Jefferson County v. Truss

85 Ala. 486
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 85 Ala. 486 (Jefferson County v. Truss) 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
Jefferson County v. Truss, 85 Ala. 486 (Ala. 1888).

Opinion

SOMEB.YILLE, J.

The purpose of the bill, which was dismissed by the chancellor for the want of equity, is to enjoin the sheriff of Jefferson county from enforcing an order of the probate judge of that county,made by the direction of the Governor of Alabama, under the authority conferred by section 4591 of the present Code, of 1886. This order, made on April 25th, 1888, declares a certain contract made between one James M. Lovelace and the county of Jefferson, the complainant in the present bill, under which Lovelace then held the county convicts of said county, to be annulled, and adjudges that said convicts be removed from the place where they were at labor on April 9th, 1888, and from the control of said Lovelace, their hirer. The record shows that the order has been made in strict accordance with every requirement of the statute. It is made to appear that the board of inspectors of the State convicts had officially reported to Governor Seay that these particular convicts, who had been duly sentenced to hard labor for the county of Jefferson, should, in their judgment, be removed from the place where they were then at labor, and from the control of said Lovelace, to whom they were then hired. Upon the faith of this report, the Governor issued an order, as directed by the statute, instructing the probate judge of Jefferson county to remove these convicts from such place, and to annul the contract under which they were hired. The action of the probate judge is merely a strict obedience of this executive order, which is mandatory in its character.

[488]*488It is insisted by appellant’s counsel, that this order is void, on the ground that section 4591 of tbe Code, under wbicb it was made, bas no application to Jefferson county, in view of certain special legislation by which this hiring to Lovelace was authorized.

The section of the Code, upon a proper construction of which this case turns, is as follows — the portions of it more applicable to this case being put in italics for the purpose of more ready reference; “§ 4591. When convicts are sentenced to hard labor for the county, and hired out by the court of county commissioners, it shall be the duty of the inspectors of State convicts to visit such convicts whenever they shall deem it necessary; and they shall rigidly scrutinize and inquire into the treatment and management of such convicts, and shall report to the judge of probate, in writing, the condition and treatment of such convicts. No contract shall be made by such court for hiring county convicts without a stipulation therein, that the contract shall end if the bond, in the opinion of the judge of probate, becomes insufficient, or if any convict is treated cruelly or inhumanly by the hirer or his employee. Whenever the board of inspectors shall notify the• Governor that convicts, who have been sentenced to hard labor for the county, should be removed from the place where they are at labor, or from the control of the person who has them hired, it shall be his duty to order the probate judge of the county, where said convicts were convicted, to remove them from such place, or to annul such contract, as the case may be; and any probate judge neglecting or refusing to obey such order, shall be liable to impeachment and removal from office, as provided for in other cases.” — Criminal Code, 1886, § 4591.

The convicts in question were undoubtedly county, as distinguished from State convicts, having been duly sentenced to hard labor for the county. They had also been hired out by the court of county commissioners”, although employed by the hirer, Lovelace, to work the public roads under the contract which he had made with the county officials to prosecute this work, for a stipulated compensation, and for his own private gain. They were none the less hired out by the county, because hired out under contract to work certain public roads of the county. It was presumptively the duty, therefore, of the board of inspectors, to visit these convicts, thus hired out, to inquire into their treatment and management, and to make a report as to these [489]*489matters to tbe probate judge of Jefferson county; and also to notify tbe Governor as to tbeir best judgment in reference to tbe propriety of removing them from the pldce- where tbey were at labor, owing to unbealtbfulness or other good reason, or from the control of Lovelace; unlesst it is shown that this general law has no application to Jefferson county; by reason of its repugnancy to special legislation applicable to this county.

Two special acts are relied on to support this' contention— tbe act approved February 17th, 1885 (Acts 1884-85, pp. 709-10) ; and tbe later act.of February 18th, 1887 (Acts, 1886-87, pp. 818-821) — both of which relate to the working of the public roads in Jefferson county by contract, with the use of the county convicts sentenced to hard labor for that county. The former act provided for the letting out to contract, by the court of county commissioners, of the work on certain public roads in the county,' and authorized the court, in their discretion, to hire said convicts to the contractors who might undertake the work. The latter act made it mandatory on the court of county commissioners to employ all male convicts, sentenced to hard labor for the county, to work on the public roads of the county. It also authorized them to appoint “a superintendent of public works”, whose duty it is, among other things, to faithfully carry out the orders of the commissioners court; to see that the convicts labor efficiently; that they have proper food, clothing, shelter and medical attention, and are not over-worked or maltreated; and, generally, to exercise a superintendence over the work and the convicts. It is also made the duty of the county commissioners, to see that these convicts are well fed, clothed and humanely treated, and to this end each one of them is required to visit the convicts at least once in every thirty days. — Acts 1886-87, p. 818. The maltreatment of any convict, either by the superintendent, hirer, or other person having charge of convicts, is made a punishable misdemeanor by special reference to sections 4319 and 4320 of the Code of 1876, bearing on this subject. There are other provisions in the law having no special relevancy to the inquiry before ns.

Do the provisions of this special legislation repeal section 4591, above set out, so far as concerns the county of Jefferson? Both laws, general and special, have in contemplation the promotion of a more humane treatment of the convicts. The legislation on this subject, for the last [490]*490ten years, has irom year to year steadily been growing more rigid in its attempted correction o£ tbe evil of maltreating convicts. Chief among the remedies adopted for this purpose was the creation of the Board of Inspectors, whose duty it was to visit convicts for the purpose of looking after their condition and treatment. — Code, 1876, §4586. The duties of these inspectors are dignified and enlarged by the act of February 22, 1883, the declared purpose of which was “to regulate the hiring and treatment of State and county convicts” (Acts 1882-83, p. 134); and again by the later act of February 17, 1885, further defining and regulating the convict system of Alabama (Acts 1884-85, p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 Ala. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-county-v-truss-ala-1888.