Perot v. Police Jury

22 So. 2d 666, 208 La. 1, 1945 La. LEXIS 845
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketNo. 37560.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 666 (Perot v. Police Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perot v. Police Jury, 22 So. 2d 666, 208 La. 1, 1945 La. LEXIS 845 (La. 1945).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This suit was instituted by a number of residents of the Parish of Natchitoches to annul an ordinance of the police jury prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors in the parish. The ordinance was adopted after a local option election was called and held as requested by petitions presented to the police jury and a majority of the votes cast at the election were in favor of such prohibition.

Plaintiffs, in their suit, seek to enjoin the parochial authorities from enforcing the ordinance. After the trial of the merits there was judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ suit at their cost and plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment.

Plaintiffs, in their petition, allege seven grounds of complaint against the validity of the ordinance. Their first ground of complaint is to the refusal of the police jury to consider counterpetitions containing the names of more than five hundred voters of the parish requesting that their names be withdrawn from the petitions asking that the local option election be called. Plaintiffs contend that if the names of the signers of the counterpetitions had been withdrawn from the petitions asking that the election be called, those petitions would have contained less than the number of names required by law.

Attached to the petitions asking that the election be called was a certificate of the registrar of voters certifying that there were 8,598 registered voters in the parish and that there were 3,144 names on the petitions, of whom 2,646 were qualified voters. The counterpetitions contained the names of about 1,000 persons, of whom it is alleged only 500 were qualified voters whose names appeared on the original petitions.

[1] Under Section 4 of Act No. 17 of the First Extra Session of 1935, the Local Option Law, it is the mandatory duty of a police jury to call a local option election upon the presentation of a petition containing twenty-five per cent of the qualified voters of the parish, as shown by the certificate of the registrar of voters. The petitions presented to the police jury in this case asking that a local option election be called complied in every respect with the statutory provision. The counterpetitions not only did not contain any certificate of the registrar of voters certifying that five hundred qualified voters whose names were on the counterpetitions were also on the original petition, but they did not affirmatively show that such was the fact. The signers of the counterpeti- • tions did not declare that they signed the original petitions. They merely requested that if their signatures appeared on the original petitions, they be withdrawn therefrom, thus imposing upon the police jury, if it undertook to consider the counterpetitions, the arduous task of ascertaining, first, whether their names appeared on the petitions, and, secondly, whether they were qualified voters. No such burden is imposed upon police juries under the law. The police jury in this case could not de *7 lay calling the election when presented with petitions properly drawn and containing the requisite number of signers requesting that it be done, on the mere chance that a sufficient number of qualified voters who had signed the original petitions also may have signed the conterpetitions to reduce the number of qualified voters requesting the calling of the election below the number required by law. And that is particularly true in a case like this, where the counterpetitions do. not show that the signers thereof are qualified voters nor that their names appear on the original petitions. We find no merit in plaintiffs’ first complaint.

The second ground of plaintiffs’ complaint is that Act No. 17 of the First Extra Session of 1935, the Local Option Law, is unconstitutional, because there was no constitutional authority for the adoption of the.statute by the Legislature. Plaintiffs’ argument is that at the time the Constitution of 1921 was adopted, the Eighteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution and the Volstead Act, 27 U. S.C.A. § 1 et seq., wére in effect and presumably, therefore, the framers of the Constitution of 1921 deliberately omitted Article 181 of the Constitution of 1898 and 1913, expressly authorizing the Legislature to enact laws regulating the sale of alcoholic or spirituous liquors, from which the conclusion must be drawn that the framers of the Constitution did not intend to give the Legislature the right to prohibit or suppress the sale of liquor, but, on the contrary, deliberately took the power away from the Legislature to do so. There is no force in plaintiffs’ argument. While the Constitution of 1921 may not have given the Legislature express authority to enact laws regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors, nowhere in’ the Constitution is the Legislature prohibited from enacting such laws. It is a familiar rule of law that the Legislature of a State, unlike Congress, which cannot do anything which the Federal Constitution does not authorize, may do everything which the State Constitution does not prohibit. Ricks v. Department of State Civil Service, 200 La. 341, 8 So.2d 49. We find no merit in plaintiffs’ second complaint.

In a brief filed by counsel employed by certain persons who are not petitioners in this case to appear as amicus curiae, it is suggested that the ordinance of the police jury is illegal for having stipulated a regulation for a less percentage of alcohol than the law allows a police jury to stipulate, and that the local option statute is unconstitutional because the body of the statute is broader than the title. The suggestion is supported by a most ingenuous and interesting argument, but it can not be considered by this Court since the questions involved were not raised in the pleadings of the parties themselves nor presented by them to the district court. They are raised for the first time in the brief of the amicus curiae, which merely contains his written argument and forms no part of the pleadings.

The third ground of plaintiffs’ complaint is that the' parish-wide prohibition *9 election was held within less than one year from the time local option elections were held in Wards Three and Six of the Parish, contrary to the provision of the law that “no election on any such question shall be held oftener than once a year.” The provision in question is contained in paragraph 1 of section 4 of the Local Option Law and applies to any parish, ward or municipality in the State. While it is clear that under the plain terms of the statutory provision two local option elections can not be held within the same political subdivision within a period of one year, there is nothing in the statute which provides that a ward election will serve to break the unity of the parish so as to prevent the holding of a parish-wide election until more than one year has elapsed from the time the ward election was held. If plaintiffs’ contention were accepted as correct, two wards-of the parish, by holding local option elections every six months, could prevent a parish-wide local option election. The Members of the Legislature in enacting the local option law never contemplated any such absurd result. We find no merit in plaintiffs’ third complaint.

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22 So. 2d 666, 208 La. 1, 1945 La. LEXIS 845, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perot-v-police-jury-la-1945.