Court Opinion

ID: 5581571
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 01:40:51.696556+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:36:06.210958
License: Public Domain

Atkinson, J.
1. It is contended that the words, “or that will depreciate the value of the said Western & Atlantic Bailway,” as embodied in the act of 1915, are not included in the caption, and' that the inclusion of them in the body is violative of art. 3, section 1, par. 8, of the constitution of Georgia (Civil Code, § 6437), which inhibits the inclusion in the body of an act of matter that is not covered by the caption. The caption contemplates the enactment of a law for the protection of the Western & Atlantic Bail-road as against competing lines to be constructed by private companies. The caption does not use the words which are quoted above from the body of the act, but the matter expressed by these words is *573germane to the object of the act as indicated by the caption. The caption concludes, “and for other purposes.” When the caption is considered in its entirety, it is sufficient. Mayor &c. of Macon v. Hughes, 110 Ga. 795 (36 S. E. 247).
2. It was also contended that it did not appear that the proposed railroad would be parallel to the tracks of the Western & Atlantic Eailroad, or that it would depreciate the value of that road; and hence that the act has no application. The case was tried upon the pleadings, which set forth in detail the facts as outlined in the statement preceding this opinion. From these it sufficiently appears that the contemplated road would be parallel to and depreciative of the value of the W. & A. Eailroad, within the meaning of the act.
3. It was further contended that the act of August 11, 1915, was a special act for which there was provision by- an existing general law as set forth in the Civil Code, §§ 2577 et seq., and that the special act was violative of art. 1, sec. 4, par. 1, of the constitution of the State of Georgia (Civil Code, § 6391), which among other things provides that “Laws of a general nature shall have uniform operation throughout the State, and no special law shall be enacted in any" case for which provision has been made by an existing general law.” The attack thus made upon the act of 1915 involves the character of the law embodied in the Civil Code, §§ 2577 et seq., and likewise the character of the act of 1915, in respect to either or both being special laws or laws of a general nature, within the meaning of the above provision of the constitution. If the former is a general law and the latter a special enactment on the same subject, the latter is unconstitutional; if both'are special laws, the latter does not violate that provision of the constitution. Mathis v. Jones, 84 Ga. 804 (11 S. E. 1018). We will first consider the character of the law embodied in the Civil Code, §§ 2577 et seq. Formerly the matter of incorporating railroad companies was a subject exclusively for special legislative enactment. This was changed by an amendment to the constitution of the State (art. 3, sec. 7, par. 18; Civil Code, § 6446), which took from the legislature the power directly to grant charters to railroad companies, and conferred that power upon the Secretary of State to be exercised under laws to be prescribed by the legislature. In 1892 an act was passed by the legislature (Acts 1892, p. 87), pre*574scribing laws for 'the incorporation of railroad companies, which are now embodied in the Civil Code, §§ 2577 et seq. The legislative history on the subject is set forth in Hawkinsville &c. Ry. Co. v. Waycross R. Co., 114 Ga. 239 (39 S. E. 844), in which case was involved the validity of an amendment by the legislature to the charter of the Waycross Air-Line Eailroad Company before the above-mentioned amendment to the constitution (Civil ’Code, § 6446), but after an act of the legislature passed in 1891 (Acts 1890-91, vol. 1, p. 416). In holding the amendment to the charter valid, the case was distinguished from any such case as the present, by pointing out that the amendment was prior to the amendment to the constitution. The amendment to the constitution, so far as material to be stated, provides that “All corporate powers and privileges to . . railroad corporations . . shall be issued and granted by the Secretary of State in such manner as shall be prescribed by law; and if in any event the Secretary of State should be disqualified to act in any case, then in that event the legislature shall provide by general laws by what person such charters shall be granted.” When it was declared, as in the foregoing excerpt, that charters should be issued and granted by the Secretary of State “in such manner as shall be prescribed by law,” the constitution is to be construed as referring to laws to be adopted by the legislature in a constitutional manner. It was not intended that that provision should abrogate the other provisions of the constitution inhibiting the passage of a special act for which there was provision by an existing general law. After the adoption of the above amendment to the constitution, the legislature passed an act for the purpose of carrying its provisions into effect (Acts 1892, p. 37). The provisions of the act were subsequently embodied in the Civil Code (1910), §§ 2577 et seq. The provisions of the act thus placed in the code established comprehensive laws for the grant of charters to railroad companies exclusively by the Secretary of State, applicable to all persons and operative throughout the State, so that persons complying with the law thus made could obtain a charter for a railroad company, authorizing them to construct a railroad to be located anywhere throughout the State. In McElreath on the Constitution of Georgia, § 1-136, it is said, upon authority of decisions of this court: “A law is general under the constitution of Georgia *575when it operates uniformly throughout the whole State upon the subject with which it purposes to deal.” Under this authority the act of 1892, supra, as embodied in the Civil Code, §§ 2577 et seq., was an existing general law for the incorporation of railroad companies. By that law the authority was conferred exclusively upon-the Secretary of State, “except in cases of disqualification, when the power was conferred upon the Comptroller-general to act for the State in granting charters to railroad companies.” While such general law was in existence, the legislature passed the act of 1915, which is fully set out in the foregoing statement of facts. This act purported to amend the general law in such manner as to prevent the Secretary of State from granting a charter to any private company whose line of railroad would parallel the Western & Atlantic Railroad, or would depreciate the value of the Western & Atlantic Railroad, so long as it should remain the property of .the State. As indicated above, if this were a special law its constitutionality could not be sustained as amending the general law. We will now consider the character of this act.
If carried into effect the act would be a limitation upon the power expressly conferred upon the Secretary of State by the preexisting law, and render inoperative the general railroad law embodied in the Civil Code, §§ 2577 et seq., in that section or territory of the State where a railroad, if constructed, would be parallel to the Western & Atlantic Railroad. The Western & Atlantic Railroad having a fixed position and location, there wpuld be excepted from the operation of the law.a well-defined portion of the State along and through which no private railroad could be constructed, and the law would not be territorially general. Under these circumstances the amending act would ordinarily be a special law inhibited by the constitution, under the principles of the cases which will now be noticed. In the case of Futrelle v. George, 135 Ga. 265 (69 S. E. 182), the question was whether.the act of 1903 (Acts 1903, p. 26), purporting to amend the general road laws of the State, was a special law and violative of the provision of the constitution prohibiting the passage of a special law upon a subject for which there was provision by an existing general law. The act in question was so expressed as definitely to describe otherwise than by name certain counties which it purported to except from the operation of the act. It was held that the act was a special *576law, because it was not territorially general, and for that reason was violative of the provision of the constitution which is now being applied. In the course of the opinion, there was- a quotation from the opinion in Thomas v. Austin, 103 Ga. 701 (30 S. E. 627), as follows: “The words 'throughout the State/ as used in the constitution, necessarily imply that in order for a law to partake of the nature of generality, it should, by its terms, show that it is capable of being applied in any county in the State. It is not necessary that every county in the State, at the time of the passage of the law, should fall within its operation, but it is necessary that none should be excepted in such a way that it can never fall within its provisions. If, therefore, a statute should except from its operation even one county, either by name or-by the use of such words as clearly indicate that the law can never apply to such county, the act is lacking in the feature of 'territorial generality’ and is, therefore, not a general law. We think this case is controlled by the decision in Lorentz & Rittler v. Alexander, 87 Ga. 444 (13 S. E. 632). In that case Justice Simmons said: 'The act of 1872, which first provided for the establishment of county courts, was not a general law having uniform operation throughout the State, for the act itself excepted 46 counties from its operation. The act of 1879, which amended the prior act, was not a general law, for the same reason. It excepted Walton county by name, and all counties in which a city court had been established, and all counties in which county courts were then existing. A law to be general under this section of the constitution must operate uniformly, throughout the whole State, upon the subject or class of-subjects with which it purposes to deal. The act under consideration deals with the establishment of county courts. In order for it to be general and have uniform operation throughout the State, it must affect each county in the State. • It follows, therefore, that the act in question is not a general law under this clause of the constitution.’ ” In City of Cochran v. Lanfair, 139 Ga. 249 (77 S. E. 95), one question was whether the act of 1874 (Acts 1874, p. 109), now embodied in the Civil Code, §§ 864 et seq., in regard to the levy of taxes by a municipal corporation, was a general law applicable to all municipal corporations, thereby precluding the legislature thereafter from conferring charter authority upon separate municipalities to levy a different tax rate. *577The act of 1874 excepted from its operation the City of Savannah; and it was held that this made the law a special law as distinguished from a general law within the meaning of the constitution, and did not prohibit the legislature from authorizing the City of Cochran to levy a different tax rate. The foregoing decisions dealt with cases where the character of the enactment depended upon its territorial generality. A law may assume a general nature, within the meaning of the constitution, from its subject-matter, notwithstanding it may have only local application. Mathis v. Jones, supra. But the act of 1915 is not of that character. The act déals with the subject of incorporating railroad companies. There is nothing peculiar to this subject that would render local legislation with respect to it general law. It is urged, that, because it prevents the incorporation of a railroad that would compete with the Western & Atlantic Railroad, the act was in the interest of the State as owner of such road, and that such interest would characterize the subject as one from which generality might be inferred. The State’s ownership of the Western & Atlantic Railroad is a business venture, and in no sense an institution for exercise of governmental functions. In Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Carlton, 28 Ga. 180, it was declared: “When a State embarks in an enterprise which is usually carried on by individual persons or companies, it voluntarily waives its sovereign character, -and is subject to like regulations with persons engaged in the same calling.” Relatively to such a business, the pecuniary interest.of the State could no more give public character to the subject of incorporating railroad companies than could the interest of private persons engaged in the same kind of business. If incidental interest resulting from the restrictions upon the power of the Secretary of State to grant charters could give character to the legislation, it would not be the State alone that would be affected. The proposed incorporators and constructors of railroads, as well as the inhabitants of the section of the State where the restriction is to be applied, would be affected. So long as the act remained of force, there could not be another railroad in that part of the State, and the .population would be deprived of the convenience which such a road would afford, and local public institutions would fail to receive substantial aid that would flow from taxation of railroad properties and increased values of property, due to the eon*578struction. of the railroad. The existence and condition of public roads enter largely into taxable values from which the State derives its revenues. The case of Futrelle v. George, supra, affords an example where this court has held that enactments on that subject which are not territorially general are special enactments. The assessment of the value of property for taxation is also a question which affects the State’s revenue. An act was passed in 1885 (Acts 1884-85, p. 449), creating a board of tax assessors for the County of Richmond. In the case of Bohler v. Verdery, 92 Ga. 715 (19 S. E. 36), it was sought to apply the act. It was resisted on the ground that it was repugnant to that part of the constitution which forbids special legislation in any case for which provision'has been made by an existing general law. In the course of the opinion it was said by Simmons, J.: “The invalidity of the act was conceded, and may now be regarded as settled, under the decision of this'court in the case of Stewart, tax-collector, v. Collier, 91 Ga. 117 [17 S. E. 279].” By the act of 1870 (Acts 1870, p. 428) the Governor of the State was authorized to lease the Western & Atlantic Bailroad. By a section of the act it was declared that the lessees should be a body corporate under the name and style of the Western & Atlantic Bailroad Company; and succeeding sections conferred specified powers and obligations and imposed duties upon the corporation to the State. The road was duly leased, and the corporation operated the road until the term specified in the act for duration of the charter was about to expire. Certain suits were pending in the courts, and for the purpose of continuing the prosecution and defense of such suits by the corporation an act was passed (Acts 1890-91, p. 280), continuing the term of the charter beyond the time expressed in the lease act above mentioned.' It was attempted to apply this act in the case of Logan v. Western & Atlantic R. Co., 87 Ga. 533 (13 S. E. 516); and it was held to be a special act for which there was a provision by an existing general law, and that the act was invalid. The pecuniary interest of the State was more remote in the cases mentioned than in the case under consideration, but the fact remains that the State’s pecuniary interest was incidentally affected, and that fact did not cause this court to hold that the act involved was a general law. In other States, in which the language of constitutions on the subject of general and special laws differs from that of our own State (see *579Mathis v. Jones, supra), the courts have ruled, differently. But under our constitution, as interpreted and applied by this court, we think the act of 1915 is a special law! It was upon a subject for which provision was made by the general law as contained in the Civil Code, §§ 2577 et seq., and was violative of that part of the constitution which prohibits special laws on subjects for which provision has been made by an existing general law. The act was alleged to be violative of other provisions of the constitution; but as we hold that it is void for the reasons indicated, it becomes unnecessary to deal with other questions in the ease.

Judgment reversed.

All the Justices concur, except Fish, O. J., absent.