Court Opinion

ID: 3237610
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:11:44.576761+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:26.755095
License: Public Domain

The Act of March 11, 1911, p. 128, provided for the appointment and compensation of a guardian ad litem for all counties of over 100,000 inhabitants, and which for the time being applied to Jefferson county only. The Act of July 27, 1915, p. 260, amended the Act of 1911, but in no material aspect except to make it also apply to counties of not less that 60,000 and not over 82,000 inhabitants, and which said last act dealt with two classes of counties, and which at the time applied to Jefferson and Mobile. The Act of August 18, 1919, p. 204, as indicated by its title, purported to amend only an act providing for an appointment of a guardian ad litem in counties of not less than 60,000 and not over 82,000. No hint is given that the law, as far as applicable to counties of over 100,000 inhabitants, would be changed or altered. No Legislature could possibly be informed by reading the title, or the body of the act for that matter, that the guardian ad litem, in counties of over 100,000 inhabitants, would be thereby affected. Indeed, while not conclusive, the index, as it appears in the act of 1919, in the only reference to said act, says, "Guardian Ad Litem Provided for Mobile County," and is persuasive that it gave the compiler or indexer no hint that it applied to Jefferson county. To hold that the act of 1919 applies to Jefferson county would render it a most flagrant piece of "log rolling and hodgepodge legislation," so strongly condemned by Mr. Cooley, and whose language is approvingly quoted in the opinion of this court in the case of Lindsay v. U.S. Savings Association, 120 Ala. 156, 24 So. 171, 42 L.R.A. 783. Section 45 of the Constitution, among other things, provides:
"Each law shall contain but one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title."
"While we have heretofore held that this constitutional provision is mandatory, it should be liberally construed in favor of legislative enactments when they are reasonably cognate or germane to the title; but when the title is so misleading and uncertain that the average legislator or person reading the same would not be informed of the purpose of the enactment, it is insufficient." Pillans v. Hancock, 203 Ala. 570,84 So. 757; Lindsay's Case, supra; Ballentyne v. Wickersham, 75 Ala. 533.
To hold that the act of 1919 amended the previous ones in so far as the latter relates to Jefferson county or to counties of over 100,000 inhabitants would render it repugnant to section 45 of the Constitution. Whether or no the said act is a valid amendment as applicable to counties of not less than 60,000 and not over 82,000 inhabitants we are not called upon to decide. It is sufficient to say that the fees allowed the guardian ad litem in the case at bar are not in accordance with the law as applicable to Jefferson county, and the decree of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
SOMERVILLE, THOMAS, and BOULDIN, JJ., concur. *Page 120