State ex rel. Rodes v. Warner

94 S.W. 962, 197 Mo. 650, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 56
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 20, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 962 (State ex rel. Rodes v. Warner) 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. Rodes v. Warner, 94 S.W. 962, 197 Mo. 650, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 56 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

In 1905 the General Assembly of the State of Missouri passed an act entitled “An Act relating to the preservation, propagation and protection of game animals, birds and fish; creating the office of game and fish warden; creating a game protection fund, and appropriating money therefrom,” in 71 sections. [Laws 1905, p. 158.]

By section 38, it is provided that the Governor shall “appoint some person skilled in matters relating to birds, game and fish, a resident of the State, game and fish warden.” And this official is put under bond and given large powers and multiplied duties. Thereafter the Governor selected relator as “skilled in matters relating to birds, game and fish,” and duly appointed and commissioned him to the office of game and fish warden, he qualifying as such, taking upon himself the burden of said duties and powers.

By section 66, it is provided that “moneys collected from fines, penalties.or forfeitures, under this act, belonging to the game protection fund, shall be paid over by the officer authorized to collect said money to the State Treasurer on or before the first day of each month.”

By section 64, it is enacted that “all moneys sent [655]*655to the State Treasurer in payment of . . . fines, penalties, forfeitures, shall he set aside hy the State Treasurer and shall constitute a fund, known as the ‘ Game Protection Fund, ’ for the payment of the salary of the state game and fish warden, his necessary expenses, also for the payment of deputy game and fish wardens and their necessary expenses.”

By other sections, the game and fish warden is authorized to appoint deputies for each Congressional district, and, furthermore, by section 53, “all sheriffs, deputy sheriffs, marshals, constables or other peace officers, are declared to be ex officio game and fish wardens.” The act bristles with impaling provisions, the violation of which are denounced, seriatim, as misdemeanors, to be punished as criminal offenses by fines (and by imprisonment, in case the fines are not paid), ranging from $5 to $1,000, and the scheme is that all these fines should be paid to the State Treasurer to swell the corpus of the “Game Protection Fund,” out of which fund comes the expenses of enforcing the law.

At a certain time, one Weber was convicted before a justice of the peace in Jackson county of a misdemeanor for violating one of the provisions of said act, and was mulcted in a fine of $50, which he paid. This fine was. turned over to respondent, Warner, as county treasurer of Jackson county, who credited the same to the school fund of that county. Whereat relator brought this original proceeding to compel, by the moving writ of mandamus, said county treasurer to turn over said fine ro the State Treasurer to be by him credited to the “Game Protection Fund.”

An alternative writ issued, directed to respondent, requiring him to pay over said $50 to the State Treasurer for the use of said fund, or show cause why he has not so done. To this alternative writ, respondent made return interposing divers grounds as “cause” for not obeying’ our writ. The only cause, deemed of consequence, is that whereby the constitutionality of those [656]*656provisions of the act requiring such fines to be converted into the state treasury and into said fund is challenged. It is insisted said provisions violate section 8, article 11, of our Constitution, reading thus:

“All . . . , the clear proceeds of all penalties and forfeitures, and of all fines collected in the several counties for any breach of the penal or military laws of the State . . . , shall belong to and be securely invested and sacredly preserved in the several counties as a county public school fund; the income of which fund shall be faithfully appropriated for establishing and maintaining free public schools in the several counties of this State.”

On the coming in of this return, relator demurred thereto. Thereby the question submitted becomes one of law and the issue will be treated as single and sharply defined as pointed out.

Does the statutory disposition of these fines impinge upon the state Constitution? That is the question here, and, in our opinion, that question must be answered in the affirmative. It is with judicial reluctance we are constrained to this notion; for the law is a wholesome one. The mischiefs struck at and to be retarded are manifest; the benefits in view and to be advanced, many and salient; and, in so far as this holding tends to emasculate the law and defeat its purposes (if so it results) by reducing somewhat the fund for its enforcement, it becomes a matter of pronounced solicitude and gravity. Before any provision of a statute may be declared unconstitutional, the courts should allow full play to all wise rules and maxims of construction and interpretation — inter alia, that its unconstitutionality should be so palpable and obvious as to leave no room for reasonable doubt in the court’s mind. [State v. Layton, 160 Mo. l. c. 499.] Another unbending rule is that a state legislature (in contrast to the federal Congress) has all legislative power' not prohibited to it by the state or federal Constitution. [State [657]*657ex rel. v. Sheppard, 192 Mo. 497; Cass County v. Jack, 49 Mo. l. c. 199.] , But considering, as we are hound to consider,' the constitutional provision, supra, as imperious, as written by plain men in plain language for a plain and high purpose; and approaching, as our duty is, the legislation in question without judicial austerity or over-refinement of interpretation, we have been able to arrive at no othér conclusion than that fines arising from punishment of violators of the act in question, like all other fines arising from punishment inflicted by the criminal law, are devoted to a constitutional purpose of inflexible stiffness, to-wit, the education of the little ones, the children, of Missouri.

And this is so, because:

I. In the first place it is argued by the learned counsel of relator that penal laws may be enforced for the benefit of individuals; that public policy, as chrystallized in the law, permits qui tarn actions; and further, that, when the gist and scope of the legislation in hand is considered, it is apparent it was passed for a specific purpose, to-wit, the protection of game, and to create a specific fund, to-wit, the Game Protection Fund —ergo, relator says, in effect, it may stand on the theory that legalizes a qui tarn action, or that legalizes the collection of a penalty for the benefit of a private person or for a local object. On this insistence, we are referred to Barnett v. Railroad, 68 Mo. 56, where a penal statute was under consideration giving to a stock-owner double damages for killing stock, when a railroad remained unfenced contrary to law, and in which case the point was made that the statutory penalty under the Constitution could not go to the stock-owner, but inured to the benefit of the school fund, and, hence, the statute was void. In that case the law was held constitutional, and the penalty of double damages, it was held, might go to the stock-owner. In considering the constitutional provision now in hand, Hough, J., speak[658]*658ing for this court, said: “This section clearly refers to penalties accruing to the public, and not to penalties recovered by private persons for their own use.” [1. c. 64.]

In Kaes v. Railroad, 6 Mo. App. l. c.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 962, 197 Mo. 650, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rodes-v-warner-mo-1906.