143 Iowa 466 | Iowa | 1909
The proceedings provided by Acts 30th General Assembly, chapter 68, as amended by Acts 32d General Assembly, chapter 94 (Code Supp. 1907, section 1989al et seq.), so far as involved in the determination of the questions presented in this case, are substantially as follows:
A petition signed by one or more of the landowners whose lands are to be affected by the proposed improvement, accompanied by a bond for the payment of all costs and ex-
In the proceedings instituted by these petitioners the board of supervisors determined that in their judgment the proposed district was not for public benefit, or utility, or conducive to the public health, convenience, or welfare, and dismissed the petition. The petitioners appealed to the district court from this finding, which reached the conclusion that it had no jurisdiction to review such finding, and the question, succinctly presented on this appeal from the action of the district court, is whether the determination of the board was legislative in its character, and therefore one not reviewable in the courts, or whether, on the other hand, the court to which such an appeal is taken may, on the question presented to the board of supervisors for determination, on its judgment and in its discretion substitute itself for the board, and on the hearing of new evidence, if offered in addition to that submitted to the board, establish the district which the board has refused to establish. It may be conceded that the broad provisions relating to appeals authorize an appeal by the petitioners from the action of the board in its judgment and discretion refusing to establish a district and to proceed further in the making of the public improvement contemplated,
In view of the express provision of our state Constitution that the powers of the government shall be divided into three separate departments, the legislative, the executive, and the judicial, and that no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others, except as in the Constitution expressly directed or permitted (Constitution, article 3, section 1), it must be conceded that, if the authority vested in the hoard of supervisors is in its nature legislative, and not judicial, then the district court, which is only vested with judicial power (Constitution, article 5, sections 1, 6), can not by statute be authorized to exercise such authority. No doubt a finding by the board of supervisors that the petition is not sufficient in form or matter is judicial, and subject to review on appeal to a .court; but, is a finding that the board deems it best, or not advisable, to establish the district and make the public improvement, on the ground that such action would, or would not, be conducive to the public health, convenience, or welfare, or to the public benefit or utility, subject to such review? “Powers, not in themselves judicial, and that are not to be exercised in the discharge of the functions of the judicial department, can not be conferred on courts or judges designated by the Constitution as a part of the' judicial department.” State v. Barker, 116 Iowa, 96.
The courts have frequently experienced difficulty in drawing the division line between the functions of the three departments of government, and a discussion, or even citation, of the many cases in which questions of this kind have been considered would be impracticable. We prefer to confine ourselves strictly to the question whether a court, whose powers are by the Constitution strictly judicial, can he vested by the legislature with the authority
It is well settled in this state that the Legislature •may provide for the exercise by • a court of the power to judicially determine facts which are made the conditions on which authority may be exercised by officers to whom is delegated the exercise of legislative and executive power. Thus a statute has been upheld which authorized a proceeding in the circuit court, as it formerly existed, to determine whether justice and equity required that certain
Questions relating to the establishment of a public highway are somewhat analogous, .and it has been held that a statute authorizing a judicial tribunal to determine the existence of conditions specified therein as requiring the establishment of such highways is not unconstitutional, inasmuch as the question only of the necessity of the highway was to be submitted for judicial determination. Citizens’ Savings Bank v. Greenburgh, 173 N. Y. 215 (65 N. E. 978). On the other hand, it has been said by this court that questions as to the public policy of establishing a bridge or mailing a street improvement are legislative in character, and the action of the tribunals specially charged with the responsibility in determining them is not to be reviewed by the courts. State v. Morris, 43 Iowa, 192; Dewey v. Des Moines, 101 Iowa, 416. Of course the Legislature may provide for a review in the courts of the action of a tribunal, legislative in character, which it has required to determine issues of a judicial nature; but it can not authorize such review of the exercise of a discretionary power. Illinois Cent. R. Co. v. Chicago, 141 Ill. 586 (30 N. E. 1044, 17 L. R. A. 530).
Somewhat analogous, also, are eases relating to the power of the Legislature to vest in the courts the determination of the question whether a telephone company or street car company shall be granted a franchise on the public streets. In the case of Zanesville v. Zanesville Telegraph & Telephone Co., 64 Ohio St. 67 (59 N. E. 781, 52 L. R. A. 150, 83 Am. St. Rep. 725) the court-considered the validity of a statute authorizing a proceeding in court to determine the rights of telegraph and
Coining now to the specific question whether the wisdom and practicability of a proposed drainage scheme can be left to the determination of a constitutional court, we find the case of Tyson v. Washington County, 78 Neb. 211 (110 N. W. 634, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 350), to be directly in point. In that case it is held that the question of
In Houseman v. Circuit Judge, 58 Mich. 364 (25 N. W. 369), a statute was held unconstitutional which provided that a court, declaring void the proceedings by which any drain had been located or established, might upon application of either party appoint commissioners to relevy the tax for such drain, and apportion the costs thereof among the parties interested as justice might require, and it announced its conclusion in this language: “The duties which it imposes upon the courts are not judicial in their nature, but belong to the administrative branch of the government. The sending out surveyors or other persons to make examination or surveys to relevy taxes, in place of invalid ones, are each and all acts which do not pertain to the judicial branch of the government. The design of the Constitution is that each of the three branches of the government shall be kept, so far as practicable, separate, and that one of the departments shall not exercise the powers confided by that instrument to either of the others. Any legislation, therefore, authorizing an invasion of this design, and conferring upon the judiciary the exercise of powers belonging to either of the others, can not be regarded as valid.” The cases of Sauntman v. Maxwell, 154 Ind. 115 (54 N. E. 397) and State v. Jackson, 118 Ind. 553 (21 N. E. 321) are not in point on the question now under consideration, for the reason that the constitutional question was not decided in those eases. This court has recently had occasion, in the case of Hartshorn v. Wright County District Court, 142 Iowa, 72, to express its views as to the exercise by a district court of the independent power to establish a drainage district, and has intimated that such power is not in its nature judicial. A similar intimation is found in Temple v. Hamilton County. 134 Iowa. 706.