36 Fla. 703 | Fla. | 1895
Judgment was obtained by John Powell against Nathaniel Webster and E. Rigney in the Circuit Court for Duval county, and Webster desires to prosecute a writ of error from the judgment, but Rigney refuses to join therein. Webster -filed with the Clerk of the Circuit Court for Duval county a prcecipe for writ of error, reciting therein that Rigney refused to unite in the writ, and it appears that he complied with the law in reference to suing out writs of error in every respect, except giving the bond required by Chapter 4414, laws of 1895-. The Clerk of the Circuit Court refused to issue the writ solely because the* said bond was not given, and Webster applied to the clerk of this court to issue the writ. No bond as required by the act mentioned having been executed, the clerk of this court declined to issue the writ without directions from the court, and Webster has renewed his motion here for the issuance of the writ without the required bond.
This motion involves solely the constitutionality of Chapter 4414, laws of 1895; it being conceded that if this act was constitutionally passed, the writ should not issue without executing the bond required by it. The validity of the act in question is assailed in two grounds. One is that the title is insufficient to author
Our Constitution provides (sec. 16, Art. III) that “each law enacted in the Legislature shall embrace but one subject and matter properly connected therewith, which subject shall be briefly expressed in the title; and no law shall be amended or revised by reference to its title only; but in such case the act, as revised, or section, as amended, shall be re-enacted and published at length.” Such constitutional provisions are not of English origin, but of American growth, and they were designed to arrest certain abuses that had developed in legislation under our systems of government. What those abuses were, and the purpose for which such provisious were incorporated into organic law, are clearly shown by the judicial discussion that has arisen in the interpretation of such laws. We have recently had occasion to-consider the purpose and meaning of the provision of our Constitution as applied to certain acts of legislation, in the cases of State ex rel. vs. Green; County Commissioners vs. City of Jacksonville, and State ex rel. vs. Hocker, Judge, decided at this term, and we need not go over again the ground covered by these decisions. The provision of the Constitution mentioned is mandatory, and it is the duty of the court to enforce it. It is stated by Sutherland on Statutory Construction, sec. 82, that “the courts with great
It is evident- from reading the act (Chapter 4414,
Section 1272 does not provide for or regulate the issuance of writs of error, but it does provide the conditions upon which such writs shall operate as supersedeases, and to that extent it relates to supersedeas orders and supersedeas bonds. An act confined to the granting of supersedeas orders and the giving of supersedeas bonds, with a title to amend section 1272, relating to supersedeas orders and bonds, would be in compliance with the mandate of the Constitution as to-the expression of the subject-matter in the title. But a supersedeas and a writ of error are entirely different things. A writ of error does not per se affect the judgment, which may be executed while the writ is-pending, unless a supersedeas issues to stay the proceedings. Under the title to amend sections 1270 and 1272, relating to supersedeas orders and supersedeas
We do not consider the other ground urged as a reason why- the act is void, as it is not necessary.
The clerk of this court will issue the writ of error prayed for in the motion, and it will be so 'ordered.