DocketNumber: No. 11762
Citation Numbers: 79 Wash. 227, 140 P. 540
Judges: Ellis
Filed Date: 4/25/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an appeal by the relator from an order of the superior court for Spokane county sitting en banc, refusing a peremptory writ of mandate to compel the defendant, as clerk of the court, to file a complaint in a civil action, tendered for filing by the relator, with the $4 filing fee prescribed by Rem. & Bal. Code, § 497 (P. C. 179 § 1), but without tender of the additional $1, required by chapter 126, Laws of 1913, p. 386 et seq. (3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 42-1 et seq.). The act is entitled;
*229 “An act providing for the appointment of official court reporters in the state of Washington, prescribing their duties, oath of office, and qualifications, .and providing for their compensation and the manner of their appointment.”
The provisions of the act may be condensed as follows: Section 1 (Id., § 42-1) makes it the duty of each superior court judge, in counties or judicial districts having a population of over 30,000, to appoint an official court stenographer, prescribes the standard of qualifications for eligibility, provides for removal for incompetency, misconduct or neglect of duty and fixes the official bond of the person so appointed.
Section 2 (Id., § 42-2) provides for the taking of accurate shorthand notes of the testimony, exceptions and all other oral proceedings in each cause by such stenographer upon request of either party or upon direction of the presiding judge, of his own motion, and for the filing of such notes in the office of the clerk of the trial court.
Section 3 (Id., § 42-3) provides for payment of the official reporter at the rate of $10 per diem of actual attendance, pursuant to direction of the court, out of the county treasury as other expenses of the court are paid.
Section 4 declares:
“In each civil action hereafter commenced the sum of one dollar ($1) shall be paid by the plaintiff at the time of the filing of the complaint to the clerk of the court, and at the time of the appearance of the defendant, or any defendant appearing separately, there shall be paid in to the clerk of the court one dollar ($1), and these sums so paid shall be taxed as costs in the case, and collected from the unsuccessful party in said action, and shall be known as stenographers’ costs, and shall be paid by the clerk of said court into the county treasury of the county in which said action is commenced.” 3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 42-4.
Section 5 (Id., § 42-5) provides that, on request of the court or of either party or of his attorney, the official reporter shall make an accurate transcript of the testimony and
“That when the defendant in any criminal cause shall present to the judge presiding satisfactory proof, by affidavit or otherwise, that he is unable to pay for such transcript, the presiding judge, if in his opinion justice will thereby be promoted, may order said transcript to be made by the official reporter, in which case the official reporter shall be paid for preparing said transcript ten cents per folio for the original copy and five cents per folio for each carbon copy ordered at the same time as the original or made at the same time as the original, which transcript fee shall be paid in like manner as the per diem fees are paid as specified in section three of this act.”
Section 6 (Id., § 42-6) provides that the report of the official reporter, when certified as provided, shall be prima facie a correct statement of such testimony or other oral proceedings, and may thereafter, in any civil cause, be read in evidence as competent testimony upon proof that the witness who gave it is then dead or without the jurisdiction of the court, subject to all objections as though the witness were present and testifying in person.
Section 7 provides for the certification of the transcript of the notes of an official reporter after he has ceased to be such. Section 8 provides for the appointment of a reporter pro tem in the absence or inability of the official reporter to act. Section 9 makes the official reporter the amanuensis to the court under certain conditions, except in counties of the first class. Section 10 insures the use of the files by the official reporters or reporters pro tem, on giving the clerk a receipt therefor. Section 11 provides that supplies for reporting criminal cases shall be furnished by the county, and that such supplies in all other cases shall be furnished by the stenographer. Section 12 provides for the substitution, on request of either party,
The appellant contends that the act is void for the following reasons: (1) that it embraces subjects not germane to that expressed in its title, thus impinging § 19 of art. 2 of the state constitution, which provides that no bill shall embrace more than one subject, and that shall be expressed in the title; (2) that the act is, in eifect,' a taxing act, impinging §§ 1, 2, and 9, of art. 7, of the state constitution, which provide, respectively, for taxation of property in proportion to value, for taxation upon a uniform and equal rate, and that taxation for corporate purposes by municipalities shall be uniform with respect to persons and property; (3) that the act makes an arbitrary classification of the counties of the state, thus impinging paragraph 6, of § 28, of art. 2, of the state constitution, which prohibits the legislature from enacting any private or special laws for granting corporate powers or privileges, and § 12, of art. 1, prohibiting the granting to any citizen, class of citizens, or corporation, other than municipal, privileges or immunities which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens or corporations; (4) that the act is violative of § 4, art. 11 of the state constitution, guaranteeing uniform laws for county government, and § 5 of the same article, prescribing uniform laws for the election of county and township officers; (5) that the act denies to the citizens of the state equal protection of the laws, contravening the first section of the 14th amendment to the Federal constitution.
I. The appellant argues that the provision in § 4 of the act for an additional filing fee of $1 invalidates the act, urging that this is a matter in no way germane to the sub
“This court has often held that the title of an act, in order to comply with the constitutional provisions above quoted, need not he an index to the contents of the act; that the purpose of the title is to call attention to the subject-matter of the act so that anyone reading it may know what matter is being legislated upon, and it is sufficient when it is broad enough to accomplish that purpose. For the various provisions constituting the act, the body of the act must be consulted, the title being neither expected nor required to give details. State v. Scott, 32 Wash. 279, 73 Pac. 365; State v. Fraternal Knights Ladies, 35 Wash. 338, 77 Pac. 500; Weed v. Goodwin, 36 Wash. 31, 78 Pac. 36; State ex rel. Osborne, Tremper & Co. v. Nichols, 38 Wash. 309, 80 Pac. 462; State ex rel. Zenner v. Graham, 34 Wash. 81, 74 Pac. 1058; Shortall v. Puget Sound Bridge & Dredging Co., 45 Wash. 290, 88 Pac. 212; State v. Winsor, ante p. 407, 97 Pac. 446.” State ex rel. Zent v. Nichols, 50 Wash. 508, 97 Pac. 728.
See, also, State v. Hall, 24 Wash. 255, 64 Pac. 153; Seattle Nat. Bank v. Ally, 66 Wash. 610, 120 Pac. 94; National Surety Co. v. Bratnober Lumber Co., 67 Wash. 601, 122 Pac. 337; Hambach v. Ward, 69 Wash. 351, 125 Pac. 140; Sorenson v. Kittitas Reclamation Dist., 70 Wash. 528, 127 Pac. 102. The title here in question expressly indicates that the act includes provisions for the appointment, duties, and qualifications of official court reporters, and contains provision for their compensation. Clearly, the act is intended to cover the whole subject of official reporters, and the title so indicates. It would seem that no more than a bare statement of the fact should be necessary to demonstrate that any provision for their compensation, whether by fees, legislative appropriation or otherwise, is germane to a title expressly stating that’ the act contains matter “providing for their compensation.” A thing so self-evident cannot be further clarified by argument, or reinforced by citation of precedent.
II. We find no merit in the claim that the act runs counter to §§ 1, 2 and 9, of art. 7, of the state constitution, guaranteeing a uniform and equal rate of taxation. The act is not, in any just sense, a revenue act. The fee prescribed is not a tax. It is a fee having the same direct relation to the future service to be performed by the official reporter that the fee of $4, provided for in Rem. & Bal. Code, § 497 (P. C. 179 § 1) has to services to be performed by the clerk. It is not a graduated tax based upon the value of the property
III. Eliminating the last section of the act, which we shall presently consider, the act does not make an arbitrary classification repugnant to the inhibition of the constitution against laws granting special corporate powers or privileges, or granting special privileges to persons or corporations, other than municipal. Appellant’s argument proceeds upon the theory that the classification is one of counties; that San Juan county and Skagit county, each having a population of less than 30,000, together form a single judicial district of 30,000 inhabitants, are subject to the operation of the act, and are thus placed in a different class from all other counties of the state having a population of less than 30,000. The vice of this argument lies in the mistaken assumption that the classification is a classification of counties as such. It is essentially a classification of judicial districts, and not of counties except as they coincide with or go to make up the judicial districts of the state. Eliminating the 13th section, the act applies to every judicial district having a population of over 30,000, and to no judicial district having a less population. Viewed, then, as a classification by population, the act is uniform in its application, and must remain so, since there is nothing in the act limiting its operation only to judicial districts now having a population of 30,000 or over. It must be construed as applying to every judicial district if, and when, it hereafter acquires that population, though now having less.
So viewed, is the classification by population a valid classification? Classification of cities, counties, and other legal
“But it is urged that no reason has been assigned for limiting the operation of the act to counties ‘having a population of not less than 70,000 and more than 90,000’ and thus necessarily excluding the counties of Davidson and Shelby, each having a population, according to the Federal census, largely in excess of 90,000. To this objection, it may be said as to Davidson, that the legislature may have found as a reason for its exclusion, that it was covered by turnpike built and controlled by private chartered companies, and in the matter of Shelby that the public has already perfected a network of good roads, under a system entirely satisfactory, But while the courts frequently find and assign reasons for legislative classification, yet it is by no means uniformly so. And it does not follow, because the reason for the classification is not disclosed in the face of the act, that it is necessarily without reason and capricious. B,easons eminently wise and provident might control the law-making body which do not appear upon the face of a statute, and for the courts to strike it down, because not readily perceptible might well be criticised as an act of judicial usurpation. Nor is there any abdication of constitutional duty or responsibility in this action. The true question in each case is, is the classification capricious, unreasonable, or arbitrary?” Condon v. Maloney, 108 Tenn. 82, 65 S. W. 871, 874.
See, also, State ex rel. Bell v. Frazier, supra; McCarter v. McKelvey, 78 N. J. L. 3, 74 Atl. 316, 138 Am. St. 583;
If, therefore, there can be found any sane, reasonable ground- for a distinction between judicial districts having less than 30,000 inhabitants and those having more than that number, in their relation to the purposes of the act and its practical application, we have no warrant for saying that the classification so made is arbitrary. Viewed in the light of these general principles, it is clear that there is such a distinction between districts of a larger population and districts of a smaller population in their relation to the purposes and practical application of the act here in question. Districts of the smaller population would necessarily be those rural in their character, not including any populous cities. In such districts, there is, of course, and will always be, comparatively little litigation. The fees provided by the act, as the legislature may well have concluded, might not, in such districts, provide a fund sufficient to meet the purposes of the act. There is thus a distinct relation between the population of a given district and the law in question. Where the exact line between the larger and the smaller populations should be drawn is necessarily a matter of legislative discretion. This is manifest, since populations too small to meet the purposes of the act and populations sufficiently large to meet these purposes would necessarily merge into each other at some point. That exact point can, of course, never be ascertained, yet the line must necessarily be drawn somewhere, and the determination of that point by the legislature will not be disturbed. On both reason and authority, we hold that the classification of the judicial districts of the
IV. Nor do we find the law contrary to the provisions of §§ 4 and 5, art. 11 of the constitution, guaranteeing uniform laws for county government and township organization, and uniform laws for the election of county and township officers. The act in question has nothing whatever to do either with county government or with county officers. It is a law relating to judicial districts; not to counties as such. It has not even the remotest relation to county or township organization or government, or to the election of county or township officers.
V. Whether the act in question is obnoxious to the first section of the 14th amendment of the constitution of the United States is a question which concerns the power of the state government in its relation to the Federal government. This amendment was never intended to prevent the different states of the Union from classifying their citizens for the purposes of legislation or judicial administration wherever that classification is based upon any real distinction in its relation to the purposes of the law. This amendment contemplates not only persons, but classes of persons. It has no application to local or municipal laws or regulations that do not injuriously affect or discriminate between persons or classes of persons within the places, municipalities, or jurisdictions for which such regulations are made. If every person residing or being within such subdivision, municipality, or jurisdiction is accorded the equal protection of the laws there prevailing, there is no violation of the inhibition of the Federal constitution. This is the settled law, as declared by the supreme court of the United States, and, the question being a Federal question, the decision of that court is final.
The principle here involved was passed upon by that court
“If this position is correct, the Fourteenth Amendment has a much more far-reaching effect than has been supposed. It would render invalid all limitations of jurisdiction based on the amount or character of the demand. A party having a claim for only five dollars could with equal propriety complain that he is deprived of a right enjoyed by other citizens, because he cannot prosecute it in the superior courts; and another might equally complain that he cannot bring a suit for real estate in a justice’s court, where the expense is small and the proceedings are expeditious. There is no difference in principle between such discriminations as these in the jurisdictions of courts and that which the plaintiff in error complains of in the present case.
“If, however, we take into view the general objects and purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment, we shall find no reasonable ground for giving it any such application. These are to extend United States citizenship to all natives and naturalized persons, and to prohibit the state from abridg*239 ing their privileges or immunities, and from depriving any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law, and from denying to any person within their jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. It contemplates persons and classes of persons. It has not respect to local and municipal regulations that do not injuriously affect or discriminate between persons or classes of persons within the places or municipalities for which such regulations are made . . . The last restriction, as to the equal protection of the laws, is not violated by any diversity in the jurisdiction of the several courts as to subject-matter, amount, or finality of decision, if all persons within the territorial limits of their respective jurisdictions have an equal right, in like cases and under like circumstances, to resort to them for redress. Each state has the right to make political subdivisions of its territory for municipal purposes, and to regulate their local government. As respects the administration of justice, it may establish one system of courts for cities and another for rural districts, one system for one portion of its territory, and another system for another portion ... If every person residing or being in either portion .of the state should be accorded the equal protection of the laws prevailing there, he could not justly complain of a violation of the clause referred to. For, as before said, it has respect to persons and classes of persons. It means that no person or class of persons shall be denied the same protection of the laws which is enjoyed by other persons or other classes in the same place and under like circumstances.”
See, also, Hayes v. Missouri, 120 U. S. 68; Magoun v. Illinois Trust & Sav. Bank, 170 U. S. 283; Williams v. Eggleston, 170 U. S. 304.
We are constrained to hold that the act in question, exclusive of the last section, does not violate either the letter or the spirit of any provision of the state or Federal constitutions in its relation to the question here presented.
But it is urged that the last section is an additional classification by population, founded upon no reasonable distinction in its relation to the purpose or practical operation of the law. We do not so read this section. It is not a classification, but a limitation on the general classification already
“In any case, therefore, where a constitutional question is raised, though it may be legitimately presented by the record, yet if the record also presents some other and clear ground upon which the court may rest its judgment, and thereby render the constitutional question immaterial to the case, that course will be adopted, and the question of constitutional power will be left for consideration until a case arises which cannot be disposed of without considering it and when consequently a decision upon such question will be unavoidable.” Cooley, Constitutional Limitations (6th ed.), p. 196.
It is, therefore, incumbent upon us first to determine whether the body of the act and the limiting clause are so inseparably connected in purpose and substance that the one cannot stand without the other. It is plain that the act is a complete act, perfectly capable of feasible operation without the aid of anything found in the last section. The question is thus reduced to this: Assuming the last section invalid, would the legislature have passed the act without that section had its attention been directed to the illegality of that
“Where, therefore, a part of a statute is unconstitutional, that fact does not authorize the courts to declare the remainder void also, unless all the provisions are connected in subject-matter, depending on each other, operating together for the same purpose, or otherwise so connected together in meaning, that it cannot be presumed that the legislature would have passed the one without the other. The constitutional and unconstitutional provisions may even be contained in the same section, and yet be perfectly distinct and separable, so that the first may stand though the last fall. The point is not whether they are contained in the same section; for the distribution into sections is purely artificial; but whether they are essentially and inseparably connected in substance. If, when the unconstitutional portion is stricken out, that which remains is complete in itself, and capable of being executed in accordance with the apparent legislative intent, wholly independent of that which was rejected, it must be sustained. The difficulty is in determining whether the good and bad parts of the statute are capable of being separated within the meaning of this rule. If a statute attempts to accomplish two or more objects, and is void as to one, it may still be in every respect complete and valid as to the other. But if its purpose is to accomplish a single object only, and some of its provisions are void, the whole must fail unless sufficient remains to effect the object without the aid of the invalid portion. And if they are so mutually connected with and dependent on each other, as conditions, considerations, or compensations for each other, as to warrant the belief that the legislature intended them as a whole, and if all could not be carried into effect the legislature would not pass the residue independently, then if some parts are unconstitutional, all the provisions which are thus dependent, conditional, or connected must fall with them.”
It is too obvious for doubt that the dominant motive of the act was to remove, so far as possible, the court reporter from private influence by making him independent of private employment. On this motive, there can be no question that a majority of both branches of the legislature fully agreed. This motive is as palpably sane and just, and the act is as palpably feasible of application, to judicial districts of 200,000 or more population as to those of less than that number. Since the legislature must be presumed to have been agreed upon this prevailing wholesome motive, applicable as well without the limitation as with it, and since it is thus apparent from the act itself that influences were brought to bear at the last moment, inducing the adoption of the limitation in the last section, else it would have been included as an exception in the first section itself, are we justified in assuming that, had the legislature been then advised' that the limitation was unconstitutional (assuming that it is unconstitutional), it would not have refused to sacrifice the entire act to this afterthought? We think not, since so to assume would be to ascribe unworthy motives to the legislative body. The question is a close one, but we believe, in the light of the act itself, we are justified in assuming that the legislature, under the circumstances supposed, would have adhered to the dominant purpose of the act, and passed it without the limitation had it then been advised that the limitation would probably or possibly defeat that dominant purpose. In this, we are not without the authority of precedent. The legislature of Iowa passed a law prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicants in that state. A distinct section of the act provided for a submission of the question to the voters of that state and for an official statement of the result, and provided that:
“If it shall appear from such official statement, that a majority of the votes cast as aforesaid upon said question*243 of prohibition, shall be for the prohibitory liquor law, then this act shall take effect on the first day of July, A. D. 1855
but provided that the portions of the act relating to the election should go into effect immediately on publication of the act. The court held the section providing for the submission to the people void as an unconstitutional delegation of the legislative function, but sustained the remainder of the act. The court said:
“This leads us to the next step: which is, whether the whole act, or the eighteenth section only, is invalid. It is assumed, for the present, that the matter was submitted to the people in the largest and broadest sense. This is unconstitutional and void. But an act void in part is not necessarily void for ■the whole. If sufficient remains to effect its object, without the aid of the invalid portion, the latter only shall be rejected, and the former shall stand. This doctrine is clearly maintained in the Massachusetts cases. Fisher v. McGirr and other cases, 1 Gray 1; 6 How. (Miss.) 625; State v. Cox, 3 Eng. (Ark.) 437; Commonwealth v. Kimball, 24 Pick. 361; Morris v. Boston, 4 Met. 288; Clark v. Ellis, 2 Blackford 10. Now, the prohibitory act of Iowa is a complete act in all its parts, without the eighteenth section, submitting it to the people. No part depends, for its efficacy or practicability, on that section. It can be carried into effect as well without it, as with it. That section relates to nothing but the vote, the returns, publication of the result and like matters. Testing this act, then, by the same rules which are applied to others, we see no reason why the whole act should be declared unconstitutional and void. It was not the vote of the people which was unconstitutional, but it was the submission to the people; and that part of the act was and is invalid, if it submitted the question whether it should be the law or not; and the vote was, to a legal intent, nugatory. It effected nothing.” Santo v. State, 2 Iowa 165, 205, 63 Am. Dec. 487.
The court seems to have argued that the submission to the people was not whether the act should become a law or not, but only whether it should take effect. This, however, seems
“The sole difference between that act and the one under consideration is in the extent of the popular vote by which the statutes are to become operative. In the first instance, the vote of the people of the whole state adopted or rejected the law; in the last, it may be adopted or rejected in the separate counties by the vote of the electors thereof. The principles involved in each case are the same — the law depends in each instance upon a popular vote for validity. Following Santo v. State, which has been too long acquiesced in and too often approved by this court to be now questioned, we hold that the act of 1868, chapter 144, is of force without regard to the vote which it provides shall be taken to determine the question of its adoption by the people.”
The supreme court of Indiana has decided the question both ways. In Maize v. State, 4 Ind. 342, that court held that a liquor license law, complete in itself, without the part relating to a township vote for its adoption, which was held invalid, was the law of the state, with that part stricken out. The same court, in Meshmeier v. State, 11 Ind. 482, overruled Maize v. State, supra, apparently without necessity, ■ but by a divided court. In People ex rel. Fowler v. Bull, 46 N. Y. 57, 7 Am. Rep. 302, the court of appeals of that state held that an act fixing the time of election a year later than that formerly fixed by statute, and extending the term of office of the former incumbent one year was valid as to the first provision, though the last provision was held uncon
“An act may be in part beyond legislative authority, and within it for the residue; and if the act is capable of being administered in the parts which are within the power of the legislature to enact, it will so far be valid: Fisher v. McGirr, 1 Gray 1; State v. Wheeler, 25 Conn. 290; Santo v. The State, 2 Clarke, (Iowa), 165.” East Kingston v. Towle, 48 N. H. 57, 97 Am. Dec. 575, 585.
Under the rule thus broadly stated, there can be no question but that the act here involved can be administered without regard to the last section, and should, therefore, be held valid without regard to that section. It may be objected that, without the limiting clause, this act extends to at least one judicial district to which it would not otherwise extend, and that, therefore, to that extent, to hold the act valid, disregarding the limitation, would be judicial legislation. This argument, however, is not sound, if the court is ever permitted, in any case, to indulge the probable intention of the legislature to sustain the validity of any act, where a separable provision is unconstitutional.
“If the legislative purpose as expressed in the valid portions of the act can be accomplished, independently of the unconstitutional portion, and, considering the entire act, it cannot be said that the legislature would not have passed the valid portion had it been known that the invalid portion must fail, effect will be given to so much as is good.” 1 Lewis’ Sutherland, Statutory Construction (2d ed.), p. 580.
“There is a difference between an exception and a limitation. When a statute upon a subject of a general nature is made to extend to the whole state in one part thereof, and then in another part an attempt is made to limit its operation to territory less than the state, the limitation may be disregarded; because to give it effect would render the whole
See, also, State ex rel. Wilmot v. Buckley, 60 Ohio St. 273, 54 N. E. 272.
This court has upheld the view here expressed, even in a case where the separable unconstitutional provision was contained in the act as a proviso to the only section involved. It was not necessary to sustain that section to save the act as a whole. In Nathan v. Spokane County, 35 Wash. 26, 76 Pac. 621, 102 Am. St. 885, 65 L. R. A. 336, the section of the revenue law relating to taxation of transitory stocks of merchandise, Laws of 1899, p. 295, was held valid, though the proviso giving a rebate to the owner of the goods of a part of the tax proportional to the part of the assessment year he was not in the county, was rejected as invalid. Clearly, there can be no stronger presumption that the legislature would have passed that section without the proviso than that it would have passed the act here under consideration without the limitation. In the Nathan case, this court quotes the following language from 1 Kent’s Commentaries, p. 463, as quoted in Black on Interpretation of Laws, p. 278:
“There is a distinction in some of the books between a saving clause and a proviso in the statute; though the reason of the distinction is not very apparent ... It may be remarked, that a proviso repugnant to the purview of the statute renders it equally nugatory and void as a repugnant saving clause, and it is difficult to see why the act should be destroyed by the one and not by the other, or why the proviso and the saving clause, when inconsistent with the body of the act, should not both of them be equally rejected.”
The court continues:
*246 “Be this rule of construction as it may, the foregoing distinction is without significance, as applied to the facts in the action at bar, since we have reached the conclusion that the proviso of the above statute is void on constitutional grounds,
Concluding, as we do, that, even if the last section of the statute in question be held unconstitutional, it alone should be rejected, and should not be permitted to defeat the dominant motive of the legislature in passing the act, it is manifest that whether or not this last section be held unconstitutional is immaterial in this case. Being immaterial, we defer a determination of its constitutionality until it shall be raised in a case to which its decision is essential. We hold that, in any event, the remainder of the act is constitutional and valid.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Crow, C. J., Gose, Chadwick, and Main, JJ., concur.