The powers and jurisdiction of the judge of the criminal court of Buchanan county are defined in section 3, page 2209, 2 Revised Statutes 1889. That section as it was originally, and the amendment thereto, approved March 1, 1897, are as follow, the amendment being indicated by the brackets: “Section 3. Powers and Jurisdiction. — The judge of said court shall be a conservator of the peace throughout his county, and shall have the power and jurisdiction to issue, hear and determine writs of habeas corpus, and to admit to bail all parties entitled thereto, and shall have such1 powers as the several judges of the circuit courts of this State have in criminal cases, [and may be called upon by the judge of any circuit in this State to try any cause pending in such circuit in which a change of venue has been granted from the judge, or to hold any term or part of term of court for such 'circuit judge, and in such matters shall have such powers, as the several judges of the circuit courts of this State now have in civil and criminal proceedings].” Acts 1897, p. 79.
If the foregoing amendment is valid, then the judge of the criminal court of Buchanan county had the right to sit in the trial of this cause on the bench of the circuit court of Platte county, having been called upon so to do by the judge of that court.
In order to determine the question thus presented, it is necessary to examine the provisions of section 53 of article IV of the Constitution, so far as applicable to the case before us.
The General Assembly is prohibited from passing any local or special law, “regulating the practice or jurisdiction of, or changing the rules of evidence in any judicial proceeding or inquiry before courts,” etc. Is the amendment of 1897 then “a local or special law ?”
In Ex parte Allen, 67 Mo. 534, it was held that “an act making provision for supplying the place of a criminal judge *67in the event of his sickness, absence or inability to hold court” iwas one regulating the criminal practice and proceedings in courts of record.
And in State v. Kring, 74 Mo. 612, it was decided that the act approved March 26, 1881 (Laws of 1881, p. 119), in relation to, and which changed, the method of procedure only in the criminal court of St. Louis, was a special law, inasmuch as it was confined in its operation to that one court, and was therefore violative of section 53 of article IY of the Constitution aforesaid. In the light of these authorities, and in the light of the plain provisions of the Constitution already cited, the law before us can not escape the condemnation of being a local or special law, one which regulates the practice and jurisdiction of courts.
The law under consideration is invalid for another reason, even if concession be made that the legislature could validly pass a local or special law for the purpose indicated; paragraph 32 of article IY of the Constitution declares: “In all other cases where a general law can be made applicable, no local or special law shall be enacted.” That a general law could be made applicable to judges of criminal courts all over the State, no one can doubt. Thus a statute which made it a misdemeanor for barbers to shave their customers on Sunday, was held to be a local or special law, where a general law could be made applicable. [State v. Granneman, 132 Mo. 326.]
The act of 1897 is also obnoxious to other objections: Its operation is not uniform. In Buchanan county the judge of the criminal court has only “such powers as the several judges of the circuit courts of this State have in criminal cases,” but whenever he steps over the line of Buchanan county, he immediately assumes the proportions and jurisdiction of a circuit judge in civil as well as in criminal cases.
Touching this topic of the uniform operation of a law, Judge Cooley observes: “Those who make the laws 'are to govern by promulgated, established laws, not to be varied in *68particular cases, but to have one rule -for rich and poor, for tbe favorite at court and tbe countryman at plough.’ This is a maxim in constitutional law, and by it we may test the authority and binding force of legislative enactments.” [Oonst. Lim. (6 Ed.), 483, and cases cited.]
“The legislature may suspend the operation of the general laws of the State; but when it does so the suspension must be general, and can not be made for individual cases or for particular localities.” [Ib., 482, and cases cited.]
By the general laws of the State the judges of the criminal courts of the State could not be called out of their respective counties to sit on a circuit bench in other counties; by the law- in question that general law is suspended only in a particular locality, to wit, Buchanan county. While in that county the judge of the criminal court is, as such judge of such court, subject to the control of the circuit court of his county, but when he is dehors the county, he becomes a controller of the criminal court of any county into which he may be called to exercise his newly-found and newly-fledged functions. Nor is it possible to separate the civil powers of the judge thus called in from his criminal, since the legislature evidently had but one object in view; its purpose was evidently to confer both civil and criminal jurisdiction. This being the case, the whole statute must fail. [Cooley’s Oonst. Lim. 211.]
As the defendant was tried and convicted under an unconstitutional law, we reverse the judgment and remand the cause.
All concur.