Abrasley v. Jefferson County

4 So. 2d 153, 241 Ala. 660, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 29, 1941
Docket6 Div. 896.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 4 So. 2d 153 (Abrasley v. Jefferson County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abrasley v. Jefferson County, 4 So. 2d 153, 241 Ala. 660, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 186 (Ala. 1941).

Opinion

FOSTER, Justice.

This is a suit filed under the Declaratory Judgments Act of Alabama, Code of Alabama 1940, Title 7, sections 156 et seq., to determine and declare the legal and constitutional status of Jefferson County and the *665 city of Birmingham in certain aspects of the Voting Machine Act of Alabama, approved August 25, 1939, Acts 1939, page 443, Code 1940, Tit. 17, § 91, as amended by the Act approved July 10, 1940, Acts 1939, page 989.

Different questions are presented in respect to each of them separately. Our conclusions are based on the Act as it now exists without reference to such local legislation as may be hereafter enacted, pursuant to the authority contained in the constitutional amendment to which we will refer.

Taking first the county of Jefferson and its problem as here involved. It is a question of constitutional debt limit under section 224, Constitution, which it is thought is not defintely settled by the recent case of Wharton v. Knight, ante, p. 218, 2 So.2d 310.

The Voting Machine'Amendment to the Constitution, see, Act of March 31, 1939, Special Session of 1939, page 20, in no respect places an obligation on a county which is a limitation on section 224, Constitution. The purpose of that amendment was to grant authority to the legislature, by general or local law, to permit the use of voting machines. It was evidently the result of the decision of this Court in McCall v. Automatic Voting Machine Corp., 236 Ala. 10, 180 So. 695. This amendment is not self-acting, but requires an enabling act or acts. It is not mandatory, but grants merely authority to the legislature so as to relieve the election law of the necessity of uniformity throughout the State in this respect. Its whole tenor is one of subservience to constitutional limitations in all other respects. The legislature has a wide discretion, but it is to be exercised within constitutional requirements. So that while the legislature may make the use of machines mandatory, and require a county to pay for them, such requirement is necessarily limited to the constitutional powers of the county. If the county does not have the funds to be used in paying cash, or sufficient current revenue, and has already become indebted to the full limit of constitutional authority, the mandate is for the time being ineffective, and elections in that event ‘should be conducted as though there were no such requirement. The fact that elections are a necessary function of our Government does not serve to place elections by voting machines as a necessary function so as to supersede constitutional requirements and limitations. It is the province of the legislature to prescribe the priority of payments out of county funds. It has undertaken to do so. See Code of 1940, Title 12, § 121; and in Title 17, section 198 has provided that the fees of the officers of the election shall be paid as preferred claims out of the county treasury. See, also, section 167. And claims made so by law, ’called involuntary, take precedence over general and voluntary claims. Brown v. Gay-Padgett Co., 188 Ala. 423, 66 So. 161.

The bill alleges that proposals have been made to the county for the sale and for the lease of such machines. But whether for sale or lease, they contemplate that the county will bind itself to pay an amount not limited to current revenue available for the purpose, thereby creating a financial obligation of the county not of a self-liquidating sort. It is immaterial whether consideration for such an obligation is called the purchase price or the lease price of the property.

We have said that section 224, Constitution, does not prohibit a county which has reached its debt limit from contracting liabilities for current expenses in anticipation of current revenue, and which are to be paid alone from such revenue. Brown v. Gay-Padgett Co., supra; Jefferson County v. State ex rel. Carmichael, 233 Ala. 148, 170 So. 70. But an obligation for operations during a current year cannot be made payable out of revenues from subsequent years without thereby becoming a debt in contemplation of section 224, Constitution.

An election expense, which may .include the rental cost of voting machines, is one of current operation and payable out of revenues of that year. If made payable out of revenues of a succeeding year, it thereby creates a debt against■ the county in the contemplation of section 224, Constitution.

The Act of 1939, supra, section 3(h), Code 1940, Tit. 17, § 93, looks to the possible inability to purchase the machines on account of debt limit, or the economic desirability of not doing so, by providing that the county shall (at its option we interpolate) either purchase or rent the machines with or without the option to purchase, provided the rental or lease price shall not exceed ten per cent, of the purchase price. But the constitutional power of a county must be considered in determining whether an option right thus grant-

*666 ed is available. The burden which the law places upon counties to pay election expenses is one imposed by the legislature and not the Constitution. Code of 1940, Title 17, sections 167, 198. And the fact that it is involuntary does not serve to increase the debt limit under section 224, Constitution. But has the effect of making it a preferred claim against the county, taking precedence over general and voluntary obligations. Brown v. Gay-Padgett Co., supra (see 188 Ala. at page 431, 66 So. 161). But when the obligation, whether imposed by law as involuntary or whether it is voluntarily assumed without legal compulsion, is to pay more money than can be supplied by current funds, it is an indebtedness within the Constitution. Brown v. Gay-Padgett Co., supra, 188 Ala. at page 427, 66 So. 161. This does not conflict with the power of the legislature to impose on counties certain expense, as future election costs, applicable to future elections, and to make such costs payable by the county out of revenues received for the year in which the election is had, without creating a debt prohibited by the Constitution.

We now consider the question of the duty of the city of Birmingham as a municipal corporation to supply voting machines, either by purchase or by renting them for use in elections hereafter held, in said city.

The election was held under the Act of 1939, supra, on the call of the County Commission of Jefferson County upon a petition filed with it and signed by the requisite number of qualified voters of the county. The residents of the city of Birmingham,' as voters of the county, participated as did those in other portions of the county. There was no election held at the instance of the city commission' as a city project. Section 3 of the Act, supra, (a) and (d) provides for such separate election projects. And in clause (h) of section 3 and (a) of section 4, Code 1940, Tit. 17, § 94, and in section 6, Code 1940, Tit. 17, § 98, it is provided that in event a county or municipality shall vote in the majority for the --use of voting machines, the county board or the city commission shall either purchase the necessary number of voting machines for said county (or) municipality, or shall rent or lease them. And in section 4(f), Code 1940, Tit. 17, § 95, it is provided that a county or city may by a majority vote direct the discontinuances of the use of voting machines.

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Bluebook (online)
4 So. 2d 153, 241 Ala. 660, 1941 Ala. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abrasley-v-jefferson-county-ala-1941.