain persons to the prejudice of others; the inequality of the laws and want of uniformity in their operation resulting in confusion, and often in injustice; and, among others, the possibility of improper motives in legislators, who, to secure the passage of a law of supposed advantage to a part or all of their immediate constituency, might readily unite with others having like special schemes, and thus, by a system of combination which has been denominated “ log
Two inquiries then remain: 1st. Is this a local or special law ? and, 2d. Can a general law be made applicable ?
First: A special act is one wbicb only operates upon particular /persons and private concerns. 1 Blackst., 86,
The term “ local act (or statute) ” is one of modern origin,, and has therefore no defined meaning in the common law, and yet there is no room for reasonable doubt as to its proper signification. Local, according to Webster, means “ pertaining to a place, or to a fixed and limited portion of space;” according to Bouvier it means, “fixedness in a place, as local courts, or courts fixed in a particular place.” (Bouvier’s Law Diet.)
The act in question establishes a court in .a particular place, to wit, McGregor, its jurisdiction is confined to the corporate limits of that town, and extends only to suits brought for violations of its ordinances, and in other cases to persons-served and property found therein. The judge must bean elector of the town, and reside and hold his court in it.. He is elective by its inhabitants. The marshal of McGregor is the officer of his court, and the prosecuting attorney is also to be elective by the voters of that municipality; and its judgments are liens ex vi termini, only upon property within its corporate limits. And, indeed, the act has-every characteristic of a local statute, which it is possible' to incorporate into any law. And a very satisfactory evidence that it was so regarded by the legislature, is found ip the fact, that the act itself provides that it shall take effect by publication, “ provided such publication be without expense to the State.1’ Showing thereby that the legislature regarded the act, not as a general law, the burdens of which ought to be borne by the people of the whole State; but as a local law, the expenses of which ought and should be paid by the people of the locality for which it was enacted. It is then beyond question a local law within the meaning of that term, as used in our Constitution.
Second: Can a general law be made applicable? Why not? The legislature has wisely provided, by general law,
It would not be difficult to show that a general law could be made applicable, even without the practical demonstration already afforded us by our legislature. But it is unnecessary to do so, since the judgment of every person of ordinary understanding, who has not, as well as the experience of those who have, drafted legislative acts, will unerringly teach that it can readily and easily be done. Certain judicial powers could be conferred upon cities of the “ first class;” lesser powers upon those of the second class; and still less upon towns. So that the authority conferred would be equal to the wants of the respective municipalities.
How perfectly consistent with the Constitution, and how infinitely better such a general law than the endless variety of judicial powers, which would follow a course of local legislation like the,act in question. The conferring of different jurisdictions upon the various cities and towns of the State, after the manner of the act under discussion, and in accordance with the peculiar wishes of each municipality would bring upon the people of the State the very mischief the constitutional prohibition was designated to remedy.
Without stopping to quote at length the various decisions and reasonings of this and other courts, in support of the foregoing views, we content ourselves with simply
Reversed.