251 P. 895 | Or. | 1926
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *246 The vital question raised herein is whether that portion of Chapter 162, General Laws of Oregon 1925, requiring the plaintiff to pay a fee of $5 to "cover the appearance" of the district attorney in such suit is valid. Plaintiff contends that that portion of the act of 1925, requiring the payment of such fee, is unconstitutional and provides for taking private property for "private" use, in violation of Article I, Section 18, of the Constitution of Oregon, and imposes a special burden on plaintiffs in divorce suits, not required of other litigants, and therefore repugnant to Article I, Section 20 of the Constitution. That portion of the legislative act under consideration reads as follows:
"There shall be collected by the county clerk of each county at the time of the filing of each divorce action or proceeding for having a marriage declared void, in the circuit court for such county, in addition to all other fees collected, a fee of $5.00 `to cover the appearance' of the district attorney in such action, and the said county clerk shall, on the first working day of each month forward all moneys collected for such additional fees during the preceding month to the state treasurer with a detailed statement showing the purposes for which such fees are paid, which shall be placed to the credit of the general fund of the state of Oregon; provided, that all moneys so collected and paid to the state treasurer shall be considered and constitute a continuing appropriation for the purpose of paying a portion of the monthly salaries of the various district attorneys of the state of Oregon, as provided in this act. The secretary of state shall keep a separate account of all such moneys collected under the provisions of this act and shall issue warrants on such account in payment of the monthly salaries of the various district attorneys to the extent that there are sufficient funds in the special account herein created to pay the total monthly salary *248 of one or more district attorneys. When the funds in such special account shall be reduced to such an extent as not to be sufficient to pay at least one district attorney's monthly salary, then in that event the balance of the monthly salaries of the district attorneys shall be paid from the regular biennial appropriation for the payment of salaries of district attorneys."
In the consideration of this question we start with the proposition that every reasonable presumption is in favor of the validity of the statute. The legislature can enact any law not repugnant to the organic law of the land: State v. Hecker,
Divorce is prima facie prejudicial to the public good. The state is therefore a party defendant in every divorce suit, and hence every divorce suit is in effect a suit against the state:Hawley v. Hawley,
The statute in question is in complete harmony with the long-established policy in the United States, expressed as follows in 19 C.J., p. 19:
"A divorce cannot be had except in that court upon which the state has conferred jurisdiction, and then only for those causes and with those formalities which the state has by statute prescribed. The married status of parties, being a matter of public interest, and controlled by the sovereign will for the benefit of the community at large, cannot be dissolved by the mere act or consent of the parties. The state is an implied party to all suits for divorces. * *"
See, also, Pennoyer v. Neff,
The state has a right to place divorce litigants in a special class for the reason that in the other ordinary forms of civil litigation the state is not a party, nor are the services of the district attorney required, as in divorce cases. The statute therefore does not violate any of the constitutional provisions that prohibit class legislation: State ex rel. v.Dunbar,
Parties to a judicial proceeding are required to contribute toward the expense of maintaining courts of justice, or a particular action, suit or proceeding therein, by the payment of certain sums of money, which are denominated fees. The sum of $5 which the statute in question requires each divorce applicant to pay is purely a fee, and is in no sense a tax: Section 1111, Or. L.; State ex rel. v. Dunbar,
The statute here in question is by no means new or unfamiliar legislation in this state. A similar statute was previously in existence for many years, as shown by Hill's Code, §§ 1073, 1074, and Bellinger Cotton's Code, §§ 1097, 1098. Bellinger Cotton's Code provides, in Section 1098, that:
"Plaintiff in Divorce Suit must deposit Ten Dollars before complaint filed. * * It is hereby made the duty of the plaintiff in every divorce suit to deposit with the clerk of the court in which the suit is instituted, before the complaint is filed, the sum of ten dollars, which sum shall be paid to the district attorney *250 by the clerk as his fee in such suit, when his fee therein is allowed by the court as aforesaid; and if the plaintiff prevail in such suit, he or she shall be allowed such sum of ten dollars as a disbursement against the defendant."
This statute was finally repealed by Chapter 202, Laws of 1907, *362.
In the case of State ex rel. v. Moore,
"The fee required by section 1074 to be paid to the clerk by the plaintiff in a divorce suit is a mere deposit for the district attorney, and not for his own use or that of the county. Under the law as it stood prior to the act of 1898, placing the district attorney upon a salary, he was entitled to such fee as compensation for his services. Since that act the fee still remains, and the district attorney is required to collect it as before but, he must pay it over to the county treasurer for the use and benefit of the county. So we conclude that neither the act of 1895 nor that of 1899 operated to repeal the provisions of § 1074 of the statute, requiring the plaintiff in a divorce proceeding to deposit with the county clerk $10 as a district attorney fee."
So in the case of Howard v. Clatsop County,
Passing now, however, to a consideration of the constitutional question on its merits, we think that the statute now under discussion, namely, Chapter 162, Laws of 1925, is in all respects constitutional and valid.
The State of Oregon has a vital interest in keeping a husband and wife together, if possible, for the sake of their offspring and for the general welfare of society. With this end in view the legislature enacted Section 1020, Or. L.
Since the state is a party defendant in every divorce suit it follows that every divorce suit is in effect a suit against the state. "Public policy," as was said by Mr. Justice BURNETT in the case of Rapp v. Multnomah County,
As stated in 9 R.C.L., page 245, Section 5, "in this country it is the province of the legislatures of the several states to regulate the subject of divorce *252 * *, and the power of the legislature over the subject of marriage as a civil status and its dissolution is unlimited and supreme except as restricted by the constitution."
A statute repealing all divorce laws has been held constitutional: 9 R.C.L., § 9.
The State of Oregon having as it does the undoubted power to prescribe the terms and conditions upon which divorces may be obtained, was simply exercising that inherent and self-evident power when it said to each divorce applicant as it did by the enactment of the 1925 statute now in question, "In order for you to be permitted to sue for a divorce you must pay a fee of $5 to cover the appearance of the district attorney, whose duty it is to `prevent fraud and collusion.'"
The validity of the statute is not affected by the fact that it provides that the $5 fee paid by divorce applicants shall be forwarded to the state treasurer and used for the purpose of paying a portion of the monthly salaries of the various district attorneys. "We conceive," it was said by Mr. Chief Justice WATSON in the case of City of Portland v. Besser et al.,
Neither is there any merit in the plaintiff's claim that the statute in question imposes a special tax and unequal burden, for as was said by this court in the case of State ex rel. v.Dunbar,
"In cases in which the manner of compensating officers has been changed from fees to a salary, it has been held that the collection for the use and benefit of the state under legislative authority of the fees theretofore provided as a compensation to the officer is not objectionable as being a special tax, but that it is competent for the legislature, if it sees proper, to exact from persons especially benefited by the performance of an official service a reasonable compensation therefor, to be paid into the public treasury to reimburse the public for the expense incurred in providing for and maintaining such office. Conner
v. Mayer, 2 Sandf. (N.Y.) 255; State ex rel. Attorney-General
v. The Judges,
The district attorney's fee of $5 prescribed by the statute is simply a court cost and like any other court cost will be taxed as a disbursement in favor of the successful divorce applicant. This statute, after all, is but another expression of that rule of public policy which has existed in the State of Oregon ever since it became a state, and which is set forth as follows, in Section 1111, Or. L.:
"Parties to a judicial proceeding are required to contribute towards the expense of maintaining courts of justice, or a particular action, suit, or proceeding therein, by the payment of certain sums of money, as provided in this chapter, which are denominated trial and district attorney fees."
We conclude that the statute in question contains a valid requirement for the payment of a $5 fee as compensation for the appearance of the district attorney in a divorce suit.
It follows that the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
McBRIDE, BROWN and BELT, JJ., concur. *254