Morgan County v. Edmonson

192 So. 274, 238 Ala. 522, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 23, 1939
Docket8 Div. 8.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 192 So. 274 (Morgan County v. Edmonson) 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
Morgan County v. Edmonson, 192 So. 274, 238 Ala. 522, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 55 (Ala. 1939).

Opinion

GARDNER, Justice.

On March 9, 1939, there was approved a local act establishing a Board of Revenue and Control of Morgan County, Alabama, repealing all laws in conflict therewith, with specific reference to the Act approved September 29, 1919, found in Local Acts 1919, page 258.

In this proceeding the constitutionality of the Act of March 9, 1939, is assailed upon grounds to be noted. First, it is insisted that it is violative of section 105 of our Constitution, in that the provisions of the law are such as are provided for by the general laws of the State relating to commissioners’ courts for the several counties. Sections 6748 et seq., Michie’s Code of 1928.

Speaking to this provision of our Constitution as applicable to local legislation, we observed in State ex rel. Day v. Bowles, 217 Ala. 458, 116 So. 662, 664:

“Sufficient to say now, it is settled, we think, by our decisions, that this section does not withdraw the legislative discretion to prescribe or change the governing agencies of counties by local legislation suited to the varied needs of counties of widely, different conditions as to population, wealth and local requirements.

“Such legislation need not be based upon enlargement or curtailment of governmental functions. General laws may already meet all the demands .in that regard, and *525 agencies may be provided by general law; jyet, if a substantial object of the local law is to abolish one agency and invest its functions in another, to consolidate agencies, to provide additional ones to take over .and reduce the labors of existing agencies ■or to create new ones deemed to be better fitted to exercise in whole or in part functions theretofore committed to an existing .agency, such local act is not within the inhibition of section 105 of the Constitution.”

Numerous authorities are cited, among them Dunn v. Dean, 196 Ala. 486, 71 So. .'709, perhaps here more nearly in point, and which fully sustains the view the Act in question does not offend section 105 of the Constitution. And to like effect is State ex rel. Brandon v. Prince et al., 199 Ala. 444, 74 So. 939. See, also, Talley v. Webster, 225 Ala. 384, 143 So. 555; Polytinsky v. Wilhite, 211 Ala. 94, 99 So. 843, 544. And in the Polytinsky case the Court observed: “Section 105, as repeatedly held by this court, does not inhibit local legislation on subjects not enumerated in section 104, where the object of the local law is to accomplish an end not substantially provided for and effectuated by a general law, notwithstanding there is a general ‘law dealing with the subject or system af•fected by the local law.”

The differences existing between this Act and the general law concerning commissioners’ courts need no detail statement here. They may be noted in a general ■ way only. Under the general law the com-missioners are elected from the county at large, while the act here considered divides the county into four districts, one ■member of the board to be elected from ■each district by the voters of that district, .and their terms of office are .based upon the stagger system rather than the concurrent terms provided by the general law.

The newly established board has a full '.time chairman rather than having the judge ■of probate as chairman of the board as provided in the general law. The meetings of the board are twice monthly rather than once quarterly. Inventories are required to be filed annually by each member of the board, wage and rental scales .are fixed, and various and sundry reports as to repairs and purchases are required. 'The chairman of the board serves as auditor and keeps the books and required records and performs numerous other duties not here necessary to enumerate. It is important also to note that the chairman and each member of the board .are required to devote their entire time to the duties of the office; apd among other numerous duties enumerated for the members of the board is that-of supervision of all public roads in their respective districts, with a duty to “supervise, inspect and superintend all work done on the public roads within his district, to appoint overseers and cause all road hands and work to be apportioned to the several roads within his district.”

Some of the changes above noted were embraced in the Local Act. of 1919. But that Act is expressly repealed, and we are not here concerned therewith in a consideration of section 105 of the'' Constitution.

We are here interested in the distinguishing features of the Act of 1939 and the general law relating to the commissioners’ court. We have heretofore observed that mere changes in the terms or wording between a local and general law, or any other unessential change showing an attempt to evade or avoid the Constitution will not save such local law from condemnation by the courts. State ex rel. Brandon v. Prince et al., supra.

It is of course a well settled rule that in determining the validity of an en•actment, the judiciary will not inquire into the motives or reasons of the legislature or the members thereof. 16 Corpus Juris Secundum, Constitutional .Law, §,154, p. 487. “The judicial department canno't control 'legislative discretion, nor inquire into the motives of legislators.” City of Birmingham v. Henry, 224 Ala. 239, 139 So. 283. See, also, State ex rel. Russum v. Jefferson County Commission, 224 Ala. 229, 139 So. 243; Mulford v. Smith, 307 U.S. 38, 59 .S.Ct. 648, 83 L.Ed. 1092. But if the act upon its face, and considered in all its phases, appears to the judicial mind to be a mere “colorable pretext” it will be stricken as an evasion of the Constitution. Such was the holding in Carnley v. Moore, 218 Ala. 274, 118 So. 409.

But the Act considered in the Carnley case, supra, was materially different from the one here, in question. There it was pointed out the general duties of members of the commissioners’ court were the same, and that in effect the only substantial change related to the method of election by districts with the “stagger system” and the commissioners’ compensation. The same, commissioners were continued in of *526 fice, the court of county commissioners was not abolished, but continued to function as theretofore, but with an increase in per diem pay. And the conclusion was that the Act disclosed upon its face it was “a mere effort or colorable pretext to in-, crease the compensation of the county commissioners.”

Indeed, so far as section 105 of the Constitution is concerned, the learned chancellor, as we understand his opinion, which appears in the record, concluded that under the authority of Dunn v. Dean, supra, the Act could not be stricken down as in violation of this provision of the Constitution. But the conclusion reached that the Act was violative of sections 68, 96 and subdivision 24 of section 104 of the Constitution, was rested upon the theory that the increased duties imposed were germane to the office and not foreign thereto, with citation of cases from other jurisdictions, as found in 21 A.L.R. 256, and of Tayloe v. Davis, 212 Ala. 282, 102 So. 433, 40 A. L.R. 1052, a distinction not heretofore considered by this Court. State ex rel. Brandon v. Prince et al., supra; Jackson v. Sherrod, 207 Ala. 245, 92 So. 481; McElderry v. Abercrombie, 213 Ala. 289, 104 So. 671; Dunn v. Dean, supra; State ex rel. Ward v. Plenry, 224 Ala. 224, 139 So. 278; and Moon v. Thompson, ante, p.

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192 So. 274, 238 Ala. 522, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-county-v-edmonson-ala-1939.