Judges: MR. JUSTICE CHAMBLISS delivered the opinion on Petition to Rehear.
Filed Date: 6/29/1940
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
Parenthetically it may be remarked that, while the question of constitutionality may be first raised at any time, even on a petition to re-hear, the burden, always on those attacking the constitutionality of an Act of the Legislature, is increasingly heavy when raised for the first time by petition to re-hear. Not only does the general presumption of constitutionality apply, but a presumption also arises from this after-thought attack that the constitutional defect alleged is not clear and obvious, since it did not before appear, either to astute and diligent counsel, or to the Courts which have construed the Act.
We have carefully considered the able argument attacking the constitutionality of the clause of the Act involved, but are not convinced that the attack is well made. The provision of the Act in question does not introduce matter independent of the general subject, but grows naturally out of it. As said in the original opinion, in this Act "The Legislature was dealing with a widespread practice of law violation likely to be aggravated in the counties left legally ``dry' by the conversion of adjacent counties into legally ``wet' territory under the Act of 1939." As a natural incident the Legislature might properly provide for additional means of protection of this territory left dry, in order that the "wet" privileges conferred on given territory might not adversely affect the territory left legally dry. This is all this provision does. The Act as a whole, as indicated by its caption, deals with the general subject of the regulation of the sale of liquor. Authorizing its sale under prescribed conditions, it was germane to provide that it should not be otherwise or elsewhere sold, and provide *Page 427 for enforcement of this limitation. The constitutional provision relied on that "no bill shall become a law which embraces more than one subject," art. 2, section 17, has no application where "the unity of the subject is to be found in the ultimate object of the statute," as well said by the learned Attorney General.
It is, also, we think, apparent that the restrictions and conditions placed by this Act upon the sale of liquor in a county voting itself wet would be in large measure defeated if unrestricted sales in other and adjacent territory are not suppressed. All the carefully provided regulations prescribed by this Act for the sale of liquor in legally wet territory would be weakened if liquor might with impunity be sold free of these regulations in other territory. This Act of 1939 has been described by this Court as an amendment to existing prohibition laws. Chadrick v. State,
GREEN, C.J., and COOK, J., concur.
McKINNEY and DeHAVEN, JJ., dissent. *Page 429