Court Opinion

ID: 7895192
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:52:04.062033+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:03.224561
License: Public Domain

Miller, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error was indicted for a violation of sec. 40 of the Act of 1878, ch. 108, which prohibits and punishes as a felony the cutting down of timber and trees in Garrett County. The Court below entered a pro forma judgment sustaining a general demurrer to the indictment, and the record has been brought here for a review of that judgment. The State’s attorney in his petition for the removal of the record as upon writ of error, drawn in pursuance of the First Rule regulating appeals, (29 Md., 1,) alleges that by this judgment the Court decided that the Act of 1878 is unconstitutional, and designates that as the question to be heard and determined by this Court, and by the express terms of the rule referred to, we are confined to a consideration and determination of that question alone.
The Act in question is entitled “ An Act to add an additional Article to the Code of Public Local Laws to be entitled Garrett County,” and the principal objection to its validity (and indeed the only one requiring notice,) is that it violates the constitutional requirement that, “Every law enacted by the General Assembly shall embrace but one subject, and that shall be described in its title.” Laws have been frequently assailed upon this ground, and we have very recently had occasion to consider many cases of this kind, hut we have not met with an instance in which we have found a law less open to the objection than this. Garrett is a new county; and its organization took place under the Act of 1872, ch. 312, which was passed in pursuance of Article 13 of the Constitution. It was, therefore, created a county many years after the codification of the Public Local Laws of the twenty-one counties and the City of Baltimore, which then constituted all the territorial divisions of the State for governmental purposes. These Public Local Laws are contained in the second volume of the Code, and' are *415codified in separate Articles entitled of the respective counties to which they severally belong, and each Article embraces all the numerous provisions pertaining to the internal government and local administration of the county affairs, among which are provisions, not the least in importance, creating and punishing various offences. After the formation of Garrett County several separate laws had been passed regulating its government, and by the Act of 1818 these were amended, additions made to them, and the whole arranged in appropriate sub-divisions and sections to the number of one hundred and thirty-three, precisely in the same manner as the Local Laws of each of the other counties are sub-divided and arranged in the Code of Public Local Laws. It was unquestionably within the power of the Legislature to pass such a law. Its convenience and usefulness are apparent. In passing this Act, it was evidently the object and purpose of the Legislature to frame and enact an entire system of Local Law for Garrett County. This is the one subject with which the law deals, and we do not see how that subject could be more tersely and accurately described, than by calling the Act designed to accomplish this purpose, “An Act to add an additional Article to the Code of Public Local Laius to be entitled Garrett County.” In all its numerous provisions we find nothing foreign to the subject thus indicated by the title, and in our opinion it is clearly not a law creating or permitting any of the mischief, it was the design of this constitutional injunction to prevent.
(Decided 17th June, 1879.)
It follows that the pro forma judgment sustaining the demurrer must be reversed, and the record remanded in order that the defendant in error may be tried upon the indictment against him.

Judgment reversed, and record remanded.