159 S.E. 834 | W. Va. | 1931
This proceeding was instituted by West Virginia Power Transmission Company before the public service commission under the water power act of 1929. See ch. 58, Acts 1929. The commission granted the applicant a license to construct a series of dams on Cheat River and its watershed. The protestants are citizens of West Virginia who resisted the application before the commission, and then appealed to the circuit court of Kanawha county which reversed the commission and remanded the proceeding. The applicant secured an appeal to this court.
The act made the governor of the state a member of the public service commission and authorized the commission to investigate the effect of any proposed development of water power upon railroads, cities, towns and villages and on the development of other natural resources; to hold hearings, etc., in connection with an application for a water power license; and directed the commission (among other things) "to weigh from the standpoint of the state as a whole and the people thereof the advantages and disadvantages arising therefrom before acting upon any application for a license", and to grant no license until the commission should have determined that the advantages substantially exceeded the disadvantages. The act provided for an appeal as a matter of right by any party of record from any decision of the commission granting or refusing to grant a license (and from any other final decision or order of the commission) to the circuit court of Kanawha county, with trial on the appeal de novo upon the original record before the commission and upon any additional evidence offered by any party in interest. An appeal from the circuit court to this court was provided, to be "upon the record in the circuit court in the usual manner". If reversed on either appeal, the act directed that the case be remanded *651 to the commission for further proceedings "in accordance with the decision of the court".
The protestants initially contend that the act violates article V of the constitution of West Virginia, in conferring legislative powers upon the governor, and, on appeal, upon the circuit court of Kanawha county. The applicant challenges the right of the protestants to raise constitutional questions on the ground that they have no personal or proprietary interest in the subject matter. Lack of such interest would ordinarily sustain this challenge. However, we have no jurisdiction to entertain this appeal unless it be conferred by the act. "By the plain terms of the constitution, appellate jurisdiction is limited to controversies arising in judicial proceedings, and the 'other appellate jurisdiction' that may be authorized must relate to 'civil and criminal cases', that is, some judicial proceedings begun in an inferior judicial tribunal. Such is the effect of our decisions. In some of them we have denied appellate jurisdiction to review the judgments or decrees of the circuit courts on appeal from the orders of the board of public works, or other boards, involving simply executive or administrative matters, such as valuation of property for taxation, and the like. Never have we entertained jurisdiction from such decrees or orders of the circuit court unless the same have related to the taxability of the property." Gas Co.v. P. S. Comm.,
We realize that we should consider the contention of the protestants "with great caution and delicacy" and not declare the act invalid unless so convinced beyond a reasonable doubt.Bridges v. Shallcross,
Article V is as follows:
"The legislative, executive and judicial departments shall be separate and distinct, so that neither shall exercise the powers properly belonging to either of the others; nor shall any person exercise the powers of more than one of them at the same time, except that justices of the peace shall be eligible to the legislature."
The phraseology of the article follows that of the constitutions of Virginia and other older states. The framers of these older constitutions were deciples of such, great political teachers as Blackstone, Montesquieu and Paley, who had declared that in order to prevent arbitrary conduct by those in control, the legislative, executive and judicial powers must be kept separate. See Story on the Constitution, (5th Ed.), ch. VII. These teachings had been exemplified in the division of governmental power practiced in England. Hamilton asserted: "There is no liberty if the powers of judging be not separated from the legislative and executive powers." His expression was but the common thought of his contemporaries. See Willoughby, supra, sec. 1058. Bryce, The American Commonwealth, I Vol., p. 26. So thoroughly were these early statesmen imbued with this idea, that the very *653
first resolution passed in the convention which framed our national constitution, called for a separation of governmental powers. Story refers to this division as "a fundamental proposition", Cooley as a "fundamental principle", and Ordronaux as "this fundamental truth". (Const. Leg. 344). "All writers on constitutional law," said Smith, J., in The State v.Johnson,
This historical background is reflected perfectly in the constitution of West Virginia. The separation of powers prescribed in article V is confirmed and consumated in other articles of the constitution, namely, article VI vests the legislative power in a senate and house of delegates; article VII forms the executive department, consisting of the governor, secretary of state, state superintendent of free schools, auditor, treasurer and the attorney general; and article VIII lodges the judicial power of the state "in a supreme court of appeals, in circuit courts and the judges thereof, in such inferior tribunals as herein authorized and in justices of the peace." We are aware that section 12 of article VIII confers on circuit courts "such other jurisdiction, whether supervisory, original, appellate or concurrent, as is or may be prescribed by law"; and that by reason of this clause, this court has upheld enactments imposing on circuit courts jurisdiction in such legislative matters as the valuation of property for taxation (on appeal) and the incorporation of towns. SeeMackin v. County Court,
This construction of section 12 is not to be taken as unsettling the practice of circuit courts to incorporate towns and to entertain appeals from boards of equalization and review on the valuation of property for taxation. This practice has been pursued in such a great number of cases and over so many years, that we are of opinion it should not be disturbed now. However, this procedure applies to local matters only; and we feel no obligation because of submission thereto, to approve the further delegation of legislative functions to the judiciary, particularly in a proceeding of statewide interest, such as this.
We are mindful that courts have not drawn "abstract analytical lines of separation" (37 Harv. L. Rev. 1014) between the departments and that there is some overlapping of judicial and administrative duties. Courts recognize "necessary areas of interaction" (idem) and not infrequently exercise powers which are technically administrative. Such encroachments on other departmental powers are undoubtedly proper when incidental to the performance of legitimate judicial functions. "The grant of power embraced in one of the great departments of government carries with it the right to *655
use means appropriate to the exercise of that power." Ry.Company's Appeal,
The local investigation and subsequent determination, by the commission, of the effect of a proposed development from "the standpoint of the State as a whole and the people thereof" (as required by the act) are clearly legislative in character.Lbr. Co. v. Comm.,
For like reasons, the act also violates both the spirit and letter of the constitution, in imposing purely legislative duties on an executive, the governor.
We do not understand that the applicant and itsamici seriously contend that the circuit court can properly perform these legislative duties (which, however, they term "administrative"), but they say the provisions relating to the appeal are not necessary to the validity of the act; that such provisions are severable; that the rest of the enactment is operative and valid, and should be upheld, particularly in view of the express declaration in the act that in case any separable part be held unconstitutional, the other parts should remain in effect. This declaration is not "an inexorable command" but is merely an "aid in determining the legislative intent." Dorchy v. Kansas,
This attempt of the legislature to commit one of its great responsibilities to the judiciary is a flattering display of confidence in our department. But we must reject this expansion of our power just as firmly as we should resist a reduction of our rightful authority. The legislature is the trustee of the state's resources. Courts can no more assume that trusteeship than they could correct legislative impolicy thereon. After one hundred years of observation, the supreme court of the United States extolled the tripartite division of governmental powers as "one of the chief merits" of the American system of written constitutions and said that it was essential to the successful working of the system "that the persons intrusted with power in any one of these branches shall not be permitted to encroach upon the powers confided to the others, but each shall by the law of its creation be limited to the exercise of the powers appropriate to its own department and no other."Kilbourn v. Thompson, *658
Accordingly the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and this court, proceeding to enter such judgment as the circuit court should have entered, sets aside the order of the public service commission and dismisses the application.
Judgment reversed; order of the public service commission setaside; application dismissed.
*1