Katz v. State
Decision Date | 19 October 1932 |
Docket Number | No. 15257.,15257. |
Citation | 54 S.W.2d 130 |
Parties | KATZ v. STATE. |
Court | Texas Court of Criminal Appeals |
Appeal from County Court at Law, No. 1 Bexar County; McCollum Burnett, Judge.
A. Katz was convicted of the offense of pursuing the business of lending money and charging and receiving therefor a fee and brokerage, without paying occupation tax, and he appeals.
Reversed and prosecution ordered dismissed.
Newton & Gittinger and Leonard Brown, all of San Antonio, for appellant.
D. F. Davis, Co. Atty., Marion R. McClanahan and Arthur V. Wright, Asst. Co. Attys., all of San Antonio, James V. Allred, Atty. Gen., Neal Powers, Asst. Atty. Gen., and Lloyd W. Davidson, State's Atty., of Austin, for the State.
The offense is pursuing the business of lending money and charging and receiving therefor a fee and brokerage, without paying the occupation tax provided for in chapter 41, General and Special Laws of the Forty-Second Legislature, enacted during the Second Called Session (Vernon's Ann. Civ. St. art. 7047, subd. 15); the punishment, a fine of $150.
Appellant attacks the caption of the act, insisting that it is violative of section 35, article 3, of the Constitution. The applicable portion of the cited section of the Constitution reads:
The title to the bill reads as follows: "An Act to amend Section 14, Article 7047, of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, relating to and imposing an occupation tax on money lenders and defining same and providing for certain exceptions, and declaring an emergency."
The provision of the bill here in question reads:
A solution of the question makes it necessary to examine article 7047, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, which embraces the section sought to be amended. After providing for the collection of an occupation tax, article 7047, sets forth thirty-nine numbered subdivisions, each of which relates to a distinct occupation. Subdivision 14 reads as follows: "Loan brokers.—From loan brokers, as that term is defined by the laws of this State, an annual tax of one hundred and fifty dollars for each place of business."
We find "loan brokers" defined in article 6162, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, which we quote: "A `loan broker' is a person, firm or corporation who pursues the business of lending money and taking as security for the payment of such loan and interest an assignment of wages, or an assignment of wages with power of attorney to collect the same, or other order for unpaid chattel mortgage or bill of sale upon household or kitchen furniture."
Subdivision 15 of article 7047 defines "money lenders" and provides for the payment of an occupation tax. We quote:
Deducing from the judicial precedents the principles controlling, it is observed that a liberal construction will be applied in determining whether or not a statute violates section 35 of article 3 of the Constitution, and, where the provisions are germane in any degree, the law will be upheld. Mercer v. State, 111 Tex. Cr. R. 657, 13 S.W.(2d) 689; Davis v. State, 88 Tex. Cr. R. 183, 225 S. W. 532. The word "subject" in the constitutional provision to which reference has been made is used in the same sense as the word "object" in former Constitutions. Mercer v. State, supra; Fielder v. State, 40 Tex. Cr. R. 184, 49 S. W. 376. The word "object" under former Constitutions was construed by the courts to mean "end or purpose." Giddings v. San Antonio, 47 Tex. 548, 26 Am. Rep. 321; Breen v. Ry. Co., 44 Tex. 302; Stone v. Brown, 54 Tex. 331; State v. McCracken, 42 Tex. 384; Houston & T. C. R. Co. v. Odum, 53 Tex. 344; International & G. N. R. Co. v. Smith County, 54 Tex. 1.
The purpose of the constitutional provision under consideration is well expressed in the case of Consolidated Underwriters v. Kirby Lumber Company (Tex. Com. App.) 267 S. W. 703, 705, from which the following is taken: "It is well recognized that the purposes of this provision are to advise the Legislature and the people of the nature of each particular bill, so as to prevent the insertion of obnoxious clauses which otherwise might be ingrafted on it and become the law, and to obviate legislation through the combination, upon a composite bill, of the votes of the proponents of different measures included in it, some of which would not pass upon their merits if separately considered."
See, also, Stone v. Brown, 54 Tex. 342.
The judicial precedents are to the effect that, if the general and ultimate subject of the particular act as a whole is to be found within the wording of the title, the subject thus expressed will support provisions in the body of the act that are components of the general subject; are reasonably implied by it because they have been connected with, and appropriate to, it in similar laws or by usage; are relevant and germane to it; are necessary for the attainment of it; are reasonably auxiliary to it; are complementary to it; or are reasonable incidents of it, or of its incidents as expressed in the title. Consolidated Underwriters v. Kirby Lumber Company, supra, and authorities therein cited. On the other hand, it is the announcement of the decisions that particular provisions are not within a given title where no subject at all is expressed in the title; where the ultimate subject expressed and that provided for are plainly different; where the provisions are palpably ulterior or foreign to the title; where they are separate, distinct from, and not germane to the subject expressed; where by no intendment they possess a necessary or proper connection with it; where they are disconnected from it and inappropriate to it. Consolidated Underwriters v. Kirby Lumber Company, supra, and authorities therein cited.
It has already been observed that the act (chapter 41) under consideration purports to amend section 14 of article 7047, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925. In stating the principles from which it may be determined whether the title to a bill meets the requirement of section 35, article 3, of the Constitution, we are not to be understood as holding that the title of an act amendatory of an article in a code, such as our Revised Statutes, is insufficient if it does no more than refer to the code and the number of the article therein. The courts of this state have held that a reference to a number of an article in a code, such as our Revised Statutes, is sufficient in the title of an act amendatory thereof, to allow any amendment germane to the subject treated in the article referred to. English & Scottish-American Mortg. & Inv. Co. v. Hardy, 93 Tex. 289, 55 S. W. 169; State v. McCracken, 42 Tex. 384. The reason for the holding appears to be that the naming of the article to be amended directs attention to all of the provisions therein, as the subject of the amending act, and that such provisions can be ascertained by reading the article to be amended. However, when the Legislature restricts the title of an amendatory act by reference to the number in the code of the article amended, and announces its purpose to deal with the original bill in respect to particular matters therein, it is bound to govern itself accordingly, and keep within what it had itself declared would be the limits of its proposed action. Sutherland Statutory Construction (2d Ed.) vol. 1, § 139; State v. American Sugar Refining Co., 106 La. 553, 31 So. 181, 186.
We quote from Sutherland Statutory Construction, supra, as follows:
Many authorities are cited in support of the text, among the citations being State v. American Sugar Refining Co., supra. In the case last mentioned, the court considered an act to amend sections 10, 12, and 14 of an act in relation to licensing occupations. The act brought into these sections the business of refining sugar and molasses. The business last mentioned was provided for in section 11 of the original act. This was held to be void as not within the...
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