108 So. 231 | Ala. | 1926
Appellant operates a lumber yard within the police jurisdiction, but outside the corporate limits of the city of Montgomery, and prosecutes this appeal from a judgment of conviction for the violation of an ordinance of said city requiring a license for the transaction of such business. That portion of the ordinance here pertinent reads as follows:
"Section 15. Any person, firm or corporation engaged in any business outside of the city of Montgomery, but within the police jurisdiction thereof, shall pay one-half of the amount of license imposed for like business within the city of Montgomery. It is the purpose of this section to license for police and fire protection only, and not for revenue."
The territorial limit as to the police jurisdiction outside the corporate limits of cities is prescribed by section 1954, Code of 1923, being based upon a population classification. Under the provisions of the General Acts of 1919, p. 1030 (section 2173, Code of 1923), appellant would not have been subject to such license here imposed. But the Legislature in 1923 (Gen. Acts 1923, p. 580) passed an act providing that any city which now or may hereafter have a population of not less than 30,000, and not more than 50,000, inhabitants may fix and collect licenses for any business done within the police jurisdiction of such city and without the limits thereof, with a proviso that the amount shall not be in excess of one-half the license charged for like business done within the city limits.
The constitutional validity of this latter act is the major question here presented; it being insisted that it is not a general, but a local, law, applicable under present conditions to Montgomery alone, and as such violative of section 106 of the Constitution, requiring publication of local enactments. This court has by repeated rulings recognized differences in population as a proper basis for the classification of municipalities (State ex rel. Gunter v. Thompson, 69 So. 461,
This doctrine was pressed too far by the lawmaking body, and the population classification, made the basis of enactments where the classification did not show a substantial difference in population, was not reasonably related to the purpose to be effected and to such difference in population, and was but arbitrarily fixed. Such laws were declared invalid as being local laws, guised as general laws, and violative of section 106 of the Constitution. Illustrations are found in Reynolds v. Collier,
We recognize it as our duty to sustain the act, unless it is clear beyond a reasonable doubt that it is violative of the fundamental laws. There is here a substantial *411 difference in population, and, upon the matter of a reasonable relation of the classification to the purpose to be effected and such difference in population, much must be left to legislative discretion. Reynolds v. Collier, supra. Good faith is to be presumed. We have referred to the fact that the statute (section 1954, Code of 1923) as to territorial extent of the police jurisdiction of cities outside of the corporate limits is rested upon a population classification. While not amendatory, but original in form, the act here in question in practical effect forms a proviso to section 2173, Code of 1923, thus permitting a license to be charged in an amount equal to one-half the regular city license for business conducted within the police jurisdiction, but outside the corporate limits in cities having the population therein prescribed — from 30,000 to 50,000 inhabitants.
The question of difference as to facilities for and expense of furnishing fire and police protection may have entered into consideration of the legislative mind in fixing the classification here involved. It is not sufficient that a suspicion arise that the act rests alone upon consideration of local needs, and we are not to "look beyond the act itself for motives." Crenshaw v. Joseph, supra.
Upon due consideration we are unable to say with perfect assurance that the Legislature may not have found differences between cities of this class and others having populations of less or more, which justified differences as to such license charges. Crenshaw v. Joseph, supra.
The case of State ex rel. v. Weakley, 45 So. 175,
Indulging all presumptions and intendments favorably thereto, we are not persuaded the act should be declared a local law, and thus violative of section 106 of the Constitution.
The ordinance appears upon its face to have been enacted in the exercise of the police power, and is presumed to be reasonable. Van Hook v. City of Selma,
Appellant sought to show that at the point where his lumber yard is located the service both as to fire and police protection was inadequate, but the trial court held such evidence immaterial to the issue presented. We think the ruling correct. These were executive or administrative matters, not involved in the question of the validity of the ordinance. We are cited to no authority holding that such an ordinance is subject to attack upon the ground that, in the opinion of the taxpayer, the police or fire protection was inadequate. Such questions are not to be presented in such form.
We are of the opinion the ordinance is valid, and the judgment of conviction should accordingly be here affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and MILLER, JJ., concur.