Case ID: njl_95/html/0030-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "SwayzK, J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

FREDERIC L. HULME, PROSECUTOR, v. BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF TRENTON, RESPONDENT.
    Submitted July 1, 1920
    Decided October 19, 1920.
    Chapter 160 of the laws of 1920 is constitutional legislation: 1. The title sufficiently indicates the object of the statute. 2. Legislation as to retirement and pensions for firemen and for policemen have a proper relation to each other. 3. The legislature may enact that legislation as to the retirement and pensions of policemen' and firemen shall take effect at once in municipalities already having a pension fund for firemen or a pension fund for policemen and shall not take effect until after a favorable vote at an election in other municipalities.
    On certiorari.
    
    Before Justices Swayze and BlaoK.
    For The prosecutor, Charles E. Bird and Aaron Y. Dawes.
    
    For the respondent, Henry Hartman.
    
    I or the State Firemen’s Association, Pierre P. Qarven and Jolm F. Drewen, Jr.
    
   The opinion of the court was delivered by

SwayzK, J.

The question, is the constitutionality of the act of 1920 for the pensioning of policemen and firemen. Pamph. L., p. 324. The act is assailed on the ground that its object is not expressed in the title, because incongruous subjects are included, and because it is special. The title in so many words indicates that the object of the act is to provide for the retirement of policemen and firemen in municipalities, including police officers having supervision or regulation of traffic on county roads, and to provide a pension for such retired policemen and firemen and members of the police and fire department and widows, and dependents of deceased members of said departments. As nearly as we can understand the objection is that the act was really meant to apply only to certain cities and to compel in those cities retirement at sixty-five years of age. We fail to see any reason why the legislature might not include all municipalities within the scope of the act and embrace all in the title.

Prior to the decision in Herman & Grace v. Freeholders of Essex, 71 N. J. Eq. 541; affirmed on opinion, 73 Id. 415, it might perhaps have been said that traffic policemen on county roads were not embraced in a title which purports to provide for the retirement and pensioning of policemen and firemen in municipalities. We see no reason why the definition of the word “municipality” should not have the same scope in the present statute as in the statute then under review. The same definition was adopted in Union Stone Co. v. Freeholders of Hudson, 71 Id. 657; Burtis v. Haines, 91 N. J. L. 4; Murphy v. Freeholders of Hudson, Id. 40.

There is nothing in the title to limit the application of the act-and the object is plainly pointed out. Possibly, it is arguable that the retirement and pensioning of policemen has no proper relation to the retirement and pensioning of firemen, but we are not to set aside acts of the legislature on nice distinctions of rhetoric and logic. The constitutional provision was meant to prevent the concealment of the real object of the act and what is commonly called log-rolling. The incongruity of the object of a statute in its application to the facts must depend on the existing state of the law just as the Court of Errors and Appeals has held that the object expressed in the title must give notice of the effect of the legislation to one conversant with the existing state of the law (Sawter v. Shoenthal, 83 N. J. L. 499, 501, 502), and we may add existing customs of the people, and habits, so to speak, of the language. In this view it cannot be denied that policemen and firemen have long been coupled as public servants sufficiently alike to justify legislation for both together. The practice goes back certainly as far-as the Civil Service act of 1885 (Comp. Stat., p. 2341), and we do not know that its propriety has ever been questioned. The reason is that policemen and filremen alike have to do with the protection of the public and are engaged in occupations always of some and often of great hazard to themselves. -The same may be said of officers and employes of the health service, but the risk they run while it may be as great is not as conspicuous and their place in the public service is a matter of more recent growth. Moreover, the similarity of the work of policemen and firemen is such that the legislature might properly think it desirable to malee their reward similar in order that the two careers might offer equal inducements. W.e do not mean to say that it would be incongruous to include men in the health service in such an: act as this, or even to include all public servants in a general pension act. The justification of including policemen and firemen is to be found in the legislative practice of- more than thirty years, as exhibited in tíre Compiled Statutes, under the head of “Fire and Police.” The title clearly indicates the object of the act, and the things intermixed in the act have a proper relation to each other.

The act is also assailed as special legislation. One phase of this objection has already been disposed of. The particular point of the present objection is that the act takes effect immediately in every municipality in which a fund for the retirement or pensioning of policemen or firemen, or either, is now in effect, but does not take effect in any other municipality -until adopted by the voters at an election. This objection is not tenable under Lohan v. Thompson, 88 N. J. L. 40, so far as the distinction arises out of the statutory provision for a referendum. The requirement of a referendum where there is no present provision, for a pension fund is justified by the consideration, that where there is already such a provision, the people may well be supposed to have adopted the principle and there is no need of a further vote; where there is already no such provision the legislature might well think that the people should have the same chance to adopt or reject the principle as the others have already had.

The new element presented by this statute is that it goes into effect without a referendum as to policemen if there is a firemen’s pension fund in the municipality, and as to firemen if there is a policemen’s pension fund, and it may be argued with some force that if the voters, are to have a choice, .they should have it at least in eases where the people have not already indicated their approval of the principle of compulsory retirement and a pension. The answer is, that the legislature, for the reasons we have already stated, may well think uniformity in the treatment of firemen and policemen may be desirable, and one step, in that direction is to provide for retirement and a pension for both policemen and firemen where existing legislation provides for only one.

The examination of the case has suggested to us, another difficulty. The act applies to traffic policemen upon county roads. If there are traffic policemen on other than county roads, or if there are policemen on county roads other than traffic policemen, we should have greater difficulty in defending the generality of the legislation. There is no proof that such is the fact and our attention is not called to any statute providing for such policemen. One must speak with hesita,tion on a, matter relating to the legislation as, to roads, but our own examination of the statutes shows no statutory provision except that authorizing traffic policemen on county roads in first-class counties. Pamph. L. 1911, p. 583; Supp. to Comp. Stat., p. 1377. As far as appears in this case, the act of 1920 legislates for all.

The certiorari should be dismissed, with costs.