Houston County v. Martin

Decision Date11 June 1936
Docket Number4 Div. 869
Citation232 Ala. 511,169 So. 13
PartiesHOUSTON COUNTY et al. v. MARTIN.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

Appeal from Circuit Court, Houston County; D.C. Halstead, Judge.

Petition by Harry K. Martin for a declaratory judgment against Houston County and the Board of Revenue of said county. From a judgment for plaintiff, defendants appeal.

Affirmed.

BOULDIN J., dissenting.

W Perry Calhoun and L.A. Farmer, both of Dothan, Geo. A Sossaman, of Mobile, and Merrill, Jones & Whiteside, of Anniston, for appellants.

E.W. Pettus, of Selma, Ernest Matthews, of Birmingham, W.L. Lee, of Dothan, and Niel P. Sterne, of Anniston, for appellee.

BROWN Justice.

This appeal is from a declaratory judgment rendered on the petition of appellee, contested by appellants, adjudging that the fees collected by the appellee, as judge of probate of Houston county, for official services, authorized by section 7285 of the Code 1923, from September 1, 1933, to January 14, 1935, though the fees so collected exceeded the sum of $6,000 per annum, were the property of the appellee, and that the appellants were without right or interest therein.

The proceedings and the appeal are authorized by the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act. Gen.Acts 1935, p. 777. And the pleadings present a bona fide controversy. Jefferson County v. Johnson (Ala.Sup.) 168 So. 450.

The contention of the appellants, asserted in the circuit court and here renewed, is that what is termed in brief and in the record as the "Sparks Amendment" (Const.1901, Amend. No. 26A, see Gen.Acts 1933, Ex.Sess., p. 46), but more appropriately designated in the 1936 Supplement to Michie's Code, Annotated, "Suspension of Restriction on Diminishing Public Salaries, etc.," is self-executing and ex proprio vigore limited the right of appellee to collect and appropriate to his own use such fees to the amount of $6,000 per annum, and all fees collected by him in excess of $6,000 become property of the county, and appellee is chargeable therewith as a trustee in invitum; that the "Hendley Act," approved September 9, 1935 (Gen.Acts 1935, pp. 844-846), imposed on the appellee the duty to account for such excess, under penalty, and makes a failure to so account an indictable offense.

The contention of appellee, on the other hand, is that said amendment, in so far as it fixes the maximum compensation of $6,000 is indefinite and uncertain whether the allowance was intended to be gross or net, makes no provision for office assistance, and therefore cannot be applied to officers who derive their compensation solely from fees fixed by law for their official services, without additional legislation, and until such legislation is or was enacted the title to all fees collected by the appellee vested in him as his sole property; that the said "Hendley Act" (Gen.Acts 1935, pp. 844-846) is also so indefinite that it cannot be enforced without further legislation; that it is retroactive in its operation and subjects officers who do not account to civil penalties and criminal indictment, and is therefore ex post facto and violative of section 22 of the Declaration of Rights.

In disposing of these questions we shall assume that said "amendment" or "suspension" of the provisions of the Constitution protecting compensation of constitutional officers from reduction was validly proposed and adopted as a part of the Constitution--that question not being presented on this record.

However, we do not wish to be understood as holding that the right to amend the Constitution reserved to the people by section 284 of the Constitution, as amended by Const.1901, Amend. No. 24, includes the right of a majority to temporarily suspend the Constitution or any part thereof to meet a real or fancied emergency. If three-fifths of the members elected to the House and Senate, with the approval of a majority of the electorate voting in an election, can temporarily suspend the provisions of the Constitution protecting public salaries from reduction--provisions intended to secure to the people of the state a virile, independent, and just government of law--then by like procedure the provisions of the Constitution protecting freedom of speech and freedom of the press may also be temporarily suspended. Or, the provisions of the Constitution securing to the citizen civil liberty, the right to the writ of habeas corpus, the right to public trial before an impartial tribunal, the right of trial by jury, may also be suspended for a certain time, during which those in authority may arrogate to themselves the right and power to punish summarily those who find fault with or who are not in accord with the existing regime. By the same practice, if finally approved by the courts, every right and immunity protected by the Declaration of Rights may be suspended to meet the will of the majority, substituting a government of men for a government of law. No such thought was ever entertained by the framers of the Constitution or the people in its adoption, and no such practice has ever been attempted in any sovereignty on earth existing under a written Constitution, except in Alabama.

"A constitution, unlike a statute, is intended not merely to meet existing conditions, but to govern the future. It has been said that the term 'constitution' implies an instrument of a permanent nature." 6 R.C.L. pp. 16, 17, § 3.

Constitutions are not primarily designed to protect majorities who are usually able to protect themselves, but to preserve and protect the rights of individuals and minorities against the arbitrary actions of those in authority. State v. Bush, 12 Ala.App. 309, 68 So. 492.

It is only through a permanent and stable government of law that justice may be established and administered, and the blessings of liberty secured to the people and their posterity. This is so, notwithstanding the reserved political power "inherent in the people," and the fact recognized by the Constitution, that "All free governments are founded on their authority, and instituted for their benefit; and that, therefore, they have at all times an inalienable and indefeasible right to change their form of government in such manner as they may deem expedient." Const.1901, § 2.

That principle has found full expression in this language: "Under our institutions sovereignty resides in or with the people, and may be exercised in the manner they have provided in their constitution." (Italics supplied.) 6 R.C.L. p. 24, § 13.

The representatives of the people in convention assembled, who framed the Constitution, contemplated neither revolution nor repudiation. The Constitution itself provides the only method of changing the form of government which it sets up and establishes--by a convention of the representatives of the people. Const.1901, §§ 284-287; Collier, Governor, v. Frierson et al., 24 Ala. 100; Johnson v. Craft et al., 205 Ala. 386, 87 So. 375; Realty Investment Co. v. City of Mobile, 181 Ala. 184, 61 So. 248; In re Opinions of the Justices (In re Proposed Amendment to Constitution Authorizing Issuance of Interest-Bearing Warrants and Levy of Income Tax), 223 Ala. 365, 136 So. 585.

It is well settled that even a state of war and the declaration of secession by the people cannot suspend the Constitution or remove its protection; and the mature judgment of the courts, after the strife was ended, was that the Constitution prevailed and the judgments and decrees of the courts of Alabama, rendered during the War between the states, were valid and binding. Riddle et al. v. Hill's Administrator, 51 Ala. 224; Horn v. Lockhart et al., 17 Wall. 570, 21 L.Ed. 657; 6 R.C.L. p. 41, § 35; United States v. L. Cohen Grocery Co., 255 U.S. 81, 41 S.Ct. 298, 65 L.Ed. 516, 14 A.L.R. 1045.

It is a well-settled rule of interpretation, applicable to constitutions as well as statutes, that it is permissible in ascertaining their purpose and intent to look to the history of the times, the existing order of things, the state of the law when the instrument was adopted, and the conditions necessitating such adoption. Fox v. McDonald, 101 Ala. 51, 13 So. 416, 21 L.R.A. 529, 46 Am.St.Rep. 98; 16 R.C.L. p. 51, § 46.

It is now a matter of history, known to all men, that prior to the Extra Session of the Legislature at which said "Sparks Amendment" was proposed, the Governor and the Legislature had been elected after an "anti-tax levying campaign"; that the current debts of the state had increased; the Governor, in order to keep the schools open, had procured a large loan, much in excess of what the Constitution authorized, and the state treasury was facing a large deficit--about $16,000,000. The Legislature had, at the Extra Session of 1932, passed the Fletcher-Bonner Bill, making a drastic reduction in salaries of state officials and employees above $1,200, of from 33 1/3 to 5 per cent. As to officers and employees whose salaries were not protected from reduction by sections 150 and 281 of the Constitution, the act was made effective on the last day of the month in which it was passed and approved. As to those whose salaries were protected, it was made to take effect at the end of their terms, and regulated the salaries of their successors, excepting the Justices of the Supreme Court, and as to them it was effective at the end of the terms of the two last elected before the passage of the act. Gen.Acts 1932, Ex.Sess., pp. 300, 301.

House Bill No. 1, introduced at the Special Session of 1933 (January 31, 1933), proposed the following as article 24 of the Constitution: "All provisions of the Constitution which prohibit the Legislature from reducing, decreasing, or diminishing the salary, fees, or compensation of any executive, legislative, or judicial officer, whether elected or appointed,...

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