Freshour v. McCanless

Mr. Justice Tomlinson

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Chapter 316 of the Private Acts of 1953 created a General Sessions Court for Cocke County. It likewise created the office of clerk of that Court, and fixed the salary of this office, and provided that it be paid by the county and that all the fees of the office should be the property of the county. Chapter 135 of the Private Acts of 1955 increased this fixed salary of that clerk.

Curtis Freshour, who is clerk under that statute of this General Sessions Court, sought to have adjudged unconstitutional, and elided, that provision of these two acts fixing his salary at a specified sum and providing *411that all fees of the office should he the property of the county. His insistence was that this provision of these statutes is class legislation violating Article 11, Section 8 of our Constitution.

The demurrer to his petition was sustained. By his appeal in error he renews here that insistence and relies upon Carmichael v. Hamby, 188 Tenn. 182, 217 S.W.2d 934; Freeman v. Swan, 192 Tenn. 146, 237 S.W.2d 964; and Anderson v. Maury County, 193 Tenn. 62, 242 S.W. 2d 81.

In each of the decisions just mentioned the Court was dealing with a statute which created a Gfeneral Sessions Court in a particular county and provided that the clerk of the Circuit Court should serve as clerk of that General Sessions Court, but should receive a specified salary, with the fees collected in the General Sessions Court going to the county. There is a general law providing that every circuit court clerk in the State is entitled to all the fees of his office until he receives a fixed amount each year during his official tenure, section 8-2402 et seq., T.C.A. This local statute dealt with in each of the above decisions did, of course, suspend that general law by depriving the Circuit Court Clerk in that particular county of these fees to which every other Circuit Court Clerk in the state was entitled under the provisions of the general law carried in the code sections, supra. Each of these statutes, therefore, offended Article 11, Section 8 of our Constitution.

There is no general law creating the office of clerk of the General Sessions Court in those counties of the State having such courts. Therefore, the provision in this *412statute creating that office for Cocke County does not suspend any general law.

The act in question is a special act affecting Cocke County in its governmental capacity. “ ‘* * * the legislature may constitutionally enact a special act affecting one particular county or municipality alone in its political or governmental capacity, provided such special act is not contrary to the provisions of a general law, applicable to all the counties or municipalities’ ”. Davidson County v. City of Nashville, 190 Tenn. 136, 139, 228 S.W.2d 89, 90.

It results that Mr. Freshour’s contention that this provision in each of the special acts in question is unconstitutional must be rejected, and the judgment of the Circuit Court affirmed.