delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a proceeding by a wife to obtain alimony from her husband, on the ground that he had abandoned her without
The act divorcing Bryson and his wife was, in our judgment, an attempt to exercise the judicial power which, by the constitution, is vested in a “ supreme court, circuit courts, and such inferior tribunals as the general assembly may, from time to time, ordain and establish.” The powers of the government, legislative, executive and judicial, are, by the constitution, vested in different departments, and it is clearly not within the letter or spirit of the constitution that either department shall draw to itself the powers conferred upon another. It is perfectly obvious, that if sentences may be pronounced by the legislature, between two individuals, by which their rights and relations may be conclusively determined, all the powers designed to be exercised by courts of justice may be drawn to the general assembly, and the whole judicial power of the state may be absorbed by that body. Although there might be no claim to issue process to enforce their decrees or sentences, the office and duty remaining to be exercised by the courts of justice would simply be, to recognize the rights as determined by the general assembly, and enforce those rights by process. The act of marriage confers upon the parties certain rights and imposes certain duties which it it not necessary to enumerate, be
This language would seem very clearly to express the idea that the legislature might, mero motu, dissolve a marriage between any man and wife in the state, upon considerations of public expediency, without the application or consent of either
It may not be necessary to express an opinion, in the present case, upon the question whether the general assembly can, from regard to the public good, dissolve the marriage relation
In Gaines v. Gaines, the court says, “the power of pre-. scribing, by general laws, what causes shall constitute sufficient ground for a divorce, and what shall be the consequences of a divorce founded upon the ascertainment of these causes, is strictly within the legislative competency, and its exercise is entrusted to the legislative discretion. But the power of deciding upon the existence.of these causes, in individual cases, and of pronouncing the divorce and enforcing its legal consequences, is strictly judicial.” In the language of Chief Justice Robertson already quoted, “so far as the dissolution of the marriage may be for the benefit of one of the parties, in consequence of. a breach of contract by the other, it is undoubtedly judicial.” In Bingham v. Miller, 17 Ohio Rep. 446, it is held, that “ the whole matter of the marriage-relation, call it a contract, a Divine ordinance, a domestic relation, or what you will, is a matter of judicial action and consideration, -before the parties concerned can be deprived of their rights or relieved from their duties ; to grant a divorce is not to enact a law; the expression of the will of the law-making power, that a marriage relation is dissolved, is no law. It is a decree, a sentence, an order, a judgment, but not a law. A law is a rule, something permanent.”
The cases here cited have been decided since the case of the State v. Fry, and sustain the decision there given. There would seem to be no necessity for going at large into the argument in support of the position that the act of the general assembly, in this case, was an attempt to exercise power conferred by the constitution on the judicial department. Divorce