This case comes to us on transfer from the Appellate Court under Acts 1901, ch. 247, § 10, p. 565; 1933, ch. 151, § 1, p. 800, being Burns’ Ind. Stat. Anno. § 4-215 [1946 Repl.]. See
The appellee, Whiteman, a police officer of the City of New Albany, was charged with immoral conduct unbecoming an officer, of the Police Department, to-wit: having unlawful carnal intercourse with a married woman. After a hearing conducted by the Board of Public Works and Safety of the City of New Albany, the Board found the charges were true and appellee was dismissed from the force and his pay stopped as of June 30, 1964. Appellee Whiteman asked for a judicial review before the Floyd Circuit Court, and after a trial the court entered the following judgment:
“And now upon said Special Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, IT IS CONSIDERED, ORDERED AND ADJUDGED by the Court, that the findings and decision of the Board of Public Works and Safety of the City of New Albany, Indiana, be and the same is hereby affirmed in regard to the finding that Patrolman Whiteman is guilty of violation of rules, immoral conduct, and conduct unbecoming an officer of the New Albany Police Department, as charged.
“IT IS FURTHER CONSIDERED, ORDERED AND ADJUDGED by the Court, that the punishment meted out by the said Board be and the same is hereby modified, in that, instead- of being dismissed from the force, Patrolman Whiteman be and he hereby is punished by a forfeiture of three months pay amounting to the sum of $1,170.00, however, .the City of New Albany, Indiana, is ordered to pay all other pay that would have been paid to Patrolman White-man since the 30th day of June, 1964, amounting to the sum of $1,380.00.
“IT IS FURTHER CONSIDERED, ORDERED AND ADJUDGED by the Court, that Patrolman Whiteman be and he is réinstated hs a patrolman o‘f the New Albany Police Department, effective as of the 30th day of June, 1964.
*335 “The Court orders the City of New Albany, Indiana, to pay costs, taxed at $15.95.
“(s) Paul J. Tegart, Judge.” (Emphasis added)
The special findings of fact made by the trial court supported the action of the Board of Public Works in every particular, including a finding that the two charges brought on June 30, 1964 were true. Conclusions of law number 2 of the trial court specifically stated:
“That Patrolman Paul Whiteman is guilty of the conduct charged by the Chief of the New Albany Police Department, and as to the guilt of Patrolman Whiteman, and finding of the said Board should be affirmed.”
However, the trial court then stated that the punishment, was “too drastic” and accordingly modified the punishment fixed by the Board of Public Works by ordering suspension for only three months and reinstatement with back pay.
Burns’ Ind. Stat. Anno. § 48-6105 [1963 Repl.] provides for such “appeals” from the Board of Public Works to a trial court and states that the order of the Board of Public Works may be “modified” by the court.
The sole question before us then is: What is the extent of review by a judicial department of actions of an administrative body where a so-called “appeal” is taken to a trial court?
The basic case of
Warren
v.
Indiana Telephone Co.
(1940),
*336
See
City of Evansville
v.
Nelson
(1964),
“Consistent with the rule above enunciated, on review of an administrative act or order where the court is said to hear the matter de novo, the burden is on the complainant to establish the invalidity of the administrative action and, in doing so, the trial court may not merely substitute its judgment for that of the administrative body. It may not interfere with the exercise of the discretionary authority of that body, unless it is made to appear that it acted in the exercise of that discretion in an arbitrary, capricious, fraudulent, or otherwise illegal manner.” (Citing cases.)
In
City of Elkhart
v.
Minser
(1937),
Appellee makes considerable contention about the wording of the statute which purports to authorize the trial court “to modify” the decision of the administrative board. When the statute for review of administrative actions is too broad, so as to grant the judicial department purported authority to interfere with the executive or administrative department, this Court has many times held such purported legislation invalid to the extent that it grants such unconstitutional powers to the courts.
In
State ex rel. Pub. Serv. Comm.
v.
Boone C. C., etc.
(1956),
*337 “ ‘. . . [A] review or appeal to the courts from an administrative order or decision is limited to a consideration of whether or not the order was made in conformity with proper legal procedure, is based upon substantial evidence, and does not violate any constitutional, statutory, or legal principle. . . .”’
In
Pub. Serv. Comm. et al.
v.
City of Indianapolis
(1956),
“The trial court has no power to hear the statutory ‘appeal de novo’ in the common law sense and weig'h the evidence or arrive at its own independent opinion or judgment.”
In the case before us the trial court made no finding that the administrative body, the Board of Public Works and Safety, acted arbitrarily or capriciously in fixing the punishment. In fact, it could not have made such a finding, since there was no evidence presented that the action of the Board of Public Works was arbitrary or capricious. However, in its conclusions of law, it made the statement that in its judgment, the punishment meted out by the Board was “too drastic.” This is purely a substitution of the trial court’s judgment for that of an administrative board — the substitution of the judgment of the judicial department for the judgment of the executive department acting through an administrative board. To hold that the trial court, in its own discretion, without a finding supported by evidence of an arbitrary and capricious ruling by an administrative board, may modify and change the punishment fixed by an administrative board would, in fact, turn over to the courts and the judicial department the matter of disciplining a policeman, which, under the constitution, belongs to the executive department of the government.
*338 If the judicial department, through the trial courts, may, in its discretion, fix the punishment and regulate a police department, the administrative or police board becomes merely an advisory body which would be dominated in its administrative action by the judge of the trial court. If such were a valid principle of constitutional law, then it would follow that a court, in an appeal in a rate case from a Public Service Commission, would have a right, in its own discretion, to fix the rates instead of merely determining whether the rates were confiscatory or not, and leaving the ultimate decision to the administrative board.
For the reasons stated, this cause is transferred to this Court, and the judgment of the trial court is reversed, with directions to affirm the action of the Board of Public Works and Safety of the appellant-city.
Note. — Reported in
