2 D. Chip. 77 | Vt. | 1824
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question raised by the pleadings in this case, is upon the validity of the act of the Legislature, passed November 1,1823, set forth in the defendant’s plea in bar.
All questions arising under the constitution of this, or of the
It is a delicate and invidious task for one department of the Government to review the decision of another, on a point, involving the powers of either; and that delicacy is not a little increased in the present instance by the fact, that the Legislature have long been in the habit of passing acts of a similar character to the present.
The constitution of this State, Ch. 2, sec. 9, after defining the powers of the General Assembly, proceeds as follows : “ But they shall have no power to add to, alter, abolish, or infringe, any part of this constitution.” In Chap. 1, art. 4, it is further declared, that “ Every person within this State ought to find a certain remedy, by having recourse to the laws, for all injuries or wrongs which he may receive in his person, property, or character: He ought to obtain right and justice freely, &c. — completely, and without any denial — promptly, and without delay, conformably to the laws.”
This constitution is the fundamental law of the State. The Legislature have not power to vary its provisions; yet, there is none so humble, but that he may demand his remedy, and is entitled to it, without delay, according to the laws, of which this is the chief. For this remedy, the injured citizen is referred to the Courts of Justice. The interpretation of the laws is the proper and peculiar province of the Courts. It must therefore belong to them to ascertain the meaning of the constitution, as well as the meaning of any particular act proceeding from the Legislative body.
It is our duty, therefore, as well as our prerogative, to declare that alone to be the law, which is reconcilable with this funda-damental law — this fiat of the sovereign people.
If, therefore, the act in question, shall be found upon examination, to be of that description, we shall feel constrained to say, that in its passage, the constitution was misapprehended.
Nor will this conclusion, to use the language of one of our most eminent jurists and statesmen, by any means suppose a superiority of the Judicial to the Legislative power. It will only be supposing that the power of the people is superior to both; and that where the will of the Legislature, declared in its statutes, stands in oppo-
To determine whether the act pleaded in bar of the plaintiff’s action in the present case, be constitutional or not, it becomes necessary to ascertain the character of the subject matter to be affected by it, as well as the consequences or effect of the act itself.
"When the estate of a deceased person is represented insolvent, Commissioners are to be appointed to receive, examine, and adjust all claims of the creditors to such estate. (1 St. 152.) They are the only board known to our laws, having original cognizance of demands thus situated. Their determination, when approved by the Probate Court, becomes a matter of record. The demand, thenceforth, is a debt of record. (Bray. 41. 1 D. Chip. R. 423, Arthurton Ex’r of Arthurton v. Flagg et al. Admr’s of Parker, 2 D. Chip. R. 61.) And is final between the parties, except in cases where an appeal is taken. (1. St. 153-4.) A judgment not appealed from within the time allowed by law for taking the appeal, is thenceforth of the same effect, as though no appeal were by law allowed, and, is a final judgment.
Such was the plaintiff’s cause of action, upon which the present suit was brought.
By the act in question, the defendant was authorized to enter an appeal from the decision of the Commissioners, to the present session of this Court. And it is therby further commanded, that the proceedings, both before the Court of Probate, and this Court,
This act, in the first instance, alters the decision of the Commissioners from a final and absolute judgment upon the merits, to a judgment nisi, or in other words, to a judgment liable to be vacated by the act of the party in entering his appeal: And, secondly, through the authorized act of the party on entering his appeal, it alters it to a judgment vacated. That a judgment appealed from is a judgment vacated, is evident from the fact that by the appeal, the parties are thrown back upon the original cause of action, and are compelled to litigate anew, that which would otherwise be concluded by the judgment itself. Again, it can never be enforced as a judgment of the same Court whence the the appeal was taken, though the appeal be not carried up. If the appellee do not, on the neglect of the appellant to prosecute his appeal, procure an affirmance by the Court to which the appeal was taken, he has lost the benefit of his judgment forever, and must resort to a new suit for his remedy.
"We find, then, that the subject matter of this act, was a final judgment of record between party and party, rendered by a board and approved by a Court of competent jurisdiction for that purpose ; and that the effect and operation of the act is, virtually to vacate that judgment.
The real question, therefore, is, Have the Legislature power to vacate or annul an existing judgment between party and party F
In solving this question, let us in the first place particularly recur to that palladium of our liberties, by which we are constituted what we are, and without which neither the Legislature nor . the Judiciary would have power to command the reverence of the most humble. The doctrine that all powers are originally in the government, and that the people by their charters and their constitutions have abridged and limited those powers, is fit only for those countries where the ignorance of the people is the weapon by which lawless power maintains her throne.
The axiom, that the sovereignty is in the people, is a political truth, on which every free and rational government is founded. Its development has regenerated the nations of this western hemisphere, and again reillumines the long benighted but classic land
The necessity of a distinct and separate existence of the three great departments of government, was well understood by the people of this State at the time of the adoption of our constitution. Its importance to the security of public liberty and private rights had been proclaimed and enforced by some of the wisest and most eminent men of other countries, and of this, among whom are Montesquieu, Sir William Blackstone, Jefferson and Madison. It had been sanctioned by the people of the United States, by being adopted in terms more or less explicit, into all their written constitutions. Accordingly we find it ordained by our constitution, C. 2, sec. 2, That the supreme Legislative power shall be vested in a House of Representatives, &c.
In C. 2, Sec. 3, That the supreme executive power shall be vested in a Governor, or, in his absence, a Lieutenant Governor and Council.
In 0. 2, Sec. 4, That Courts of justice shall be maintained in every County in this State, &c. which Courts shall be open for the trial of all causes proper for their cognizance, &c.
These departments being thus constituted, the constitution, C. 2, Sec. 6, proceeds to declare “ That the Legislative, Executive, and Judiciary departments shall be separate and distinct, so that neither exercise the powers properly belonging to the other.”
Whatever, therefore, it properly belongs to the Judiciary to do, the Legislature are expressly precluded from doing.
That the Legislature have the power, hy general laws, to es
It is true that the constitution has no where particularly defined what those powers are, which properly belong to the Judiciary department. But from the 4th and 6th sections above recited, we learn, that, by the Judiciary department, is meant Courts of justice, which, (it is declared) shall be open for the trial of all causes proper for their cognizance. These powers, then, must be such as are usually exercised by Courts in the trial of causes and the administration of justice; and to ascertain them, we must' necessarily resort to the common law and usage, in manifest reference to which, the constitution was framed.
The effect of this act, it has been shown, is, to vacate a judgment, and to direct another trial in the matters determined by that judgment. And it is immaterial whether that effect be produced by authorizing an extraordinary appeal in a case not within, and of course, not “ conformably to the ]%ws,” or whether it b e done by ordering a new trial before the same Court. The mischief is the same.' It is not by the mode of doing a thing, nor by the pretended capacity in which it is done, but by the nature of the act itself, that its propriety or impropriety is to be determined. To what department, then, do the common law and usages refer us, in view of these proceedings ? Most certainly to the Judiciary. The granting of a new trial after verdict and before judgment, (the effect of which is the same upon the former proceedings as that of an appeal) is a part of the ordinary administration of justice in all common law Courts, and is essential to the support and proper exercise of the right of trial by Jury.
These several powers are named together, because, if one is properly a judicial power, the others must be also, inasmuch as they all have the same effect — that of annulling tbe final character of the anterior proceedings in the cause in which they are exercised.
But why this solicitude to regulate in the best manner the exercise of those powers in the hand of the Judiciary? Is it not because the Legislature have uniformly considered them as powers properly belonging to that department ?
But there are other reasons why they are, and must continue to be Judicial powers, independently of this practical expression of the opinion of the Legislature. And
1st. — Some of these powers are essential, and others incidentally necessary to the administration of justice.
2dly. — Most of them have been exercised from a period long antecedent to our constitution, by all Courts recognizing the common .law. And
3dly. — They have been expressly adjudged to be Judicial, and not Legislative powers. 3 Dall. 398. 1 N. H. Rep. 204 Jour. Coun. of Cen. of Con. of 1820—21, p. 60.
The position then, that the power in question may be exercised by the Legislature, can be maintained on no other ground, than that our constitution, unlike the other free constitutions of this country, has expressly conferred it upon that department. This, is has before been shown, has not been done. But, if it had, then all our general statutes regulating the exercise of these powers by the Judiciary, would be unconstitutional. For, the constitution has expressly forbidden the exercise, by one department, of powers properly belonging to others; and what the constitution has forbidden, no statute of the Legislature can authorize. But, for a doctrine so absurd, it is presumed, no one will contend. And is it not equally true, that, if the exercise of the powers, regulated in the
Nor is the exercise of the power in question less a Judicial act, because, by the existing laws, the Court could not afford the relief prayed for by the party. Supposing that, in regulating the Judiciary department, the Legislature had so fixed the jurisdictions of the several Courts, that a certain class of causes was not cognizable before any of them. Would the powers essential to the trial of those causes, cease to be properly Judicial powers ? And would they, for that reason, become properly Legislative powers ? Can the Legislature, by thus neglecting its duty in one respect, acquire an extraordinary jurisdiction to the exclusion of a co-ordinate department, in the teeth of the constitution by which they were created ? The word “properly,” used in that instrument, in designating the powers of the several departments, has reference to that propriety which had been declared by usage, and which is founded in the nature and fitness of things. To give it any other meaning, would be to place the Legislature in a situation to become the capricious arbiter of its own jurisdiction in all cases whatever.
If a failure in the administration of justice occurs in consequence of the narrowness or paucity of the laws, the wisdom of the Legislature will prevent a recurrence of the evil; but they are not themselves to administer justice without law, because, forsooth, they have not made suitable provision for its administration by that department, to whom its administration is exclusively confided. For, the people in their constitution, have limited themselves to that measure of justice, which can be meted con-formably to the laws. Beyond this, no remedy for the infraction of a relative right is recognized, in this, or any other free government. The next step is within the confines of tyranny in the government, and its inseparable concomitants, uncertainty and insecurity to the people: No matter by what names they may be called, whether democratic or despotic — citizens or subjects. Their relations and conditions will be the same.
It has already been shown, that the report of Commissioners, on which the present action is founded, has all the qualities of,
We have before incidenatlly suggested, that this judgment vested a right in the present plaintiff.
He had presented his claim according to law, and had successfully pursued it to the end of the law. A right, therefore, to have and possess that which he had recovered, had accrued to, and vested in him, under the law. Nothing but execution, or what, in such case, is substituted for execution, remained to be done. The act in question is therefore retrospective, virtually vacating the judgment, and divesting the right acquired under it; and is for that reason, void. It is a settled principle of the common law, that a statute shall not have a retrospective operation, so as to take away a vested right. (6 Bac. Abr. 370. 2 Mod. Rep. 310. 4 Burr. 2460.) “ Upon principle, (says Story J.) every statute which takes away or impairs vested rights, acquired under exisfc-ing laws, or creates a new obligation, imposes a new duty, or attaches a new disability, in respect to transactions or considerations already past, must be deemed retrospective.” (2 Gall. R. 139. See also 10 Mass. 439. 7 John. R. 477. 2 Cranch 272.)
But independent of the special limitation contained in the constitutions of this, and the United States, reasoning from the general theory and nature of our government, we necessarily arrive at the same conclusion. The government being composed of departments independent of each other, and their powers separated, it follows, that each has exclusive cognizance of the matters within its respective jurisdiction, and that when acting within it, the authority of each is, and must be, final and supreme. Mr. Hamilton asserts, in his Commentary on the Constitution of the United States, “ That it is not true, that the Parliament of Great Britian, or the Legislatures of the particular States, can rectify the exceptionable
We have seen, then, that the act set forth in the defendant’s plea in bar, is an assumption of Judicial power — that its exercise by the Legislature is expressly prohibited by the constitution of the State — that it is repugnant to the constitution of the United States — that it is retrospective, defeating in its operation, a right acquired and perfected under the existing laws of the land — and that it is a departure from the spirit and genius of our government. For these reasons it is invalid, and
The defendant’s plea in bar is insufficient.