Excise Board, Washita County v. Lowden

1941 OK 243, 116 P.2d 700, 189 Okla. 286, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 219
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 8, 1941
DocketNo. 30241.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1941 OK 243 (Excise Board, Washita County v. Lowden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Excise Board, Washita County v. Lowden, 1941 OK 243, 116 P.2d 700, 189 Okla. 286, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 219 (Okla. 1941).

Opinions

RILEY, J.

The excise board of Wash-ita county appeals from a decision of the Court of Tax Review under which a protest filed by the defendant in error against a tax levy for county officers’ salaries in said county for the fiscal year 1940-41 was sustained.

The amounts provided by the levy were:

County Attorney, Sheriff and County Judge, $2,100.00 each.
County Treasurer, County Clerk, County Assessor and Court Clerk, $1,800.00 each, and County Survey- or, $120.00.

*287 The population of Washita county as shown by the federal decennial census for the year 1930 was 29,435, and according to the preliminary report of the Department of Commerce, for the year 1940, it is 22,264.

In Herndon v. Excise Board of Garfield County et al., 147 Okla. 126, 295 P. 223, this court decided that when such a preliminary report of census was made it was official and a guide for public conduct. We follow that rule. Board of Com’rs of Coal County v. Mathews, 147 Okla. 296, 296 P. 481; Elliott et al. v. State ex rel. Kirkpatrick, 150 Okla. 275, 1 P. 2d 370. Therefore, we conclude that the population of Washita county for the year 1930 was 29,435, and for the year 1940 it was 22,264, and we shall determine the classification into which the county may be placed for county officers’ salary purposes as well as the validity of provisions of acts, when necessary, establishing the classifications.

Article 18, chap. 35, S. L. 1937, according to title, is:

“An act fixing the salaries of county officers in counties having a population in excess of 38,000 and not to exceed 65,000, and in counties having a population in excess of 45,000 and an area of 2,200 square miles or more, based upon the decennial Federal Census of 1930; and amending subsections (d) and (e) of sec. 1, of chapter 11 of the Session Laws of 1933, relating to the salaries of county officers and declaring an emergency.”

Provision for and the subject of subsection (d) of the act of 1937 is embodied within the title to that act and the text of the act, in this connection, is an amendment providing a lower ceiling in population for the group of counties embraced by the subsection, and the minimum population requirement therein established includes that of Washita county for the year 1930, but the county’s population for the year 1940 is not within the subsection or scope of the entire act. The salaries therein provided are those as levied and are the same in amount as provided, by the act of 1933 amended, for Washita county under subsection (d) in event the population for the year 1930 governs; otherwise, and in event the population for the year 1940 governs, subsection (b) of the 1933 act applies as the Court of Tax Review decreed. Thereby a reduction would follow as decreed. But due to additional expressions contained in the title of the 1937 act referring to populations from 38,000 to 45,000, clarity in title is somewhat obscured, causing doubt as to constitutionality of parts of that act. We find it unnecessary to pass upon the constitutionality of the 1937 act, since, as applied to Washita county, the same salaries are provided by the 1933 act hereinafter considered.

The 1933 act, and to which reference is made in the title of the 1937 act, is based on the federal decennial census of 1930. While it is true that section 1 of the 1933 act not only applies to the decennial federal census of 1930, but also attempts to apply that “as may be shown by any succeeding federal cen-< sus,” the attempt is unavailing because the provision italicized is not embraced within the title of the act. Section 57, art. 5, Constitution of Oklahoma specifies that:

“Every act of the Legislature shall embrace but one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title except. . . . Provided, that if any subject be embraced in any act contrary to the provision of this section, such act shall be void only as to so much of the law as may not be expressed in the title thereof.”

In State ex rel. Ledbetter, Sheriff, v. Pitts, Co. Treas., 137 Okla. 59, 277 P. 918, this court held:

“The Legislature itself, having selected a restrictive title, is bound by it.”
“No doubt,” the court said, “if the general statement in the title of the act . . . stating the nature of the subject matter . . . could be considered alone, it would be sufficient to embrace the new legislation in the amendment; but the title was restricted by expressly and *288 clearly designating the object of the purported amendment.”

And so in the act of 1933, supra, the object and purpose of the Legislature as expressed in the title of the act was to fix salaries of county officers alone on population of counties as shown by the particular census of 1930.

Therefore, as in the case then before the court, “Under that title it (the Legislature) was without authority to provide differently ... in the body of the act” for the application of a succeeding ce.nsus.

The inconvenience occasioned by deleting portions of an act violative of the Constitution for insufficient or misleading title is incomparable with the evil to follow failure to correctly apply such a constitutional provision.

The Legislature may make the title to an act as restrictive as it pleases and courts cannot enlarge the scope of the title. They are vested with no dispensing power. They properly perform no legislative function. The Constitution has made the title as restricted by the Legislature the index to the Legislature’s intent governing operation of provisions of an act. It is no answer to say that the title might have been made more comprehensive. Cooley, Constitutional Limitations (5th Ed.) 179. Deletion of title to extend scope is a legislative but not a court function.

In Langley v. Cox et al., 135 Okla. 291, 275 P. 638, where a title to an act restricted the operation thereof to a certain class, this court held the act could only be sustained according to the restrictions contained in the title notwithstanding the body or text of the act was more comprehensive.

In Cornell v. McAlister et al., 121 Okla. 285, 249 P. 959, we held the text of an act “limited by its title.” And in Associated Industries of Oklahoma v. Industrial Welfare Commission, 185 Okla. 177, 90 P. 2d 899, where the act by title prohibited employment of women workers at inadequate wages, this court stated and followed the rule set forth in 25 R. C. L. 851, sec. 96, that:

“. . . The title must be construed with reference to the language used in it alone, and not in the light of what the body of the act contains.”

So that it must be concluded, in view of the rule prevailing in this jurisdiction, that the provision for succeeding federal census must be stricken from section 1 of the act of 1933, supra, and the text of the act must be restricted to conform to the title making the census of 1930 the sole guide for the comprehensive, state-wide, uniform schedule of salaries for county officers. Thus the act was not and is not variable as to change of population, and we are now concerned with the decision in Hatfield v. Garnett, 45 Okla. 438, 146 P. 24.

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Bluebook (online)
1941 OK 243, 116 P.2d 700, 189 Okla. 286, 1941 Okla. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excise-board-washita-county-v-lowden-okla-1941.