State ex rel. Robertson v. McGough

HARALSON, J.

The Constitution, Art. IV, §38, declares: “No State office shall be continued or created for the inspection or measuring of any merchandise, manufacture or commodity; but any county or municipality may appoint such officers when authorized by law.”

The sole question presented in this case is, whether or not the act, “To provide for the inspection and sale of illuminating oils in the State of Alabama,” adopted February 16, 1897, (Acts of 1896-97, p. 1133), is in con-’ flict with the foregoing constitutional provision.

Under this statute, the State -is1 the source of the inspector’s authority; the duties pertaining tó the office are of a public character; the terms of office are four years from the date of their respective appointments, and tintil their respective successors shall be appointed and qualified — (§9); and their compensation is fixéd *165by law. It is not liere contended, and could not be, that these inspectors, under these conditions, are not State officers. — Montgomery v. The State, 107 Ala. 372, and authorities there cited.

It will be observed that the section of the Constitution to be construed in connection with said act, was not intended to prohibit, and does not prohibit, “the inspection or measuring of any merchandise, manufacture or commodity.” Whatever authority the legislature had, prior to the adoption of the Constitution of 1875, in respect to such inspections, it now has, with the limitation only of the manner of its exercise. Theretofore, it had plenary power over the subject, since there was nothing in the Constitution of. the State to limit its exercise. The only restriction laid upon this power under the present Constitution is, that “no State office shall be continued or created” for such purposes. The other provision, “but any county or municipality may appoint such officers [or officers for such purposes] when authorized by law,” imposes no new limitation of authority on the legislature. It had, and exercised this authority under the older constitutions of the State, before the adoption of the one of 1875. The exception in this clause of said section is important, as contended, as indicating an intention on the part of the framers of the Constitution to limit any and all inspections authorized to be made of merchandise, to county and municipal authorities.

Section one of said act of February 16, 1897, and its remaining sections, place it beyond all dispute, that said act relates alone to oils, whether manufactured in this State, or imported therein, which are offered for sale, or sold “for consumption for illuminating purposes.” The manner of testing — for really the inspection consists in a scientific test, to determine at what degree of temperature, B'ahrenheit, the. oils will ignite or burn, — is particularly prescribed in said section, followed by the provision that “No oil, or other substance, Avhich by test herein described, ignites and burns at any temperature beloAV one hundred and ten degrees, Fahrenheit, shall be allowed to be sold, offered for sale, or consumed for illuminating purposes in this State.”

The question arises, then, whether this act of the leg*166islature falls under the condemnation of said section of the Constitution, providing that “No State office shall be continued or created for the inspection of any merchandise, manufacture or commodity.”

It is to be admitted broadly, that the object of construction, as applied to a written Constitution, is to give effect to the intent of the people in adopting it; that their intent is deduced, not only from the language of the particular provision to be construed, but in connection with all the other parts of the instrument; from its history, and from a consideration of the causes which led to its adoption, and the mischief it Avas intended to remedy. — Cooley on Const. Lim., 69, 70, 80; 1 Story on the Const., §405; Mayor v. Stonewall Ins. Co., 53 Ala. 570; Taylor v. Woods, 52 Ala. 477; Zeigler v. R. R. Co., 58 Ala. 218.

But, there are' other rules of interpretation that may override all others, as “Where a law is plain and unambiguous, Avhether'it be expressed in general or limited, terms, the legislature (or .framers of a constitution) should be intended to mean what they hare plainly expressed, and consequently no room is left for construction. Possible or even probable meanings, when one is plainly declared in the instrument itself, the courts are not at liberty to search for elsewhere.” — Cooley on Const. Lim., 69, 70. The framers of the Constitution “must be understood to have employed words in their natural sense, and to have intended what they said.” Ib, 73; Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 188; Ex parte Mayor, 78 Ala. 423. “We can only learn' what they intended, from what they haAre said. It is theirs to command, ours to obey. When their language is plain, no discretion is left to us. We have no right to. stray into the mazes of conjecture, or to search for an imaginary purposes.” — Lehman v. Robinson, 59 Ala. 241.

Whenever a constitutional provision is plain and unambiguous, Avhen no 'two meanings can be placed on the words employed, it is mandatory, and courts are bound to obey it. Such a mandate, whether wise or unwise, whether founded npon good reasons or not, is’obligatory, and cannot be construed aAvay by the history of the past, or by any mischief that it may be supposed it was intended to remedy. If it should run counter to *167well accepted theories as to the police power of the State, that can make no difference, since the Constitution can set aside all legislative police powers, and ordain the powers to he exercised or not exercised in this regard by the legislature; and what it ordains must stand as its own unquestioned arbitrary authority in the government of the State. In such a case, as has been said, there is no room for construction, and certainly none for disobedience by the courts. If so, there would remain no certainty or stableness in the written constitutions of the States, or Federal government.

As respects the section under consideration, there is nothing in any other part of the Constitution, which modifies, limits, explains or refers to its provisions. It stands as an independent provision, disconnected from all others. There was nothing in any of the preceding constitutions of the State like it, or bearing on the same subject.

The word “inspection” has been defined by the Supreme Court of the United States- — as accurately, perhaps, as may be elsewhere found — to be “Something which can be accomplished by looking at or weighing or measuring the thing to be inspected, or applying to it at once some crucial test. When testimony or evidence is to be taken and examined, it is not inspection in any sense whatever.” — People v. Compagnie Gen. Transatlantique, 107 U. S. 59. Laws for the purpose are applied to articles of domestic produce and manufacture for domestic use, to those intended for exportation, as well as those imported for consumption at home.: — Clintsman v. Northrop, 8 Cow. (N. Y.) 46; 1 Story on Const. § 1017; 11 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 234, n. 11.

So far as the history of inspection laws in this State throws any light on the subject — if that were needed in this case — it may be stated, that in all these laws, commencing with that of the Territorial legislature of December 12, 1796, down to the present time — of which there are several, and all set out in the briefs for appellee — with the exception of one, power was conferred on local authorities, either municipal or county, to inspect certain articles of merchandise, having reference to them as articles of commerce, and this duty, ex*168cept in the one instance referred to, had never been conferred on a State officer. The excepted case was the act of March 8, 1871, “To protect the planters of this State from imposition in the sale of fertilizers (Acts, 1870-71, p. 68). By this act, the office of an inspector of fertilizers for the State was created, with a tenure of office for four years, with power to appoint sub-inspectors for each county, whose duties and emoluments were prescribed. The act related solely to fertilizers 'as commercial commodities, and forbade under penalty, the sale or offering for sale within the State, any fertilizer manufactured in, or imported therein, which had not been inspected, stamped or certified to, as required by said act. There was no question about the constitutionality of that act. There was nothing in the Constitution, which forbade its passage. It belonged to that extensive mass of legislation, embracing everything in a territory or State not surrendered to the general government, or forbidden by the State Constitution to the legislature.

It is a part of the history of the State, that this law in its execution, was believed to have wrought great injustice to the people. It filled the State with a very great number of sub-inspectors, whose competency and fidelity were gravely suspected by many, and who, as charged, annoyed and burdened the people in respect to an article entering largely into the agricultural pursuits of the country. If there was any good in it, it was not considered to be of sufficient importance to outweigh the evils of maintaining a host of State officials assumed to be necessary to execute it. The creation of an unnecessary number of State officers has always been regarded as a very great evil, and so great was the discontent with, and opposition to that enactment, that the legislature in 1874 repealed it. Its alleged abuses were fresh in the minds of the people when the convention of 1875 met to form a new Constitution, and there can scarcely be a doubt, that this law, and the manner of its execution, whether good or bad, led to the incorporation into the Constitution of that year, of said section 38, Article IY of the Constitution. The mischief intended to be remedied, could not have grown out of *169any of tlie local inspection laws .theretofore authorized by law.

It seems plain, therefore, that the people in convention intended to prevent in the future .the inspection or measuring of any merchandise or commodity, through an office created by the legislature for the purpose. That they might not be supposed to have intended that no inspections whatever, in any form, should be made of such things in the State, possibly out of abundant caution, they added to the prohibitory clause, the other part of the sentence- — “but any county or municipality may appoint such officers when authorized by law” as .had been done in the territory and State, at different periods of time, since 1816. This latter clause is a strong indication of intention, that no other inspectors of merchandise than such as had theretofore been authorized and made, should ever be authorized by the legislature--to be made, and these were by the local authorities referred to.

But the contention of appellee is, in substance, that inasmuch as no inspection of merchandise had ever been made, or authorized to be made by local authorities, to protect the health, lives and property of the people, and as the legislature, prior to this enactment by the convention, had had unlimited power to adopt inspection laws, to be executed by State, county or municipal officers, the Article IV, section 38, in question, should not be construed to abridge or deny authority to the legislature for the creation 'of State officers for the purpose.

But, a sufficient reply to this contention seems to be, that the language of the prohibition is plain and unambiguous. If a member of the convention, most skilled in the use of language to convey the exact meaning intended, and to exclude all else, had undertaken it, perhaps he could not have been more apt in framing a plain, intelligible and unambiguous sentence than the one that was framed and adopted, to prevent all inspections of merchandise in this State through the agency of State officers appointed for the purpose. What can be plainer and more exact, than the mandate, “No State office shall be created for the inspection of any merchandise, manufacture or commodity?” The *170contention that this means, that no such inspection shall he allowed, except where it is necessary or proper to create a State office to inspect such commodities, to preserve the health, lives and property of the people, imports into the sentence an exception that is not therein expressed, and which is a great tax.on ingenuity to devise and suggest. If the convention had meant this, the simplest thing in the world would have been for them to have said so; and the fact that they did not incorporate into the article such an exception, is very convincing evidence that they did not intend anything of the kind. The. construction seems to be far-fetched and unsatisfactory, leaving on the judicial mind the impression, that it would appear to be an evasion .of the fundamental law, and if indulged, that the intention of the framers of the Constitution could, in this im stance, as in any other, be thwarted by unauthorized construction. We are not at liberty to presume that the convention, did not understand the force of language, and that they did not mean what they have plainly said.

We have, then, so far, declaring this inspection statute to be violative of the Constitution' — -if that were needed — the history of its enactment, and the mischief it was designed to remedy- — a mischief not excluded from view, because the inspection here authorized relates to oils intended for illuminating' purposes. Under this guise, all the evils of an inspection by State officials created for the inspection of commodities for sale and designed to be prevented by this constitutional provision might creep in. Moreover, we have the. all-controlling and supreme, reason, that the convention, in the language employed, has condemned all such inspections in language so direct, so plain and unambiguous, as to absolutely shut us up to an acceptance of what they have said, leaving no room for construction, and excluding any mere possible and probable meanings.

Again- — to enlarge a suggestion already made — under the construction .contended for, State inspection might be made, wherever it would aid in some measure,, to minimize danger to health or life in the use of any manufactured or imported goods, or domestic products. *171All statutes are designed in some' way, to affect morals, health, life or limb, and to protect the property rights of the citizen. If inspections may be provided by State agencies, the stretch of authority in this direction, in its application to the unnumbered wants entering into civilized life, would be almost limitless, rendered nugatory this constitutional provision. What article of necessity could not then be subjected to inspection by State officers? Meat, fish, butter, cheese, milk, and the different vinous or spirituous liquors, engines, boilers, firearms, wagons, carriages, and nearly everything to eat, drink, wear or use, might, for the existence of adulterations, defects and imperfections in them, tending to endanger health or life, and the frauds connected with their manufacture or sale for use be made the subject of State inspection. These from a growing distrust of legislative authority, and its frequent undue exercise, the framers of the Constitution, for the greater good of the people, seemed anxious to make impossible.

Whenever and wherever supervision by inspection over the manufacture, importation and sale of such commodities, may be deemed important, the localities most affected may, under local systems of inspections sanctioned by legislative authority, have large and perhaps adequate redress. Besides, by the enactment of statutes to prevent and punish persons who sell or offer for sale, tainted or diseased meats, unwholesome bread-stuffs, adulterated flour, sugar and other articles of food, vinous and spirituous liquors, and frauds in the manufacture and sale of goods and wares of different kinds, protection may in large measure- be provided, if those interested will enforce such statutes. We have now, on our statute books, an extensive system of legislation of this character, under the head of offenses concerning frauds, cheats, public health, safety, convenience, etc. — Cr. Code, 1896, pp. 267, 432.

We have indulged these last reflections, not alone as a reason for sustaining this provision of the Constitution, so plain and simple as to defy the ordinary rules for the construction of laws, where there remains any doubt of their meaning, but to show, that .after all, by maintaining the provision as here construed, the peo*172pie are not deprived of «legislation. for the protection of their, lives, health and property. There remains, still untouched by this provision of the Constitution, all the authority in the legislature to enact quarantine and health laws, that-it has at any time in the history of the State exercised, or that there may, perhaps, ever be any necessity to exercise for such purposes.

The judgment of- the court below is reversed, and one will be here rendered, according to the prayer of the petition. '

Reversed and rendered.

Bricicell, C. J., dissents.