*471 OPINION
By the Court,
This case involves the constitutionality of the statute creating the Nevada Commission on Equal Rights of Citizens, the legality of that commission’s power to subpoena witnesses, and the enforcement procedure available to the commission should a subpoenaed witness fail to appear and testify.
The controversy arose because of the commission’s desire to question an officer of a corporation about its racial policies and practices. The relevant facts are few. El Capitan Lodge and Casino, a corporation, operates a place of public accommodation at Hawthorne, Nevada. The commission issued a subpoena and caused it to be served upon Lindsay Smith, an officer and stockholder of El Capitan, commanding Smith to appear and testify before the commission at its meeting scheduled for February 27, 1964, at the courthouse in Reno, Nevada. Smith did not appear. Instead he filed suit against the commission, seeking a judicial declaration that the commission was not constitutionally created, nor its subpoena power constitutionally conferred. In addition he sought a permanent injunction against any effort by the *472 commission to compel his testimony. He was successful in each respect below, and the commission appeals. 1
The Nevada Commission on Equal Rights of Citizens was created by legislative enactment in 1961. NRS 233.010-233.080. The public policy sought to be advanced is declared in the following language: “It is hereby declared to be the public policy of the State of Nevada to protect the welfare, prosperity, health and peace of all the people of the state, and to foster the right of all persons reasonably to seek, obtain and hold employment and housing accommodations, and reasonably to seek and be granted services in places of public accommodation without discrimination, distinction or restriction because of race, religious creed, color, national origin or ancestry.” (NRS 233.010(1).)
The members of the commission are appointed by the governor and serve at his pleasure without compensation. The functions of the commission are dual. First, it is to effectuate the declared public policy to afford information to the people concerning actual and alleged practices of discrimination and acts of prejudice “which may provide the basis for formulating statutory remedies of equal protection and opportunity for all citizens in this state.” Accordingly the commission is directed to investigate complaints and to initiate its own investigations of tensions, practices of discrimination and acts of prejudice of a racial, religious or ethnic nature. To that end the commission is invested with authority to hold private or public hearings and to subpoena witnesses. It must report its findings to the governor and to the Legislative Counsel Bureau, and shall make recommendations. The second function of the commission is to foster mutual understanding and respect among all racial, religious and ethnic groups in the manner described in NRS 233.060(1), (2), (3), (5), (6), (7).
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It is apparent that the dual functions of the commission are to be accomplished primarily through investigation and fact finding. It is not given the power to legislate or make rules, nor may it adjudicate. It does not accuse, issue orders, punish or impose sanctions. Cf. State v. Medical Examiners,
The act is not constitutionally infirm. The power to legislate has not been delegated. Ginocchio v. Shaughnessy,
Notwithstanding the foregoing, Smith insists that the subpoena power given the commission is constitutionally deficient because of the failure to prescribe the limits within which the power is to be exercised. The contention is unsound. The grant of power is in the following language: “The commission may subpoena witnesses and require the production of any evidence relevant to any hearing conducted by the commission.” The limitations upon that power are found in NRS 233.070 (1) : “The commission shall receive and investigate complaints and initiate its own investigation of tensions, practices of discrimination and acts of prejudice against any person or group because of race, color, creed, national origin or ancestry, and may conduct private or public hearings with regard thereto.” The questions to the subpoenaed witness must, of course, be pertinent and relevant to the purposes for which the commission is authorized to conduct hearings. A “fishing expedition” into other matters is not authorized. The limitation meets constitutional requirements. Pope & Talbot Inc. v. Smith,
Finally we turn our attention to the problem of enforcement. The statute with which we are dealing does not expressly confer enforcement powers upon the commission, nor are we willing to imply such power though some courts have done so. See Ex parte Sanford,
Accordingly we reverse the judgment below declaring *476 unconstitutional the statute creating the Nevada Commission on Equal Rights of Citizens; we reverse the declaration that the commission’s subpoena power is void and unconstitutionally conferred; we reverse the judgment permanently enjoining any effort by the commission to compel Smith’s testimony; and we affirm the judgment dismissing Smith’s claimed damages for malicious abuse of process.
Notes
Smitli also claimed damages for a “malicious abuse of process.” The defendant’s motion to dismiss this claim was granted, and Smith has filed a cross-appeal from the dismissal order. In view of our disposition of the commission’s appeal, it is apparent that there can be no legal basis to support Smith’s claim for damages. Whitehead v. Southern Discount Company,
Nev. Const., art. 3, § 1 reads: “The powers of the Government of the State of Nevada shall be divided into three separate departments, — the Legislative, — the Executive and the Judicial; and no persons charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any functions, appertaining to either of the others, except in the cases herein expressly directed or permitted.”
The respondent Smith relies heavily upon the Watkins and Sweezy opinions. Neither is in point. Those cases relate to constitutional safeguards available to a witness who has appeared and submitted himself to interrogation. That matter is not reached in the instant case, for Smith simply refused to appear; nor will we assume that his First Amendment rights would have been violated (as in Watkins and Sweezy) had he submitted to questioning.
