110 Minn. 300 | Minn. | 1910
Lead Opinion
A majority of the male voters of independent school district No. 40, comprising within its limits the village of Sacred Heart, filed a petition under the provision of chapter 188, Laws 1907,
The question here presented is whether the amendment of 1909 should be given a prospective or retrospective effect. That amendment reads: “And provided further that any person or officer of any school district aggrieved by any order of the county board made pursuant to the provisions of this section may appeal to the district court from such order, such appeal to be governed by the provisions of section 1285, Revised Laws 1905.” (The italics are ours.)
In this case persons of a school district aggrieved by such an order brought such appeal. This action was justified by the language of the section as literally and naturally construed. If the law had been intended to operate in future only, the statute should have read “and provided further that any person or officer of any school district who shall be aggrieved by any order of the county board which shall hereafter be made,” etc.
The circumstances, moreover, make it reasonable to attribute intention to enact a statute operative retrospectively. The absence of a right to appeal under the law of 1907 violated analogies. There was no practical occasion for excepting the orders of the county board made pursuant to its provision from judicial review. They not only possess no inherent sanctity, but they were also, from the very nature of the board and of the moving causes for changes in school districts, with the inevitable prejudice attending them and the often narrow view of advantage, liable to be inexpedient and unjust in fact. The orders were surrounded by none of the safeguards, for example, involved in the determination by a district judge after a formal trial under carefully considered rules of evidence; yet his order for judgment is always appealable.
This- natural construction, however, defendant insists should not be adopted, because of the general rule for interpretation of statutes, “that they never should be allowed a retroactive operation where this is not. required by express command or by necessary and unavoid
No vested right was, however, created by the order of the board. Under section 1301, R. L. 1905, any adjoining freeholder immediately after its filing might petition to have his land annexed to one of the districts, and the board must act on his petition. The extent of the territory comprised within the independent districts may be changed at any time. No freeholder secured irrevocable determination of boundaries. The law was remedial in nature, was not subject to the restrictions stated, and should be liberally construed. The appeal lay.
The authorities confirm the view. Converse v. Burrows & Prettyman, 2 Minn. 191 (229) sustained a law providing for an appeal from an order granting a new trial, and was passed after the allowance of the order appealed from. Atwater, J., said: “The object of the act is evidently to extend the right of appeal beyond what previously existed. It is a remedial law, and should receive a liberal construction. It provides a remedy in a case where otherwise injustice might be done, and should be given effect in all cases where proceedings have not been had to such an extent as to exclude its application. * * * The doctrine that statutes retrospective in their effect are unconstitutional is held not to apply to remedial statutes which may be of a retrospective nature, provided they do not impair contracts or disturb absolute vested rights. (1 Kent, 455.) We cannot perceive- how the act giving the right of appeal in this case impairs in any manner the contract between the parties or affects any vested right of the defendants.”
It is urged, however, that in the Converse and McNamara cases no appeal was allowed from a final judgment.or order, for, as was pointed out in the McNamara case, the order granting a new trial was not a final order affecting a substantial right, and that the power of the court to grant a new trial was not like the right of appeal under this law. In the Converse case, moreover, the court restricted the rule of liberal construction to eases “where proceedings have not been had to such an extent as to exclude its application.” Its application is limited to those cases in which the law in question relates solely to the method of procedure for the enforcement of an existing, obligation.
We are clear, however, that defendant’s position is not tenable. The order of the board of county commissioners was not final in the sense in which a judgment is final; for, as has been pointed out, no one through it acquired any vested right. No question of contract was involved. No status had been established absolutely or permanently. It was competent for the legislature, to provide new means of attack on the order', a fortiori, for an appeal from it. The proceedings had not been carried to such an extent as to exclude the operation of the statute. The time limited by appeal (section 1285) does not appear to have expired.
Reversed.
R. L. Supp. 1909, § 1286.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
In my opinion the appeal was properly dismissed. While it is clear that a statute granting the right of appeal might properly be construed to apply to orders made in an action or proceeding which was pending and undertermined at the time of its passage, though
Again, the statute authorizing an appeal from an order of the •character of that here before us, changing the boundaries of a ■school district, is an attempt to confer legislative power upon the ■court, and is unconstitutional and void. The matter of organizing .and creating towns, villages, cities, and school districts is purely legislative, and cannot be conferred upon the courts.