State Ex Rel. Hollaway v. Knight

21 S.W.2d 767, 323 Mo. 1241, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 527
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 31, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 S.W.2d 767 (State Ex Rel. Hollaway v. Knight) 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
State Ex Rel. Hollaway v. Knight, 21 S.W.2d 767, 323 Mo. 1241, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 527 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

This is an original proceeding in prohibition. By stipulation the case has been submitted upon briefs without oral argument. Relator’s statement of the case has been adopted by respondent and we quote same in full:

“The respondent in November, 1926, was duly elected justice of the peace within and for Blue Township, Jackson County, Missouri, and was duly qualified and now holds the office of justice of the peace for said township for a term expiring November 4, 1930. During the Fifty-fifth General Assembly which convened at Jefferson Citv in January, 1929, there was introduced Senate Bill No. 658 which was passed and approved May 31, 1929, and which became effective ninety days after adjournment of such session, on August 29, 1929. Such act, in effect, provided that in counties the size of Jackson County, or a county from 300,000 to 600,000 population, a justice of the peace could not take jurisdiction of a cause of action unless *1244 tbe defendant resided in tlie township in wbicb the justice was elected or appointed, or unless the defendant should be found in such township. On the 16th day of September, 1929, suit was filed in the office of the respondent by one Harvey Bnrrus, a resident of Blue Township, on an account against the relator’, Lester R. Hollaway, a resident of Kaw Township. Kaw Township is an adjoining township to Blue Township, both in Jackson County, Missouri. Thereupon the respondent accepted such suit, issued summons thereon and the same was served upon the relator Hollaway in Kaw Township, commanding1 him to appear for trial on the 1st day of October, 1929.
“The relator Hollaway thereupon filed his petition for prohibition in this court seeking to prohibit respondent from proceeding with such suit on the theory that Senate Bill No. 658 deprived respondent of his jurisdiction as a justice of the peace after it became effective August 29, 1929.
“Respondent thereupon entered his appearance, consented to the issuance of the preliminary rule, filed his return to the rule, and the case was submitted upon the relator’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. Respondent contends that Senate Bill 658 is unconstitutional and void for many reasons, but particularly because it improperly discriminates between litigants and between justices of the peace or various justices of the peace of the State of Missouri, and that Senate Bill 658 is a local and special law, and further that the said Senate Bill is unconstitutional in that the title to the said act is insufficient. ’ ’

Said Senate Bill No. 658 appears in Laws of 1929 at page 145. It provides for the addition of a new section to Article II, Chapter 22, Revised Statutes 1919, on jurisdiction of justices of the peace, to be known, as Section 2722-a. So far as we are here concerned with the act, it reads as follows:

“In all counties of this State which now have or may hereafter have a population of more than 300,000 inhabitants, and less than 600,000 inhabitants every action recognizable before a justice of the peace shall be brought before some justice of the township, either, first, wherein the defendants, or one of them, resides, or, second, wherein the plaintiff resides, and the defendants, or one of them, may be found; . . . Every action instituted before any justice of the peace shall be tried at the place where said justice of the peace has his office or court, and in the district over which he presides as such, and it shall be illegal for any such justice to issue any process, assume jurisdiction in any such action, or render any judgment in any such proceeding brought before him unless the said process is issued, proceedings had, and judgment rendered at the place where his said court is located, in session, and within the distribt where he presides; any and all such proceedings not had in conformity with this *1245 section shall be null and void, notwithstanding any waiver or agreement of the parties to the contrary, except where such actions are transferred from any justice of the peace, as provided by law; and whenever any such justice shall remove his office or place of holding-court out of the district for which he was elected or appointed, he shall be deemed to have vacated his office.”

In his brief respondent contends that the act is invalid because it is a special law, in that it applies only to Jackson County, and because it contains an unreasonable, arbitrary and unjust classification of justices of the peace; and also that it is invalid because the title to the act is defective, all in violation of certain sections of the Missouri Constitution. We will consider these contentions in the order stated.

At the present time the act can apply only to justices of the peace in Jackson County because it is the only county in the State havifig more than 300,000 and less than 600,000 inhabitants. By its terms the act applies to all counties of this State “which now have or may hereafter have a population of more than 300,000 inhabitants,” etc. So that any county in the State which hereafter passes the 300,000 mark in population will automatically come within the terms of the act. Nor can it be said that the lawmakers could not reasonably anticipate such a situation. The county of St. Louis, adjacent as it is to the great and growing city of St. Louis with its restricted and congested urban area, is fast acquiring a large suburban population and may reasonably be expected, within a few short years at most, to reach the minimum population specified in the act. Nor can it be said that other counties in the State might not attain such a population as to be brought within the terms of the act.

The_ classification of counties or cities according to population, so that othej- counties and cities may come within the terms of the law in the future, does not make the act a special law in violation of Section 53, Article TV, of the Missouri Constitution, although such act only applies to one county or city in the State at the time of its enactment because the population thereof is the only one within the limits fixed by the act at the time of its passage. [State ex inf. Barker v. Southern, 265 Mo. 275, l. c. 286, 177 S. W. 640; State v. Keating, 202 Mo. 197, l. c. 209, 100 S. W. 648; State ex rel. Attorney-General v. Speed, 183 Mo. 186, l. c. 201, 81 S. W. 1260; State ex rel. Dickason v. County Court, 128 Mo. 427, l. c. 442, 30 S. W. 103, 31 S. W. 23.]

In the cases of State ex rel. Taggart v. Perkins, 283 Mo. 161, 223 S. W. 406, and State v. Logan, 268 Mo. 169, 186 S. W. 979, cited by respondent, the classification was not made on a population basis alone, but also upon the fact that circuit court was held in two or more places in the county. Each act considered described -Jasper County alone as definitely as if it had been made applicable only *1246 to that county in explicit terms. The acts there involved, were clearly special legislation.

In State ex rel. Kinsey v. Messerly, 198 Mo. 351, 95 S. W. 913, cited by respondent, the proviso requiring justices of the peace to turn in their fees in criminal cases and giving them a salary in lieu thereof, applied by its terms only to cities then having 15,000' and less than 35,000 population and lying wholly within one township, except cities operating under special charters.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W.2d 767, 323 Mo. 1241, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hollaway-v-knight-mo-1929.