4 A. 878 | N.H. | 1885
Chapter 144 of Laws of 1886, entitled "Joint resolution providing for the appointment of a commissioner to revise, codify, and amend the statute laws of the state relating to schools," authorized the governor, with the advice of the council, to appoint a commissioner "to compile the public statutes of this state relating to schools, * * * and frame rules and forms of proceeding in towns under said statutes, which rules and forms, when approved by the supreme court or a majority of the judges thereof, shall be deemed valid and sufficient." The rules and forms drawn by the commissioner have been submitted to the court. The resolution is not framed in the style prescribed by the 92d article of the constitution for making laws, is not an enactment of the commissioner's work, and does not require or contemplate a submission of any part of it to the senate and house for legislative action. As the legislature have not passed and do not propose to pass upon the question of enactment, and legislative power could not be delegated to the commissioner or court (Gould v. Raymond,
The provision, that the rules and forms shall be deemed valid and sufficient when approved by the court, does not authorize a decision of the judicial questions of their sufficiency until those questions arise in cases, not mooted by the court, but brought by parties into court for trial and judgment. As a retrospective act divesting private rights is not legislation, so a prospective determination of the validity of these rules and forms, without notice and opportunity of hearing given to persons whose interests may be involved in the facts and the law of a particular case, would not be an exercise of judicial power. Cool. Const. Lim. 91, 353, 354; Merrill v. Sherburne,
While the act of interested voters making a law, or electing interested agents to make it, without trial or notice, is an exercise of the right of self-government (Bill of Rights, arts. 7, 8, 11, 12, Const., arts. 13, 27, 28, 30, Dorchester v. Youngman, *576
Our approval or disapproval of the rules and forms submitted by the commissioner would be advice given upon the question of their legal sufficiency. Binding neither the advisers nor the advised, it would be given to the public presumptively for the guidance of persons whose action, based upon it, would furnish an occasion for contesting, before us, the soundness of our advice. The inability of a judge to be of counsel to any party in matters brought before him as judge (Const., art. 79), results from an application to certain facts of a general and fundamental principle that disables a juror or other judge needlessly and unreasonably to do anything inconsistent with the inherent impartiality of his office.
The 74th article authorizes each branch of the legislature, as well as the governor and council, to require the advice of the justices of the supreme court upon important legal questions pending in the body entitled to the advice, and awaiting the consideration and action of that body in the course of its legislative or executive *577
duty. The question of the validity of these rules and forms would not be decided by opinions required and given under that article. Prof. Thayer's Mem.; Sackville's Case, 2 Eden 371; Adams v. Bucklin, 7 Pick. 121, 126; 5 Met. 597; 9 Cush. 605; Green v. Com., 12 Allen 155, 164; Taylor v. Place,
All concurred.