State ex rel. Warner v. Hoagland

16 A. 166, 51 N.J.L. 62, 22 Vroom 62, 1888 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 16 A. 166 (State ex rel. Warner v. Hoagland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Warner v. Hoagland, 16 A. 166, 51 N.J.L. 62, 22 Vroom 62, 1888 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 23 (N.J. 1888).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

The act of 1888, on which the relator founds his right to the possession of these records, abolished the office of the respondents and transferred its duties to the relator. [66]*66The respondents resist the application, and contend that the act of 1888 is unconstitutional and void.

The act thus drawn in question excepts from its operation cities of the first class.” It is insisted that for this reason it is a special and local law regulating the internal affairs of cities. The classification of cities was made by the act of March 4th, 1882. Rev. Sup., p. 506. That statute divided cities into four classes — cities of the first class, consisting of those having a population exceeding one hundred thousand; cities of the second class, those having a population not less than twelve thousand nor more than one hundred thousand; cities of the third class, consisting of those not embraced within either the first or second classes, excepting cities on the Atlantic ocean which are sea-side or summer resorts, the cities thus excepted being designated as cities of the fourth class.

The scope and purpose of the Classification act of 1882 has been a subject of misapprehension which has occasioned some faulty legislation. The act, properly construed, does not purport to establish an absolute rule to discriminate between classifications which are admissible under the constitutional provision and those forbidden by its interdict. The office of the act is to provide a classification for the convenience of municipal legislation, analogous to the interpretation clauses frequently inserted in statutes, or general acts, assigning a meaning to particular words or a particular construction to statutory expressions, such as the general act relative to statutes. Rev., p. 1120. The third section, which declares that laws referring to cities under the classification therein made shall be construed to apply to and embrace all cities within that classification, clearly indicates the purpose to be . that of statutory construction. Assigning to the act of 1882 its appropriate office, the result will be that the statute under consideration will read as excluding from its operation cities having a population exceeding one hundred thousand inhabitants; and upon such a rendering, the question will arise whether the classification adopted is such, in substance, as to bring this act within the category of general laws.

[67]*67It is incontestable at this day that population may be made the basis of classification in statutes relating to municipal bodies and their police powers. The power of the legislature to legislate within that sphere on a classification on the score of population has been set at rest by two recent decisions. I refer to Randolph v. Wood, 20 Vroom 85, which was affirmed by the Court of Errors (21 Id. 175), the opinion of Mr. Justice Knapp in the Supreme Court being adopted as the opinion of the court, and State, Hart, pros., v. Scott, 21 Id. 585, decided by the Court of Errors by a unanimous vote, the opinion of Mr. Justice Van Syckel in that case being the opinion ■of the entire court.

Randolph v. Wood was decided upon an act entitled “An act concerning cities of the third class,” approved April 20th, 1883 (Rev. Sup., p. 527, § 129), and framed in compliance with the Classification act of 1882. It enacted that in cities of the third class the term of office of the legislative body should be for as many years as there were members from each ward, and provided for so classifying members that the term of one member from each ward should expire each year, and one member from each ward should be elected for each year. The act wrought a radical change in the organization of cities within its purview, and was conspicuously a regulation of internal affairs; and in the Classification act of 1882, cities of the third class were those with a population of less than twelve thousand, excluding cities bounding upon the Atlantic •ocean which were sea-side or summer resorts. The act was ■upheld by this court and the Court of Errors as a constitutional exercise of legislative power. In State, Hart, pros., v. •Scott, the section in question prescribed the minimum fees for licenses to sell liquors, graduated by a classification upon population, $100 being the minimum fee in municipalities having a population of not more than three thousand ; $150 in municipalities having a population exceeding three thousand and not exceeding ten thousand, and $250 in municipalities with a population in excess of ten thousand. It was conceded that this section was a regulation of the internal affairs of [68]*68towns and cities. The classification on which it was founded was sustained.

It must not be inferred from these decisions that classification on the basis of population may be resorted to as a means of evading the constitutional interdict of local and special laws, where the classification is plainly illusory. Mr. Justice Knapp, in dealing with the case then in hand, states the principle in these words: “A law is to be regarded as general when its provisions apply to all objects of legislation, distinguished alike by qualities and attributes which necessitate the legislation or to which the enactment has manifest relation. Such law must embrace all and exclude none whose condition and wants render such legislation equally necessary or appropriate to them as a class.” He states the question for decision to be whether, for the purpose of legislation, enlarging the term of office of councilmen, smallness of population may not be a substantial and sufficiently important ground to distinguish such communities from the great cities of the state, and answers it in the affirmative, assigning as a reason therefor that the duties of such office in small cities, were measurably small; that such offices in small cities were avoided by proper men; that unless the duty which election to public office enforces is imposed for a considerable term, competent and experienced service is not likely to be obtained, and that in this ■ larger cities differ. He adds: “ That if these or other considerations justify the drawing of some line of demarcation between the larger and smaller aggregations of people, it is for the legislature to say where that line shall be placed. I am not prepared to say that the selection of the smaller municipalities from the whole, as the objects to which this legislation shall apply, is so inappropriate that we may deny to the legislation based upon it the quality of a general law.”

In State, Hart, pros., v. Scott, Mr. Justice Van Syckel declared that the diversity created by the section under consideration would be fatal to its validity unless the basis of classification was substantial. He continued : “ Whether the basis of classification is wise or judicious, or whether it will [69]*69operate as fairly as some other basis that might be adopted, is a question for the legislature and not for the courts.

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Bluebook (online)
16 A. 166, 51 N.J.L. 62, 22 Vroom 62, 1888 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-warner-v-hoagland-nj-1888.