In this оriginal certiorari proceeding, the Iowa Industrial Commissioner contests defendant district court’s order granting the petition of Iowa Beef Processors, Inc., for writ of certiorari to review intermediate agenсy action. The Commissioner contends the Iowa Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 17A, The Code, as interpreted in
Salsbury Laboratories v. Iowa DEQ,
This controversy commenced with the filing of separate arbitration proceedings before the Commissioner by three Iowa Beef employees in October and November, 1978. In each case, Iowa Beef filed a special appearance before the Commissioner challenging the latter’s in personam jurisdiction over the employer as well as subject matter jurisdiction. 1 In two of the cases, a deputy industrial commissioner overruled Iowa Beef’s special appearances without specifying reasons; in the third case, another deputy rеlied upon section 85.71, The Code 1977, in similarly overruling Iowa Beef’s special appearance, because the claimant had alleged an Iowa domicile.
*660 Appeals from the first two rulings were dismissed by the Commissiоner as interlocutory in nature. Apparently no appeal to the Commissioner was taken from the third ruling.
A certiorari petition was filed in district court by Iowa Beef alleging the agency had acted illegally in overruling its sрecial appearances. The petition further alleged section 85.71 as interpreted by the agency violated the United States Constitution. An order setting the matter for hearing and staying further agency proceedings was entered by Judge David Blair the same day.
The Commissioner filed a special appearance in district court on the hearing date, alleging that the Iowa Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 17A, The Code, provides the “exclusive means” of judicial review of agency action and therefore district court lacked jurisdiction to issue a writ of certio-rari. The employees intervened, and the issue was briefed by all рarties.
February 6, 1979, the Honorable George F. Davis, defendant herein, granted Iowa Beef’s petition, stating, “This Court believes that the chapter on. administrative procedures and pertinent sections do not abolish thе Constitutional right of the Supreme Court to prescribe all rules of pleadings, practice and procedure, and the forms of process ‘writs,’ etc.”
The Commissioner petitioned this court for writ of certiorari and sеparately petitioned for right to pursue an interlocutory appeal. On March 14 these petitions were granted but the two matters were consolidated and “deemed brought via certiorari.” The following week we filed our decision in Salsbury Laboratories.
I. Exclusivity of section 17A.19.
The fighting issue is whether our Sals-bury Laboratories decision controls here. We there stated:
There is no basis on which to conclude the “exclusive means” language in section 17A.19 is mitigated by an exception for common-law writs such as certiorari, declaratory judgment, or injunction. A person or party aggrieved or adversely affected by agency action must utilize the provisions of section 17A.19 in seeking judicial review of that action.
Id. at 835 (emphasis added).
Although Iowa Beef, in defending district court’s actions, questions the applicability of chapter 17A, the provisions of the IAPA clearly apply to this appeal. See § 86.26, The Code (“Judicial review of decisions or orders of the industrial commissioner may be sought in accordance with the terms of chapter 17 A.”).
Iowa Beef also attempts to distinguish
Salsbury Laboratories
аs involving an executive order rather than a judicial ruling. It relies upon our statement in
Buechele v. Ray,
Iowa Beef also finds support in Warren
County v. Judges of Fifth Judicial District,
In a final effort to escape the Salsbury Laboratories ruling, Iowa Beef asserts a *661 writ of certiorari is an extraordinary remedy rooted in the Iowa Constitution and thus is not a statutory remedy which may be withheld by the legislature. The constitution provides in relevant part:
The Supreme Court . . . shall have power to issue all writs and process necessary to secure justice to parties, and shall exercise a supervisory and administrative control over all inferior Judicial tribunals throughout the State.
Iowa Const, art. V, § 4, (1857) as amended by Iowa Const, amend. 21, § 1 (1962). Iowa Beef contends that the legislature, in adopting the “exclusive means” language of section 17A.19, unconstitutionally restricted this court’s power to issue writs, including certiorari.
It is, of course, a well-established principle that every statute is presumed to be constitutionally valid.
Millsap v. Cedar Rapids Civil Service Commission,
Iowa Bеef’s argument does not address the fact that the IAPA does not infringe this court’s constitutionally protected powers. Iowa Const, art. V, § 4, first protects the distinct power of this court to issue a writ of certiorari, a power incorporated in Iowa R.App.P. 301-04 and utilized by the Commissioner to bring this appeal. This power is not at issue here.
The constitutional provision also protects this court’s power to exercise a supervisory аnd administrative control over other judicial tribunals, a power exercised in part by adoption of the Iowa Rules of Civil Procedure. This concept finds expression in section 684.18(1), The Code, which provides in relevant part:
The supreme court shall have the power to prescribe all rules of pleading, practice and procedure, and the forms of process, writs and notices, for all proceedings of a сivil nature in all courts of this state, for the purpose of . promoting the speedy determination of litigation upon its merits.
(Emphasis added.) The power is exercised under section 684.19 procedures, “and thereafter аll laws in conflict therewith shall be of no further force or effect.” Again, this court’s constitutionally protected powers have not been restricted: The prior right to adopt, amend or repeal rules of civil рrocedure (including Iowa R.Civ.P. 306-19 governing writs of certiorari issued by lower courts) was not affected, nor constitutional protections abridged, by enactment of the IAPA.
Nor were this court’s constitutional powers to issue “all writs and process necessary to secure justice to parties” affected by enactment óf the IAPA. Chapter 17A provides an alternative remedy for obtaining judicial review and securing “justice to parties.” It follows Iowa Beef’s constitutional argument does not requirе us to retreat from our Salsbury Laboratories holding. Because under this record chapter 17A.19 provides the “exclusive means” of challenging agency action, district court’s granting of Iowa Beef’s Petition for Writ of Certio-rari did not conform to our law.
II. Exhaustion of administrative remedies.
As Iowa Beef’s petition was filed and granted prior to the Salsbury Laboratories decision, we look beyond the caption of the petition, as we did in Salsbury Laboratories, and treat this petition as one for judicial review.
“Ordinarily an administrative remedy must be exhausted before courts will intervene to grant relief.”
City of Council Bluffs
v.
Pottawattamie County,
As we recently noted in
Salsbury Laboratories,
A preliminary, procedural or intermediate agency action is immediately reviewable if all adequate administrative remedies have been exhausted and review of the final agency action would not provide an adequate remedy.
We also stated in
Salsbury Laboratories,
Thus, judicial review at this stage is precluded unless the record demonstrates delay will cause Iowa Beef irreparable harm. “[A] litigant who would suffer irreparable harm from administrative litigation delay mаy proceed to court without exhausting administrative remedies.”
Salsbury Laboratories,
The requirements of section 17A.19 are jurisdictional and must be met.
Southeast Warren Community School District v. Department of Public Instruction,
Our holding in division I makes it unnecessary to consider the other issues raised by the Commissioner.
The writ of certiorari previously issued frоm this court is sustained. The writ of certiorari issued by district court and the district court’s stay order are annulled.
WRIT SUSTAINED.
Notes
. Iowa Beef alleged that claimants’ applications for employment, interviews, and the entering of employment contracts occurred in Dakota County, Nebraska, as did any alleged injuries which might have been sustained.
. Iowa Beefs challenge appears to be to the application and interpretation of section 85.71, rather than a facial challenge. Thus, the constitutional challenge may be mooted by eviden-tiary findings in a contested case proceeding which further support the agency’s assertion of jurisdiction.
See Matters v. City of Ames,
