State Board of Education v. City of Aberdeen

56 Miss. 518
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 56 Miss. 518 (State Board of Education v. City of Aberdeen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Board of Education v. City of Aberdeen, 56 Miss. 518 (Mich. 1879).

Opinions

Simrall, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The city of Aberdeen claims the money received for licenses to retail liquor within the corporate limits, by virtue of its charter, which was granted prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1869.

On the other hand, the State Board'of Education insists that that provision of the charter relied upon, if of the character claimed for it, has been repealed by the eighth article of the Constitution, and chap. 56 of the Code, which regulates the retailing of vinous and spirituous liquors.

The first section of the eighth article of the Constitution affirms that the stability of a republican form of government depends mainly on the intelligence and virtue of the people, and imposes the duty on the Legislature to promote intellectual and moral improvement by “establishing a uniform system of free public schools,” etc.

To accomplish that object (in part), the sixth section of the Constitution declares that there shall be established a common-school fund, which shall consist, among other things, of public lands known as swamp lands, fines for breaches of penal laws, * * * “and all moneys received for licenses granted under the general laws for the sale of intoxicating liquors, or keeping of dram-shops.”

When the Legislature came to put the school system into operation, as delineated in chap. 56 of the Code, it recognized, as a practice which had long prevailed, the granting oU such licenses by the incorporated towns and cities. The Code continued that privilege to incorporated towns and cities, but [525]*525directed ‘ ‘ the sums received for such licenses to be for the use of the common-school fund, and paid into the State treasury for that purpose. ”

Before the license shall issue, the money therefor must be paid by the applicant to the treasurer of the corporation (sect. 2460), who shall, within thirty days thereafter, pay the same into the State treasury; and for failure, shall be subject, on conviction, to fine and imprisonment. Sect. 2469.

It would hardly be maintained, at this day, that the power of the State to deal with and regulate internal traffic in ardent spirits was not ample. It belongs to its police powers. That subject was carefully considered in Rohrbacher v. City of Jackson, 51 Miss. 713. Nor would it now be seriously contended that the Legislature could not modify or repeal privileges and franchises which it had granted to a municipal •corporation, at its discretion, provided it did not interfere witli rights of property or contract which may have accrued.

It would have been the exercise of unquestionable power if the Legislature had taken away from the towns and cities the franchise to grant these licenses, although the power so to do had been conferred in their respective charters. If it chose to confer authority to issue the licenses, it could have imposed the conditions, named the sum to be paid, and the use to which the money should be put. These may have been different from the mode, amount, and use as defined in the acts of incorporation.

These municipal bodies had no vested right, either to grant licenses, or to the money received from them, by virtue of their charters of incorporation, which the Legislature could not resume. It is quite well settled, in constitutional law, that a municipal charter is not a contract in the sense of the Federal Constitution. It is a delegation, in-part, of the State sovereignty to the local body, for the convenience of local government; which may be withdrawn, in whole or part, at the will of the State. The charter does not create a contract between the municipality and the State, and it has not such a [526]*526proprietary interest in money authorized to be raised by its charter as would prevent a subsequent Legislature from giving another direction to such money. The People v. Power, 25 Ill. 187; The People v. Supervisors, 50 Cal. 561; The People v. Morris, 13 Wend. 325; Stelz v. Indianapolis, 55 Ind. 515. The rule is subject to the limitation that, under authority conferred by the charter, the municipality may come under such duty or engagements with third persons as to create the sanctity of contract, so that a subsequent Legislature will be restrained in its power so far as that it cannot impair rights which have become perfected. The language of the Constitution is imperative, that there shall be established a common-school fund, to consist, in part, of all moneys derived from licenses to retail liquors. The Legislature has devised general laws under which these licenses shall be granted. No other authority shall or can issue them except those of a city, or town, or county, and the money so derived shall be paid into the State treasury for the school-fund. Yazoo City v. The State, 48 Miss. 440.

It is impossible to execute this law on the theory that it does not apply to those towns and cities to which previous special laws had given the money for municipal purposes. An examination of the charters of these corporations, granted prior to 1869, would show that to nearly every one of them the liquor-license money had been given for some local object. The plan of the Code is, to gather into a common fund all the moneys collected by incorporated towns and cities, and the counties, for these licenses, for common-school purposes.

Turning to the common-school system inaugurated by the same Legislature, we find that this fund, derived from this and the other sources enumerated in the sixth section of the eighth article of the Constitution, is directed to be distributed to the school-districts into which the State has been divided, on an equal and equitable basis; and for any deficiency to keep up the schools, the districts are invested with the power of local taxation.

The repugnance and inconsistency of the Constitution, and [527]*527the legislation we have been considering, with the charters allowing towns and cities to retain the money, are so palpable that both cannot stand. It is impossible that all the moneys received by towns and cities for licenses can find its way into the State treasury as a school-fund, if towns and cities may retain it by virtue of charters granted prior to this legislation. ■ .

The repugnant features of the charters must give way to the later statutes. It is plain that the Legislature intended to cover the entire ground by the statute of 1871. The law is 4 ‘ general ’ ’ and uniform, and is applicable to 4 4 every city or town ” that is incorporated. Any other construction would greatly cripple the constitutional school-fund and impair the efficiency of the common schools, for the fiscal records of the treasury will show that much the larger part of the fund is derived from this source.

But this court has ruled adverse to the defendant in error in several cases. In The State Board of Education v. Holly Springs (MS.) there was much more plausibility for the pretension set up by the city than in this case. There, the city was authorized to impose an assessment on the license, for 'municipal purposes. Its authorities. had collected $300 for each license, and claimed that sum as paid for city uses. But it was held that it was under a duty to collect $200 and pay it over to the State ; and it was made liable for that sum on each license issued. See also West Point v. State Board of Education, 50 Miss. 643.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Miss. 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-board-of-education-v-city-of-aberdeen-miss-1879.