147 N.E. 250 | Ill. | 1925
Appellee, Frank Nega, was injured while driving a horse-drawn wagon for the Boyda Dairy Company. The night was dark and stormy and one of appellants' street cars ran into and injured him. The Boyda Dairy Company paid him the sum of $50 for medical services and a further sum of $1225. Appellee brought this suit in his own name to recover damages for the injuries received. The jury returned a verdict for $10,000 damages for personal injuries to Nega. It is conceded that Nega, the dairy company and the appellants were all under the Workmen's Compensation act if the act was valid. The injury was sustained on June 17, 1920. In the court below appellants moved for a verdict and judgment for them on the ground that sections 6 and 29 of the Compensation act then in force precluded the maintenance of any action by appellee against a third party causing the injury, where, as here, all parties were under the Compensation act. Appellee argued against such motion, and urges here that the entire Compensation act as it stood in 1919 was unconstitutional. The trial court held the act unconstitutional as a whole, and that for that reason it formed no bar to the action at law for injuries. Judgment was entered on the verdict, and the cause comes directly to this court because a constitutional question is involved.
It is conceded by appellee that if the Compensation act as amended in 1919 was not unconstitutional in its entirety *484 it constituted a complete bar to this action. Clause 1 of paragraph (f) of section 19 of the act as amended is as follows: "The circuit court of the county where any of the parties defendant may be found, shall by writ of certiorari to the Industrial Commission have power to review all questions of law presented by such record, except such as arise in a proceeding in which under paragraph (b) of this section a decision of the arbitrator or committee of arbitration has become the decision of the Industrial Commission. * * * Such suit by writ of certiorari shall be commenced within twenty days of the receipt of notice of the decision of the commission." (Laws of 1919, p. 548.)
It is contended by appellee that because this paragraph of section 19 did not give power to the courts to review disputed questions of fact as well as questions of law it was void as contravening the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, and that being so, the entire act was unconstitutional. It is urged in support of this claim that this court has, in effect, held in OtisElevator Co. v. Industrial Com.
Whether judicial review of the findings and decisions of non-judicial bodies must include the weighing of conflicting evidence in order to constitute due process of law, as required by the fourteenth amendment to the constitution of the United States, has never been passed upon in this State. This court inArmour Co. v. Industrial Board,
It is urged by appellee that the Supreme Court of the United States has conclusively decided this point in accordance with his contention. The only case cited and relied upon is theBen Avon Borough case, supra. In that case the Ohio Valley Water Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, was charged before the Public Service Commission of that State with demanding unreasonable rates. The commission, on hearing, found the valuation of the property of the water company and ordered a new and lower schedule of rates. The company appealed, contending that the commission's valuation was too low. The Supreme Court of *488
Pennsylvania held that under the Pennsylvania statute the court was not to substitute its judgment as to rates or values for that of the commission. The only question involved in the case before the commission was as to the valuation of the property of the water company, which was one purely of fact. The Public Utilities law of Pennsylvania provided that no injunction should issue modifying, suspending, staying or annulling any order of the commission or of a commissioner except upon notice to the commission and after cause shown on hearing. The Supreme Court of the United States held that under the interpretation of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court that the statute withheld from the courts the power to determine the question of valuation according to their own independent judgment, which construction was binding on the Supreme Court of the United States, there was not provided the review necessary to comply with the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. It was held that the order prescribing a complete schedule of rates was legislative in character, and that in all cases where, in the discharge of a legislative function, rates have been made and the owner claims confiscation of his property will result, it is necessary to provide an opportunity for submitting the issue as to valuation to a judicial tribunal for determination upon its own independent judgment both as to law and facts, else the order is in conflict with the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment. The decision in the case was based upon the construction of the Pennsylvania law by the Supreme Court of that State as prohibiting any review whatever of facts upon which the rates made by the commission were based. In that case the court characterizes the rate-making power of the commission as legislative in character. In drawing the distinction between acts in their nature judicial and those legislative in character it is there said that judicial inquiry investigates, declares and enforces liabilities as they exist on a present or past state of facts. Acts "legislative *489
in character" are defined and explained as the discharge of a function looking to the future and changing existing conditions; that while a legislative act is usually the result of consideration of facts and investigation, it cannot be said to be in any sense an administrative or judicial determination. (Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line,
It is of further interest to note that the only cases wherein the Supreme Court of the United States has held that due process requires judicial review of controverted questions of fact are those in which the orders under review *490
are referred to by that court as legislative in character as distinguished from the orders administrative or quasi judicial. An examination of the later decisions of that court shows that in Keller v. Potomac Electric Co.
In Leach v. Carlile,
In Ng Fung Ho v. White,
The Supreme Court of the United States has upheld as not denying due process of law numerous compensation acts, in none of which was there a provision for judicial review of conflicting evidence. Hawkins v. Bleakly,
In Hawkins v. Bleakly, supra, the Compensation act of the State of Iowa was attacked on the ground, among others, that it did not allow an appeal on questions of fact. The act in that State provided that if review of the finding of the arbitration committee is sought, the commissioner is to hear the parties and may revise the decision of the committee or refer the matter back to it for further findings of fact. Any party in interest may present the order or decision of the commissioner or the decision of an arbitration committee on which no review has been sought to the district court of the county in which the injury occurred, whereupon the court is required to render a decree in accordance with the award or decision. The act provided that there should be no appeal upon questions of fact. The Supreme Court of Iowa in this case, and in Hunter v.Colfax Consolidated Coal Co.
In Ward Gow v. Krinsky, supra, the New York Workmen's Compensation act was attacked on the ground that it violated the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States. That *493 act provided, as did the act of 1919 in this State, that the findings of fact of the commissioner are not reviewable. The court held that the act did not violate the due process clause of the Federal constitution.
In Plymouth Coal Co. v. Pennsylvania, supra, the constitutionality of a law providing a method of fixing the width of pillars to be left between adjoining coal properties was considered. It was urged that the law was invalid for the reason that the question as to whether the boundary barrier between coal mines was sufficient was left to an administrative commission and did not provide judicial review of its determination. The act was, however, sustained, it being there held that review of fundamental questions affecting the rights guaranteed by the fourteenth amendment inhered in the proceeding notwithstanding the failure of the act to so provide, and the act was not in violation of the due process clause.
We are cited to no case, and we have been able to find none, holding that a statute which permits judicial review of questions of law, only, arising on the decisions of an administrative body, where its act is in its nature judicial rather than legislative, violates the due process clause of the Federal constitution. The Industrial Commission is a non-judicial body. Its proceedings and findings, though administrative, partake somewhat of the nature of judicial proceedings. (Mississippi River Power Co. v. Industrial Com.
The judgment of the superior court is therefore reversed.
Judgment reversed.