State Ex Rel. Rowan v. Pollock

276 S.W. 20, 310 Mo. 620, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 865
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 7, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 20 (State Ex Rel. Rowan v. Pollock) 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. Rowan v. Pollock, 276 S.W. 20, 310 Mo. 620, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 865 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*623 GRAVES, C. J.

-Conditions, not necessary to mention, have cast the burdens of this case upon me. The case arises in this manner. In 1923, the respondent was duly appointed a justice of the peace for Kaw Township in Jackson County, Missouri, under and by virtue of Section 26891, and his term by the same statute expires upon the general election day in 1926. In 1925 the General Assembly passed an act, amending Article 2, Chapter 22, Revised Statutes 1919, by adding a new section thereto to be known as Section 2726a (Laws 1925, p. 172.) This section reads:

“The provisions of this article shall be subject to this proviso, to-wit: That in all municipal townships, which now contain or may hereafter contain a city of more than two hundred thousand inhabitants and less than .six hundred thousand inhabitants, and in which justices of the peace are paid a salary, every action recognizable before a justice of the peace against a defendant residing in such township shall be brought before such salaried justice of the peace of said township, and none other; and any judgment rendered contrary hereto shall be null and voici, except in actions by attachments as is now or may be hereafter provided.”

After this act took effect (if it could be effective under the Constitution), one Ered W. Lewis, as plaintiff, filed'a suit upon account against the relator here, as defendant below, before John H. Pollock, respondent herein. Eespondent filed the ease, took the filing* fee of $3 and- issued a summons for relator here, as the defendant in Pollock’s court. Summons was duly served and Pollock, the respondent, purposed to hear and determine this simple action upon account for $150. Belator brought this action in prohibition on the ground that Pollock was wholly without jurisdiction, this said relator being at the time a resident of Kaw Township in Jackson County. Respondent made a lengthy return, raising, among other things, the constitutionality of the Act of 1925 from several different angles, the details *624 of which we leave for further discussion. ' Motion for judgment upon the pleadings completes the record here. It will be noticed that the law says, “against a defendant residing in such township,” so that respondent is stripped of all jurisdiction except in attachment proceedings, and in eases where the defendant does not reside in the township, but, perchance, might be found in the township, and the plaintiff chanced to be a resident of the township. And, all this because respondent is a fee justice of the peace, rather than one of the eight salaried justices, provided for by Section 2688, Revised Statutes 1919. This is a concise outline of the case, and the divers objections urged in the return can be noted in the course of the opinion, so far as they become pertinent and necessary.

I. The office of justice of the peace is a constitutional office and is provided for by Section 37 of Article VI of our Constitution, thus: “In each .county there shall be appointed, or elected, as many justices of the peace as the public good may require, whose powers, duties and duration in office shall be regulated by law. ’ ’

Note that they may be either appointed or elected, but they shall constitute a class, i. e., justices of the peace. IJnder this constitutional provision, Sections 2688 and 2689 provides for justice of the peace in a situation such as we find in Kaw Township. The first section provides for eight districts and for eight justices to be elected-one for each district. Under further provisions these eight officials are salaried. Under the second named section, the officer is appointed as the necessity of the situation appears to the county court, and such officers serve upon a fee basis. There is express authority in the Constitution for appointment of justices of the peace and such fact can furnish no reasonable basis for a valid classification. It is contended that the difference between fees and salary is not suffication for a valid classification, and yet this is the sole basis fixed by the statute b~f ore us. Study the wording of *625 the statute for just one moment. In it the lawmakers give their reason for the act, and we need not go further. The return shows the number of cases to be disposed of by all the justices and the number disposed of by the justices on a fee basis. The motion for judgment on the pleadings admits these facts and, therefore, admits the necessity for these justices with full jurisdiction. This is a mere sidelight, however, and one of no real value in determining the case. There are real vital questions in the case, although they affect only justices of the peace. To these we shall address ourselves in the following-paragraphs.

II. The individual rights of this respondent are not so great as is the principle involved. It is a matter of vital importance to the jurisprudence of the State that legislative acts be kept within constitutional bounds, and this overshadows the mere pecuniary and legal rights of the' respondent. We feel called upon to write for the greater reason rather than the lesser one, which latter clusters around the particular rights of the respondent. The greater goes to the very vitals of jurisprudence and the fixed rules of law. Justices of the peace have been classified, both as to number and as to compensation, according to the population of their communities. This has been done in the instant case by virtue of the two sections (Secs. 2688 and 2689') to which reference has been made. The class under these statutes, in this particular case, are justices of the peace within any prescribed township which falls within the statutory terms. At this time there is no township within this State which falls within the statutory terms, except Kaw Township, in Jackson Count}?. At a later date it is barely possible that other townships may fall within the class, which class' has been made general only by this bare possibility. Otherwise this classification would fall. At this date the general class is, justices of the peace in Kaw Township, Jackson County, Missouri. This general class the proposed law *626 subdivides into two classes: (1) Justices paid by fees and (2) justices paid by salaries. Then the law proceeds to a further classification as to jurisdiction and this is one of the vital questions and is one which not only affects respondent, but the .residents of the territory served by him. and the residents of the territory served by other justices similarly situated. So the whole interest is not centered around the respondent, who chances to be a justice of the peace, but there is the general public which is vitally interested in the classification of their business. They all ask whether1 or not the classification as to jurisdiction has a reasonable basis upon which to stand. The litigants now before these courts and the prospective litigants more than five miles from a salaried justice are propounding this question of a reasonable basis for a classification to this court at this time. Of the two respective subclassifications later.

III.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 20, 310 Mo. 620, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rowan-v-pollock-mo-1925.