39 So. 2d 582 | Ala. | 1949
The appeal is from an interlocutory decree overruling the demurrer to a bill in equity filed by appellee, Hammond, against appellant, Mitchell, as Director of the Department of Public Safety, for a declaratory judgment to review the propriety of the action of the said Director in revoking appellee's driver's license on the basis of which was sought a declaration that the revocation of the license was unauthorized.
The statute under which the Director purported to act is § 68, Title 36, Code 1940, which provides, inter alia, that on the final conviction of any person of driving a motor vehicle while intoxicated and the transmittal to him by the court of the record of such conviction, the Director of Public Safety shall forthwith revoke the driver's license of such person.
The claim for relief is rested on the contention that there has been no final conviction so as to authorize the Director to take such arbitrary action, that is, that there was no evidence or insufficient evidence before this official to justify a revocation under the terms of the statute.
We are met at the threshold by a procedural question, the determination of which will be fatal to the case. The remedy afforded by the Declaratory Judgment Act, Code 1940, Tit. 7, § 156 et seq., is not available to the complainant.
It is true that "controversies to which the legalities of action of public officials or public agencies challenged by parties whose interests are adversely affected is one of the favored fields for declaratory judgments," Donoghue v. Bunkley,
This court has heretofore been committed to the soundness of the doctrine *83 that the proper field of operation for the Declaratory Judgment Act is to give a new remedy where none previously existed rather than to make two existing remedies and where there is an established remedy adequate for the purposes of the case and available to the party, relief by declaratory judgment should, as a rule, be denied. Donoghue v. Bunkley, supra.
We, of course, now take notice of the act of the recent legislature, which provides that the remedy provided by the Declaratory Judgment Act "shall not be construed by any court as an unusual or extraordinary one but shall be construed to be an alternative or cumulative remedy." Act No. 604, General Acts 1947, p. 444, Code, Cum.Sup., Title 7, § 167. But, without considering the effect of this amendment to the original act on the heretofore established rule, it is clear that it was not thereby contemplated that a proceeding in declaratory judgment be substituted for the remedy of appeal, certiorari or mandamus as the method of direct review of the judgments, decrees or orders of a judicial nature, respectively, of lower courts, bureaus, departments, or the directors or administrators thereof. We know of no case, have been cited to none, and can conceive of no situation which would warrant one as would authorize the use of the act as a method of appeal or appellate review to obtain an original declaration of rights between parties in matters solely appellate.
It is fundamental that this type of proceeding cannot be used as a substitute for an appeal, Ex parte State ex rel. Lawson,
To further elucidate the principle, one essential for the remedy to be available is that there must be a justiciable controversy between the parties. Here there is none. The question has already been adjudicated by the head of a department having jurisdiction of the subject matter and the parties, on evidence — albeit allegedly insufficient to that end — duly presented. The annotator thus epitomizes the rule in the well-considered case of Shearer v. Backer, 1925,
"Questions already adjudicated by a court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties cannot thereafter be the subject, between such parties and their privies, of an actual controversy within the meaning of this term in the Declaratory Judgment Act." 50 A.L.R. 48.
The constitutionality of the statute or the authority of the Director to lawfully act under it is not under question so as to bring the controversy within the field of the decided cases. There is a clear difference between determining such real controversy and, as here, in determining whether an act of a public official or bureau is supported by evidence as the basis for official action.
In the first instance, there is a controversy as to the meaning of what the official has done or ordered, while in the second there is merely a contention that the official acted upon no evidence or improper evidence. In the latter case the question should be determined by the usual method of direct review. In the latter instance the effort is to get the action or judgment of the official reversed, or rescinded, whereas in a proceeding for a declaratory judgment there is no such purpose, but rather an effort to have the official act interpreted. We think our cases sustain this.
In the case of Scott v. Alabama State Bridge Corporation,
In the case of Alabama State Milk Control Board v. Graham,
In the case of Morgan v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County,
In Curry v. Woodstock Slag Corporation,
The point is well illustrated by Avery Freight Lines v. White,
These cases, to our minds, clearly illustrate the difference between interpretation and review and we think it plain that the matter presented on this appeal is to be so differentiated and falls within the latter class.
So considered, the procedure was improper and the court was without authority to entertain the bill. Shadix v. City of Birmingham,
The ground of demurrer questioning the equity of the bill was sufficient to raise the point, Montgomery et al. v. Alabama Power Co.,
It results, therefore, that a judgment of reversal must be here entered and one rendered dismissing the bill.
Reversed and rendered.
BROWN, FOSTER, LIVINGSTON, and STAKELY, JJ., concur.
LAWSON, J., dissents.