Sherrill v. Brantley

66 S.W.2d 529, 334 Mo. 497, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 735
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 22, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 S.W.2d 529 (Sherrill v. Brantley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherrill v. Brantley, 66 S.W.2d 529, 334 Mo. 497, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 735 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*501 HAYS, J.

This is an action against an employer, brought by plaintiff as assignee of an assigned account for commissions earned by an employee in the service of said employer. From a judgment for plaintiff rendered on the pleadings the defendant appealed. This court’s appellate jurisdiction rests upon a constitutional question lodged in the case and involving the validity of a certain statutory provision as contained in the so-called Small Loan Laws.

The gist of the petition is that one Echols during October, 1929, as solicitor of printing for defendant upon a commission basis, earned sixty-five dollars, which became due and payable November 9, 1929; on November 2, 1929, Echols made an unconditional sale of the same to plaintiff by an assignment in writing executed for the consideration of sixty-two dollars in cash paid. Whereupon plaintiff immediately notified defendant of such assignment and thereafter on November 9, 1929, demanded of defendant sixty-five dollars, the amount of the account as assigned.

Defendant’s answer was in the form of a general denial, to which there was added a special defense, in substance, that the transaction and assignment described in plaintiff’s petition was, by the so-called Small Loan Act, “deemed to be a loan” within the meaning of the law, secured by such assignment, and that hence the transaction violated said act by charging an unlawful rate of interest, and was therefore void.

To this answer plaintiff demurred on the ground that said act, and particularly Section 16 thereof, as amended by the Act of 1929, upon which the special defense was based, is in violation of numerous provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions which are designated and among which is Section 28, Article IV of the State Constitution.

On the particular constitutional ground just stated the demurrer was sustained. The defendant, with leave, struck out of his answer the general denial, declined to plead further, and suffered judgment as prayed to be entered for plaintiff on the. pleadings.

The appellant bases his appeal upon the sole.assigned, error that the’ court erred in ruling and deciding that1 Section 16 of said act is violative of said constitutional provision which, so far as pertinent, reads as follows: — “No bill . . . shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title.”. ■

As first enacted the law in question' appears in Laws of 1927 at. pages 252-258, and as subsequently amended it appears in Laws of *502 1929, page 201, now Section 5559 of the Revised Statutes of 1929. The respective titles of the two acts are substantially as follows:

(1927) “An Act to license and regulate the business of making small loans ($300 or less), secured or unsecured; • . '. ; ■ prescribing the rate of interest and charge therefor, and penalties for the violation thereof; regulating the assignment of wages or salaries, . . . when given as security for tiny such loan. " . . .”
(1929) “An Act to repeal sections 10, 12, 13, 16,' 17 and 19 of an act of the 54th general assembly of Missouri, 1927, entitled 'Finance, department of: Providing .for licensing and regulating of business of making small loans, prescribing rate of interest and charge therefor’ . . . and to enact in lieu thereof six new sections relating to the same subject, to be known as section 10, section 12, section 13, section 16, section 17 and section 19.” (Italics ours.)

It seems appropriate to note in this immediate connection, and before discussion of title is undertaken, that the title prefacing the amendatory act operated to substitute Section 16 thereof in the original act so as to constitute it a part of the latter and in lieu of former Section 16 repealed. The title of the original, act became thereby the title of the later law and the constitutionality of the substituted section is to be determined upon whether it comes properly within the purview of this title. [State ex rel. v. Gideon, 277 Mo. 356, 210 S. W. 358.]

That portion of said Section 16 material, here reads ■ as follows • (italics ours): ' ' ''•

“Any sale, assignment or order for the payment of wages, salaries, commission or other compensation for services (of $300 or less) shall be deemed a loam, within the provisions of this act, to be secured' by .such assignment or order, and .' . . such loan and such sale or assignment of, or order . . : shall be governed by and be subject, to the provisions and limitations of this act. the violation of which constitutes a misdemeanor under a subsequent section.

By way of introduction to appellant’s principal ground of insistence upon the validity of said section, his counsel have in their brief and in oral arguments discussed in an interesting and enlightening manner the origin, development and the beneficial results of legislation of this type as enacted in this and other states- of the Union. Upon this the appellant bases a contention that it was necessary to insure the carrying out of the Small Loan Act and-to'.avoid evasion thereof, to embrace sales of wages to the extent they purport 'to be embraced in said Section 16. It seems sufficient' to' observe, in answer, that the necessity, if any, while pertinent To the question -oh the legislative object or purpose in the enactment, is not determinative of .the *503 questiomof whether the statutory provision is embraced in .the subject expressed in the title, since legislative enactments, however beneficent, must, with respect to title,: fairly conform to. the constitutional requirement.

The courts (generally speaking) 'in approaching a question raised upon the constitutionality of a statute will, as it is contended they should, assume (1) the existence of the facts and circumstances necessary to support the statute (State ex rel. Meals v. Hackmann, 217 S. W. 271, 273) ; and (2) the validity of the statute until the contrary is made to appear; resolving doubt, if any, in favor of validity if the -legislation is germane and properly relates to the main subject. [State ex rel. Lorantos V. Terte, 324 Mo. 402, 405, 23 S. W. (2d) 120.]

But such assumption notwithstanding, “the courts cannot enlarge the.scope of the' title; they -are inyested with no -dispensing power; the Constitution has made the title the conclusive index to the legislative intent as to what -shall- have operation; it is no answer to say that the title might have been made more comprehensive., if, in fact, the Legislature has-not seen fit to-make it so.” [St. Louis v. Wortman, 213 Mo. 131, 140, 112 S. W. 520.]

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W.2d 529, 334 Mo. 497, 1933 Mo. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherrill-v-brantley-mo-1933.