Brawner v. Supervisors of Election

4 Balt. C. Rep. 138
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJune 19, 1922
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 138 (Brawner v. Supervisors of Election) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brawner v. Supervisors of Election, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 138 (Md. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

STEIN, J.

This proceeding was brought to have determined by the Court of Appeals the constitutionality vel non of Chapter 448 of the Acts of 1922, Commonly called the “Bonus Act,” whose purpose as set out in the title of the Act is “to provide suitable recognition for those residents of Maryland who served In the army and navy of the United States during the war with Germany, to authorize the creation of a State debt [139]*139not to exceed $9,000,000 for this purpose and to provide for the levying of taxes for paying interest on said debt and for the redemption of said debt, and providing for a referendum thereon.”

The petitioner, a resident and taxpayer of Baltimore City, by mandamus against the Supervisors of Election of this city seeks to prevent the submission to the voters at the next general election to be held on November 7, 1922, of the question as to whether or not the above act “shall become effective or be null and void”; the petitioner claiming the act is unconstitutional and void (a) because the act purports to work an amendment to the Constitution of the State of Maryland in manner contrary to the mandatory provisions of Article XIV, Section 1, thereof; (b) because the act is contrary to Article III, Section 31 of the Constitution of Maryland, to wit: “* * * the credit of the State shall not in any manner be given, or loaned to, or in aid of any individual, association or corporation”; (c) because it contravenes the express inhibition of Article III, Section 59 of said State Constitution, to wit: “* * * The office of State Pension Commissioner is hereby abolished, and the Legislature shall pass no law creating such office or establishing any general pension system within the State” ; (d) because its title is insufficient, misleading and does not aptly describe the purpose of said legislation contrary to the mandatory provisions of Article III, Section 29 of said State Constitution ; (e) because, in providing for the levying of taxes and the expenditure of the monies to be thereby derived for the purpose named in said Act of Assembly, it contravenes Section 40 of Article TIT of the State Constitution which forbids the taking of private property for other than a public use and that only upon payment of due compensation, and (f) because the act which purports (by Section 21 thereof) to authorize the issuance of bonds dated August 1, 1922, and maturing January 1, 1988, contravenes Article III, Section 34 of said State Constitution, which requires the discharge of all such debts by the State within fifteen years from the time of contracting the same and because the act is class legislation authorizes the taking of private property for private purposes and (g) because, in denial of your petitioner’s right to the protection of equal laws, the said act arbitrarily confers upon a limited class of persons, capriciously and unreasonably determined to be entitled to a State gratuity, certain exclusive rights and privileges and makes them the recipients of gratuitous emoluments at the grievous cost and expense of your petitioner as a taxpayer; (h) because it operates to deprive your petitioner of his property without due process of law, in that without the tender of any compensation whatsoever to your petitioner, he will be coerced into the payment of additional taxes on Ms aforesaid property, the proceeds whereof will be devoted exclusively to the grant of money to private individuals in open violation of the Constitution of Maryland, and (i) because, until amended or repealed in the manner therein provided, the Constitution of Maryland constitutes a contract between said State of Maryland and your petitioner whereunder, infer alia (Bill of Rights; Articles 15, 23 and 44, Constitution; Article III, Section 40), the authority of the General Assembly is expressly limited and defined; that, said act is an open, flagrant and indefensible violation thereof, and that the affirmation, as valid, of the aforesaid act would not only be inconsistent with, but repugnant to, the Constitution of the United States. This is an elaboration of Section A, supra, that the clause submitting the act to the popular vote of the whole State for acceptance or rejection is a surrender of legislative power inhibited by the State Constitution.

The Supervisors of Election, by the Attorney General, answered that neither the act nor any of its provisions contain anything inhibited by the Slate or Eederal Constitution, setting-up that the act is constitutional. The; petitioner demurred to the answer; the questions involved were submitted and argued at great length and with unusual skill by counsel. I am called upon to examine and decide these questions, so that an appeal may be had, the record prepared and sent up in time for hearing by the Court of Appeals on next Thursday, June 22, 1922; because, if the act is held constitutional, the Secretary of State must take some action early next fall, which does not give sufficient time for the cause to be properly argued and considered at the September Term.

[140]*140At the hearing the petitioner submitted more than one hundred authorities; the respondent a number; I found others not submitted or referred to by either.

To examine and analyze these cases, so as to determine the principle upon which the decision in' each rests, within the time available for that purpose, is impossible not only because of the number of them, but because upon what I think is the important principle governing the decision in this case, the authorities, both judges and authors of equal weight, are in almost hopeless conflict. Without quoting any authorities, I hold:

1. That by the act, the State does not give or loan its credit to any individual or association or corporation, and is not inimical to Article III, Section 24, of the Constitution, which forbids the once common practice of the States endorsing its notes or bonds and the giving of them for private purposes.

2. The act does not establish any general pension system within the State, but merely follows an immemo rial custom of recognizing the services of its citizen-soldiers. The State, without objection, has established pensions for judges and school teachers, made provisions for burying deceased sailors, soldiers and marines who fought in the Civil War, Code Article 88A, Section 8.

3. Section 29 of Article II holds that every law shall embrace but one subject, and that shall be described in its title, which the Court of Appeals have held to mean—

1. That the title shall not be misleading, that it must not apparently limit the enactment to a much narrower scope than the body of the act imposes, but that it need not give an abstract of the act, nor the means and the method by which the purpose is to be accomplished. Painter vs. Mattfeld, 119 Md. 467, 474-495; Ridgely vs. Baltimore, 119 Md. 567-574.

The title of the act is:

AN ACT to provide suitable recognition for those residents of Maryland who served in the army and navy of the United States during the war with Germany, to authorize the creation of a State debt not to exceed $9,000,000 for this purpose and to provide for the levying of taxes for paying interest on said debt, and for the redemption of said debt, and providing for a referendum thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brawner-v-supervisors-of-election-mdcirctctbalt-1922.