24 Or. 558 | Or. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a suit brought by a taxpayer of the city of Astoria to enjoin the city from incurring any further expense in assessing and collecting a city tax for the year 1893. The question sought to be raised is the right of the city of Astoria to assess and collect a city tax for said
By this act the power to assess and collect taxes, conferred on the different cities of the state by their charters, and also upon the different school districts, as well as the duties connected therewith, is transferred to the county officers designated therein. Section 38 of the special act incorporating the city of Astoria provides that its common council shall have power “ to assess, levy, and collect taxes for general municipal purposes, upon all property, real and personal, which is taxable by law for state and county purposes.” It will be observed that the effect of the general act is to eliminate from section 38 of the special act the power conferred on the common council to assess and collect taxes for municipal purposes, and to transfer it and the duties connected therewith to the officers of the county so designated. This, it is claimed, is such a change or alteration of section 38 as, in effect, amends it without conforming to the requirements of section 22, article IV. of the constitution; and hence that such a change or alteration could not be legally made without setting forth and publishing at full length such section as changed or modified. The question to be determined, then, is whether the general act comes within the scope of the constitutional provision invoked. The language of that provision is both prohibitory and mandatory. By its terms it inhibits the revision or amendment of an act by mere reference to its title, and requires that the act revised, or section amended, shall be inserted at length. It does not purport to limit or restrict the power of the legislature in the enactment of laws; it relates only to the mode or form in which the legislative power shall be exercised. Its prohibition is against legislation effected by modes not in conformity
As the general act under consideration deprives the cities and school districts of the state of the power to assess and collect taxes, a power which had been theretofore conferred upon them by special and general laws, it is claimed that this is such a change or alteration of those laws in that particular as is amendatory, and that, unless the general law sets forth and republishes at length the part or section thereof as amended, it directly falls within the constitutional inhibition, and is void. Hence, as the effect of the act is to take from the city of Astoria the power conferred upon it by section 38 of its charter, to assess and collect taxes, it is amendatory of that section, and for like reason, unconstitutional. This construction of the constitutional provision in question is based on the assumption that any act of the legislature which, in effect, alters or changes an existing law, or part thereof, is an amendment of it, and void, unless it inserts the law at length, or such part as is changed or amended. In support of this construction we are cited to the case of State v. Wright, 14 Or. 369 (12 Pac. Rep. 708), in which Strahan, J., said: “ In legislation, an amendment means an alteration in the draft of a bill proposed, or in a law already passed: Rapalje, Law Diet. Title, Amendment. So that if this act alters the legal effect of the charter of the city of Astoria in a particular already covered and provided for by the charter, then it is to be taken as an amendment of the charter. This is not a case where new and additional powers are added by way of supplement, but the change or alteration of an existing power; and I think it is too plain for argument that it is an amendatory statute.” In that case the act under consideration provided, in substance, that “ every person obtaining a license to sell spirituous or vinous liquors shall pay into the treasury of the
The city of Astoria having the power conferred on it by section 38 of its charter, to assess, levy, and collect taxes for municipal purposes, the effect of the general act in conferring upon the county officers the power to assess and collect taxes, but not to levy them, for cities and school districts of the state, was to deprive the city of the right to exercise such power, and, as a consequence, the act operated to change or alter section 38 of the charter of Astoria by striking out the power to assess and collect taxes; or, in other words, it operated to amend such section by repealing, pro tanto, that portion of it by implication. But the act does not purport to be an amendment of any previous statute, special or general; it is an independent act of legislation, complete and perfect in itself. The power conferred, and the duties imposed, and all matters
This constitutional provision must receive a reasonable construction, with a view to give it effect. The mischief designed to be remedied was the enactment of amendatory statutes in terms so blind that legislators themselves were sometimes deceived in regard to their effect, and the public, from the difficulty in making the necessary examination and comparison, failed to become apprised of the changes made in the laws. An amendatory act which purported only to insert certain words, or to substitute one phrase for another, in an act or section which was only referred to but not published, was well calculated to mislead the careless as to its effect, and was, perhaps, some times drawn in that form for that express purpose. Endless confusion was thus introduced into the law, and the constitution wisely prohibited such legislation. But an act complete in itself is not within the mischief designed to be remedied by this provision, and cannot be held to be prohibited by it without violating its plain intent.”
In coming to the conclusion reached in this case, we have not overlooked the principle that a general law will not be considered as modifying or repealing a special or local law, except by express words or necessary implication. “Laws special and local in their application,” says Allen, J., “are not deemed repealed by general legislation, except upon the clearest manifestation of the legislature to effect such repeal, and ordinarily an express repeal by some intelligible reference to the special act is necessary to accomplish that end ”: People v. Quigg, 59 N. Y. 88. “ But,” as was said by Dixon, J., “ there is no rule of law which prohibits the repeal of a special act by a general one; nor is there any principle forbidding such repeal without the use of express words declarative of the legislative intent to repeal the entire statute ”: New Brunswick v. Williamson, 44 N. J. Law, 167. The question is one of intention, and the purpose of the general act to modify or repeal the special act must be clearly manifested,— the conflict must be irreconcilable, — in the absence of expresa words declarative of the legislative intent: Brown v. City of Lowell, 8 Metc. 172; Brown v. County Commissioners, 21 Pa. St. 42; State v. Fitzporter, 17 Mo. App. 273; Fosdick v. Village of Perrysburg, 14 Ohio St. 485-6; Sedgwick, Statutory Law, 123. In the case at bar the intent of the general act to interfere with the power conferred by section 38 of the charter is clearly manifest, and the last section is expressly declarative of that purpose.
In State v. Wright, 14 Or. 369 (12 Pac. 708), the general and special act, in the particular noted, are not only clearly