State Ex Rel. Rickey v. Sims

7 S.E.2d 54, 122 W. Va. 29, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 7
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1940
Docket9039
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 7 S.E.2d 54 (State Ex Rel. Rickey v. Sims) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Rickey v. Sims, 7 S.E.2d 54, 122 W. Va. 29, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 7 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinion

Kenna, Judge:

This is a mandamus proceeding by which the relator, J. W. Rickey, prosecuting attorney of Marshall County, seeks to have the Auditor draw his warrant upon the *30 State Treasurer and the State Treasurer honor that warrant to meet a salary alleged to be due him from the State Treasury by reason of a provision appearing in Chapter 162 of the Acts of the Legislature of 1927, not embodied in the recodification of this State’s general statutory law enacted in 1931. The rule was awarded, respondents appeared, demurred to the petition, and filed no answer, so that the sole question involved upon this submission is one of law.

Section 1 of Chapter 165 of the Code of 1868 consisted of the following provision:

“All criminal proceedings against convicts in the penitentiary shall be in the circuit court of the county of Marshall.”

This provision has remained upon our statute books since that time, and the circumstances giving rise to the legal question controverted in this proceeding are that in 1927, a statute was enacted which added to and reenacted the quoted section, making it read thus:

“All criminal proceedings against convicts hr the penitentiary shall be in the circuit court of the county of Marshall, and the prosecuting attorney of said county shall be paid an annual salary of twelve hundred dollars by the state, as compensation for his services in connection with such criminal proceedings, said salary to be paid out of the annual state appropriation for ‘criminal charges.’ ” Chapter 162, Acts of 1927.

When the Official Code of 1931 was enacted, the part of the immediately preceding section referring to salary was omitted, and not reenacted as a part of that codification. However, both the Auditor and the Treasurer continued to pay the salary as provided in the .1927 act until January, 1939, when they both, acting under the advice of the Attorney General, declined to do so. The 1939 session of the Legislature increased the salary of the prosecuting attorney of Marshall County, but did not appropriate any part of the salary from a state fund, and did not alter Code, 62-8-3.

*31 The relator contends that that part of the 1927 act providing for the salary is a special or local, and not a„ general, statute, and that, therefore, its omission in the Official Code of 1931 did not constitute a repeal of that particular provision due to the fact that special acts are explicitly excluded from the Code Commission’s authority, and in the act adopting the Official Code it was expressly provided that statutes of that kind should remain in full force. The relator asserts that if that position is not tenable, and that if the 1927 act is to be dealt with as a general statute in its entirety, it nevertheless follows that the added clause in that act is to be construed as an intermediate amendment lying in point of time between two enactments of the identical statute and that under a well recognized rule of construction it is not to be regarded as repealed by the subsequent enactment; and furthermore, that clause of the 1927 act not having been expressly repealed, it is not to be regarded as repealed by implication, and that both the Auditor and the Treasurer having, for eight years, issued and met warrants on the theory that the salary provision was in effect after the adoption of the 1931 Code, the courts will be loath to repudiate a practical construction so promulgated.

The respondents call attention to the fact that the act adopting the 1931 Code contains a general repealing provision applicable to “all acts and parts of acts of a general nature” in existence prior to the adoption of the Code and not included therein, the salary provision of the 1927 act having been omitted; that regarding the salary provision as a special provision, it still is repealed by the adoption of the 1931 Code by clear and plain implication, and upon the question of practical interpretation, cite State v. Conley, 118 W. Va. 508, 528, 190 S. E. 908, 917, as holding that no such interpretation nor construction can create power.

It would seem apparent that the first question to be gone into and determined is whether the act of 1927 can be subdivided so that the part laying venue in Marshall County can be regarded as general and that part of it pro *32 viding a salary for the prosecuting attorney can be regarded as special.

Section 39 of Article VI of our Constitution inhibits the Legislature from enacting any local or special law falling within eighteen enumerated specifications. The last paragraph of the same section provides that in no case shall a special law be passed where a general law “can be made applicable to the case.” This provision was for the purpose of preserving uniformity and consistency in the statutory enactments of the state. Brozka v. Brooke County Court, 111 W. Va. 191, 160 S. E. 914.

It seems quite clear, therefore, that the constitution of this state gives rise to a rule of construction when the question involved is whether an enactment is classified as a general act or as a special or local act. There is a well-settled general rule that in cases of doubt, the legislative intent not to exceed their constitutional powers is to be presumed, so that the outgrowth of a doubtful construction of an enactment is to so construe as to render it constitutional. 25 R. C. L., p. 1003, sec. 245. Based upon that presumption of the legislative intent and purpose, it follows that the legislative intent to comply with constitutional directions in enacting legislation and to enact a general law, instead of a special or local law, wherever a general law “can be made applicable to the case” should be weighed when the conclusion is doubtful. Supposedly, the Legislature is familiar with the terms and provisions of our constitution, and desires to conform to and be governed by them. We believe that this section of our constitution requires the courts, in cases of doubt, to favor the .construction which would result in a statute being viewed as a general law.

Undoubtedly a statute can be subdivided in a manner permitting certain parts to be construed as special legislation and other parts as general enactments. Following that reasoning to its ultimate result, it may be that a sentence in a legislative enactment could be so treated, as is the relator’s contention now. However, treating the legislative purpose and intention as one of the controlling fac *33 tors in construing their ■ enactments, it seems rather attenuated to conclude that as between general and special enactments it was the Legislature’s purpose tó split a sentence for the purpose of having that part of it conferring venue upon the Marshall County Circuit Court construed as a general act, which was the unavoidable consequence of including it in the 1931 Code, and that part of the same sentence following a comma which dealt with the salary of the prosecuting attorney as a special and unrepealed enactment.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 54, 122 W. Va. 29, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rickey-v-sims-wva-1940.