To maintain the present appeal, it is necessary for the appellant to show that the act “ to prohibit the sale of vinous or spirituous liquors within eight miles of the court-house of St. Stephens, in Washington county,” approved February 22d, 1876, is unconstitutional. — See Pamph. Acts, 336. That such legislation is within the purview of general legislative authority, is fully established by *51the very able and exhaustive opinion in Dorman v. The State, 34 Ala. 216; Cooley Cons. Lim. 168, et seq. 2. The particular objection urged against the constitutionality of the present statute is, that it is a local law, and that it violates section 24, Article IV, of the Constitution of 1875, which declares that “ no local of special law shall be passed, on any subject which can not be provided for by a general law, unless notice of the intention to apply therefor shall have been published in the locality where the matter or things to be affected may be situated; which notice shall be at least twenty days prior to the introduction into the General Assembly of such bill, and the evidence of such notice having been given, shall be exhibited to the General Assembly before such bill shall be passed.” When a local or special law is enacted, what intendments is it our duty to indulge? Must the journal show that the required notice was given, or must we presume that the General Assembly did its duty, and had before it “evidence of such notice having been given?”
In Cooley Cons. Lim. 183, it is said: “The constitutionality of a law is to be presumed, because the legislature, which was first required to pass upon the question, acting, as they must be deemed to have acted, with integrity, and with a just desire to keep within the restrictions laid by the Constitution upon their action, have adjudged that it is so. They are a co-ordinate department of the government with the judiciary, invested with very high and responsible duties, as to some of which their acts are not subject to judicial scrutiny, and they legislate under the solemnity of an official oath, which it is not to be supposed they will disregard. It must, therefore, be supposed that their own doubts of the constitutionality of their action have been deliberately solved in its favor, so that the courts may with some confidence repose upon their conclusion as one based upon their judgment.”
In People v. Supervisors of Orange, 17 N. Y. 241, it was said: “Before proceeding to annul, by judicial sentence, what has 'been enacted by the law-making power, it should clearly appear that the act can not be supported by any reasonable intendment or allowable presumption.”
Speaking of another constitutional direction in the matter of enacting laws, not distinguishable in principle from the present one, Cooley, on page 139, said: “ The journals which each house keeps of its proceedings ought to show whether this rule is complied with or not; but in case they do not, *52the passage in the [manner provided by the Constitution must be presumed in accordance with the general rule which presumes the proper discharge of official duty.”
Governed by the rules above declared, we think it is our duty to indulge the intendment that the legislature conformed to every constitutional requirement, which the journal of its proceedings does not affirmatively show was disregarded. The precise point made in this case is, that the journal shows that the notice given in the present case was, of intention to apply for an act prohibiting the sale of vinous or spirituous liquors within four miles of the courthouse at St. Stephens; and that no notice was given of intention to apply for such legislative prohibition within eight miles of that place. The language of the House journal, showing the introduction of the bill, is as follows:
January 25, 1876. “On the call of the counties, bills were introduced: By Mr. Stribling, (with notice, <&c.)— H. B. 271 — To prohibit the sale of vinous or spirituous liquors within four miles of the court-house at St. Stephens, in Washington county.”
The following language is shown on the House journal of the next day :
“ Bills on second reading. The bill — H. B. 271 — to prohibit the sale of vinous or spirituous liquors within four-miles of the court-house at St. Stephens, in Washington county, was read the second time. Mr. Stribling moved to amend as follows: strike out the words e four miles/ where they occur in section 1, and insert ‘ eight miles / and also strike out the word ‘twenty,’ in the ninth line, section 2,. and insert ‘ fifty ’ in lieu of it. The amendments were severally adopted, and the bill referred to the committee on temperance.”
The foregoing is all that is said in the journal of either house, material to the question we are considering.
It is contended that inasmuch as the bill, when introduced, asked for a prohibition within an area whose radius was only four miles, that that was the extent of territory of which notice was given. We can not assent to this. It is perfectly consistent with all that is shown in the journal, that the notice embraced the larger area; and we are bound to-so presume, rather than that the legislature disregarded its sworn constitutional duty. We must uphold a legislative enactment, having the form of law, until its unconstitutionality is clearly shown. — Cooley Cons. Uim. 182-3; Sadler v. Langham, 34 Ala. 311.
*533. It is also contended that the act we are considering violates section 19, Article IV, of the Constitution. In The State, ex rel. v. Buckley, 54 Ala. 650, we construed this section, and laid down rules for its interpretation, which .show clearly that the act we are construing does not offend its provisions. — See, also, Cooley Cons. Lim. 139; Bush Law and Prae. of Leg. Assemblies, § 2203.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed, and the writ of mandamus refused.