Whited v. Lewis

25 La. Ann. 568
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1873
DocketNo. 409
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 25 La. Ann. 568 (Whited v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whited v. Lewis, 25 La. Ann. 568 (La. 1873).

Opinion

Howell, J.

Plaintiff, as collector of parish taxes, sues defendant for $100, as the license, fixed by an ordinance passed by the Police Jury of Ouachita, on the business of keeper of a hotel in the city of Monroe. The defense is that by the eleventh sectiou of act 81, of the regular session of 1872, promulgated on the thirteenth of April, 1873, amending the charter of Monroe, all property situated in Monroe, and [569]*569persons following trades, occupations and professions therein, are •exempted from paying taxes or licenses to the parish.

In reply the plaintiff says that said act was not passed in conformity with the formalities required by the constitution, and is in violation of articles 114, 115, 118 and 110 of said instrument.

First — In the case of the Louisiana State Lottery Company v. Richoux et als., 23 An. 743, it was held that courts will presume that the con■stitutional rules laid down for the passage of laws have been complied with by the lawmaker, and when duly promulgated will accept them •without inquiry as to the observance or non-observance of such rules. Assuming the regularity of the promulgation of the law under consideration, we must, under this rule of jurisprudence, accept it as having been passed, as promulgated, upon the observance of all the rules prescribed for the enactment of laws. Any alleged discrepancy, therefore, in the title as adopted by one house and that as adopted by the other, is not a subject of judicial inquiry. The fact whether or not a law has been duly promulgated, may be within the province of the judiciary; but whether or not it has regularly passed through all the stages necessary lor its passage as a law up to the promulgation, it seems now settled in this State, is a subject confined to other departments of government.

Second — Does the title express the objects of the law? Article 114. As the eleventh section only of said act is involved in this controversy, we have simply to ascertain if the object or objects embraced in it are expressed in the title. In 6 An. 605 it was said, when portions of a law come within the reasonable intendment of its title, and others do not, the latter alone are unconstitutional, provided they can stand alone.” This properly applies to the section under revision, it containing independent matter. See, also, 21 An. 309, 448. In these ■cases the right of a party to raise the question of the constitutionality of a law was limited to the provisions thereof which affected his interest in the litigation.

Referring to the title and section of the law attacked herein, we con-sider the objects of the latter embraced in the former. The act is professedly amendatory. Its title reads, “ An act to amend and ■re-enact sections one, two, three, seven, and the ninth paragraph of section nine, to add a twenty-first paragraph to section nine, and to amend and re-enact sections nineteen, twenty, twenty-one and twenty-eight of the act entitled an act to incorporate the city of Monroe, to fix its boundaries, to provide for the government, and create a recorder’s ■office for the same, approved May 4, 1871, and after the first day of January, 1873, to exempt all property, real and personal, and all persons, firms or corporations within the corporate limits of the city of Monroe from the payment of parish taxes and licenses, and to provide [570]*570for the payment of costs and fees in criminal cases, originating within-said corporate limits.”

The eleventh section reads: “That all real and personal property within the corporation of the city of Monroe, and all persons, firms- and corporations within the said corporation, be and the same are hereby exempted from all taxes and licenses levied by the parish of Ouachita from and after the first day of January, 1873; provided, that the city of Monroe shall be liable for the expenses in a.11 criminal cases-originating within its corporate limits; and the clerk of the district court and the sheriff of the parish of Ouachita shall collect their fees in such cases from the corporate authorities of the city of Monroe, and-not from those of the parish of Ouachita.”

It is objected that the whole object, announced in the title, as to* costs and fees in criminal cases, is not effected or carried out in the eleventh section. This implies that the object of the law in this-respect is expressed in the title, and whether any costs and fees besides-those of the clerk or sheriff can be collected irom the city of Monroe- or not is a question to be settled in a litigation on that particular point, and can not affect the constitutionality of the law.

Third — It is next objected that the act under discussion violated article 115 of the constitution, because the attempt is made to amend and re-enact the ninth paragraph of the ninth section of a previous act,, and to add a new (21) paragraph thereto, without re-enacting the amended section at length.

Conceding this to be a well-founded objection in a proper case, it cannot, under the rule above announced, be raised here, because plaintiff has no interest in having it settled.

Fourth — It is further contended that section eleven violates the uniformity and equality of taxation, because it exempts some property and* persons within the limits of the parish from taxation to which others-are subject, and because the Legislature can only exempt “property actually used for church, school and charitable purposes.”'

Municipal or political corporations withm this State can exercise the power of taxation only so far as conferred by its Legislature. (8 An. 341; 9 An. 562; 13 An. 56.) “ Our statute books and those of our sister States are filled with acts creating those political corporations whose-powers are emanations from the legislative will, and subject to be-enlarged or curtailed by that will from time to time,, as the wisdom of the legislation may dictate.”

The power to tax the property within and require licenses from the inhabitants of the parish of Ouachita was conferred by the Legislature, and the exercise of that power is only curtailed by the section of the law under discussion. This law does not exempt these subjects or-objects from taxation; but simply limits or restricts them to the tax[571]*571ing power of one of the two corporations. The exempting of persons and property within the corporation of Monroe from taxation in any form by the police jury of the parish, only withdraws to that extent' from the police jury a power which had been delegated to it. The-police jury still must exercise the delegated power on this subject in-conformity with the constitution and laws within the limits of the parish, yet subject to its legislative control; while the municipal' authorities of Monroe must do the same within its limits. The Legislature conferred the power on each sub-division of the local government, and had the right to withdraw or modify that delegation as to-each or both.

Fifth — Is the law retroactive in the meaning of article 110 of the-Constitution ?

It proposes to exempt the property and person's from parish tax and license from and after the first day of January, 1873; it was not promulgated, as admitted by the defendant, until April 13,1873, after the the passage of the ordinance by the police jury (February 17, 1873) imposing the license claimed; and it may be admitted, for the purposes of this question, that promulgation is essential to the passage of the act.

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Bluebook (online)
25 La. Ann. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whited-v-lewis-la-1873.