Commissioner's Court of Winston County v. State Ex Rel. County Highway Commission

139 So. 356, 224 Ala. 247, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 524
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 28, 1932
Docket6 Div. 42.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 139 So. 356 (Commissioner's Court of Winston County v. State Ex Rel. County Highway Commission) 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
Commissioner's Court of Winston County v. State Ex Rel. County Highway Commission, 139 So. 356, 224 Ala. 247, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 524 (Ala. 1932).

Opinion

*248 BOULDIN, J,

This proceeding by mandamus seeks to require the court of county commissioners of Winston county to turn over the road machinery and equipment of the county to a county highway commission created by a local act of the Legislature, approved July 30th, 1931. Local Acts 1931, p. 298.

The constitutionality of this act was challenged by demurrer upon numerous, grounds.

Demurrer being overruled, and respondents desiring to raise no other question, mandamus was awarded.

The constitutionality of said act is therefore the sole question for review on this appeal.

The act is assailed upon the ground, among others, that it is violative of section 106 of the Constitution, in that the published notice of the intention to apply for its passage failed to “state the substance of the proposed law.”

The courts are expressly charged with the duty to pronounce void every local law which the journals do not affirmatively show was passed in accordance with the mandate of that section.

In Wallace v. Board of Revenue of Jefferson County, 140 Ala. 491, page 504, 37 So. 321, 324, the initial case calling for a construction of section 106, this court reviewed the history of former provisions, the evils intended to be remedied, and carefully defined the “substance of the proposed law” to mean “its essential and material parts, its essence, or an abstract or compendium of its substance, such as would give the people fair information of what it was.”

The distinction was there noted between the “subject” of legislation to be shown in the title, and the “substance” of a local law to be given by publication. The one must show what the law is about; the other what the law is, in substance.

The meaning then given to this section has been approved in numerous subsequent cases.

The application of this rule must turn much upon the act in question. Just what are the material and substantive provisions of the local law, as distinguished from matters of detail, may give rise to much difference of opinion.

In First Nat. Bank of Eutaw v. Smith, 217 Ala. 482, 485, 117 So. 38, 41, the full court again considered this section in the light of several decisions there cited, saying: “The principles declared by these cases seem to be: (1) That the ‘substance’ of the proposed law means, not merely the subject of it, but an intelligible abstract or synopsis of its material and substantial elements (Wallace v. Board of Revenue, 140 Ala. 491, 502, 37 So. 321; Law v. State, 142 Ala. 62, 38 So. 798); (2) the substance of the act may bp sufficiently stated without stating the details which are subsidiary to the stated elements (City of Uniontown v. State ex rel. Glass, 145 Ala. 471. 39 So. 814, 8 Ann. Gas. 320; Law v. State, supra; Mayor, etc., of Ensley v. Cohn, 149 Ala. 316, 42 So. 827); and (3) the Legislature is not inhibited from shaping up and working out the details of local legislation by amending bills when presented for consideration and passage.”

' That case dealt with an' amendment in course of passage, saying further: “* * * while more or less general provisions of the advertised substance of the act may be shaped up or elaborated by the Legislature before its final passage, by amendments which are consistent with that substance, the substance itself, as advertised, -cannot be thus materially changed or contradicted.”

In State v. Allen, 219 Ala. 590, 123 So. 36, again considered by the full court, the above excerpts were reiterated- and declared to be four well-defined canons of construction firmly settled.

In the latter case, emphasis is laid upon the misleading tendencies of allowing amendments working substantial changes from the act as published.

But it is to be kept in mind that the only logical ground upon which the act can be stricken down because of amendments is that the published notice did not' state the substance of the law as enacted. Such is the principle stated in First Nat. Bank of Eutaw v. Smith, supra. So we would not be understood as saying the publication of the proposed bill in full would make a provision thereof matter of substance which would otherwise be considered mere matter of detail.

Framing notices for publication in such indefinite form, as not to disclose the substance of the bill, leaving the author to insert what he will, wo-uld open the door to all the abuses section 106 is designed to lwevent. Cases condemning such practice are found in Wallace v. Board of Revenue, supra; Roper v. State ex rel. Day, 210 Ala. 440, 98 So. 286; State v. Speake, 144 Ala. 509, 39 So. 224.

Applying the above canons of construction to the act before us, we first set out the published notice, as follows:

“Notice is hereby given that a bill will be introduced at the special called session or at the regular adjourned session of Legislature of Alabama in 1931, in substance as follows:
“A bill to be Entitled an Act:
“To withdraw and take away from the Court of County Commissioners of Winston County, Alabama, all jurisdiction over public roads and bridges and public roads and bridges funds in said county; to create and *249 establish a highway commission for said county to be composed of the Probate Judge of said County and two other members to be appointed; and to invest said highway commission with jurisdiction and authority over public roads and bridges and over public road and bridge funds in and for said county; to provide for the terms of office and compensation of said members; and to define the powers, jurisdiction, duties, authority and responsibilities of said .commission; and to repeal all laws local and general in conflict herewith in so far as the same apply to Winston County, Alabama.”

The act cpntains eighteen sections, aggregating about 2,500 words. Many provisions may be regarded as matters of detail. Others go to the substance of the act; its material parts. We deal with some of them.

We observe the notice merely says the act shall fix the terms of office and the compensation of the members of the commission. As a synopsis of the “subject” to be dealt with, and part of the title of the act, this is unobjectionable. But certainly it gives no information of what the law fixing their terms and compensation is to be.

The act fixes the term of office with that of the appointing Governor, and each successive Governor is to appoint a commission for his term.

While the notice says the members of the commission created are to be appointed, it does not show by whom. It may be questioned whether this is notice of a permanent change of a county governing body from an elective system to an appointive system.

The compensation is also fixed by the act.

The notice says the act shall define the powers, jurisdiction, duties, authority, and responsibilities of the commission, but says nothing of what its powers and duties are. Certainly the duties and powers of a new governing body are matters of substance.

It is not expected that the citizen affected by a local law shall go to Montgomery or take other steps to ascertain what the substance of the proposed law is.

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 356, 224 Ala. 247, 1932 Ala. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-court-of-winston-county-v-state-ex-rel-county-highway-ala-1932.