29 Mich. 320 | Mich. | 1874
This is an application for an order requiring the governor to show cause why he does not issue his certificate showing that the Portage Lake and Lake Superior ship canal and harbor have been constructed in conformity with the acts of Congress making a land grant for the same, and the acts of the legislature of this state conferring the grant upon a corporation, which the relators now claim to represent.
When the application was first' presented to us we de
The duty we are asked to compel the governor to perform is one imposed upon him by statute, and it consists in the issue of a certain certificate when he shall be satisfied that certain work has been done in conformity with the law. The purpose of the certificate is to furnish to the beneficiaries under the land grant the evidence of their right to the land, to which the certificate, if granted, is understood to entitle them; so that the question involved in the controversy is, so far as the relators are concerned, one of private right and private property. The governor, as we understand it, concedes that the canal and harbor are constructed in proper manner, but he insists that the spirit and intent of the federal and state statutes have not been complied with, inasmuch as the canal has been constructed upon private property, so that the public are not assured the benefits anticipated and meant to be secured in making the grant; and for this reason he refuses his certificate. The relators thereupon insist that this presents for our consideration the simple question whether the governor construes correctly the statutes involved, and if not, they claim to be entitled to the proper remedy from the courts. In other words, they insist that the question involved has become, by the concession of the governor that the work has been done, purely a judicial question, involving nothing but a proper construction of the law.
It is not claimed on the part of the relators that this court or any other has jurisdiction to require and compel the performance by the governor of his political duties, or the duties devolved upon him as a coinponent part of the legislature. It is conceded that these, under the constitution and laws, are to be exercised according to his Own
It may be doubted if this concession would not require us to dismiss the present application, if not to deny our jurisdiction in all cases where the governor is respondent and his executive action or duties are involved. There is no very clear and palpable line of distinction between those duties of the governor which are political, and those which are to be considered ministerial merely; and if we should undertake to draw one, and to declare that in all cases falling on one side the line the governor was subject to judicial process, and in all falling on the other he was. independent of it, we should open the doors to an endless train of litigation, and the cases would be numerous in which neither the governor nor the parties would be able to determine whether his conclusion was, under the law, to be final, and the courts would be appealed to by every dissatisfied party to subject a no-ordinate department of the government to their jurisdiction. However desirable a power in the judiciary to interfere in such cases might, seem from the standpoint of interested parties, it is manifest that harmony of action between the executive and judicial departments would be directly threatened, and that the exercise of such power could only be justified on most imperative reasons. Moreover, it is not customary in our republican government to confer upon the governor duties merely ministerial, and in the performance of which he is to be
We are not disposed, however, in the present case, to attempt on any grounds to distinguish it from other cases of executive duty with a view to lay down a narrow rule which, while disposing of this motion, may leave the grave question it presents to be presented again and again in other cases which the ingenuity of counsel may be able to distinguish in some minor particulars from the one before ub. If a broad general principle underlies all these cases, and requires the same decision in all, it would scarcely be respectful to the governor, or consistent with our own sense of duty, that we should seek to avoid, its application and strive to decide each in succession upon some narrow and perhaps technical point peculiar to the special case, if such might be discovered.
And that there is such a broad general principle seems to us very plain. Our government is one whose powers have been carefully apportioned between three distinct departments, which emanate alike from the people, have their powers alike limited and defined by the constitution, are of equal dignity, and within their respective spheres of action equally independent. One makes the laws, another applies the laws in contested cases, while the third must see that the laws are executed. This division is accepted as a
It is true that neither of the departments can operate in all respects independently of the others, and that what are called the checks and balances of government constitute each a restraint upon the rest. The legislature prescribes rules of action for the courts, and in many particulars may increase or diminish their jurisdiction; it also, in many cases, may prescribe rules for executive action, and impose duties upon, or take powers from the governor; while in turn the governor may veto legislative acts, and the courts may declare them void where they conflict with the constitution, notwithstanding, after having been passed by the legislature, they have received the governor’s approval. But in each of these cases the action of the department which controls, modifies, or in any manner influences that of another, is had strictly within its own sphere, and for that reason gives no occasion for conflict, controversy or jealousy. The legislature in prescribing rules for the courts, is acting within its proper province in making laws, while the courts, in declining to enforce an unconstitutional law, are in like manner acting within their proper province, because they are only applying that which is law to the controversies in which they are called upon to give judgment. It is mainly by means of these checks and balances that the officers of the several departments are kept within their jurisdiction, and if they are disregarded in any case, and power is usurped or abused, the remedy is by impeachment, and not by another department of the government attempting to correct the wrong by asserting a superior authority over that which by the constitution is its equal.
It has long been a maxim in this country that the leg
It certainly cannot be on tbe ground that the 'executive is only a single person, who need await the advice or consent of no one before proceeding to the discharge of his duty, and whose default will consequently be more palpable when he acts wrongfully or refuses to act at all, than the default of any member of an aggregate body, like a legislature or a court, when action which requires consultation, deliberation and the consent of a majority fails to be taken.
In.casés subject to the process of the courts, an aggregate. body may be compelled to act as well as an individual, though the process may not be so speedy, or the ascertainment of ihdividuál default so easy as when the duty is required of a single officer. Nor can it be because the reference of a duty or authority to an 'aggregate body raises an implication that it is entrusted to its judgment or discretion any more than if it were referred for performance or exercise to one person only. The nature of the act to be done must generally determine whether or not it is dis
One reason very strongly pressed why the governor is subject to process in cases like the present is, that the act required is not to be done in performance of an executive duty imposed by the constitution, but is in its nature a ministerial act, provided for by statute, and which might, with equal propriety, have been required of an inferior officer, who, beyond question, could have been compelled by mandamus to take the necessary and proper action in the premises. And the question is put with some emphasis, whether, when individual interests depend upon the performance of ministerial action, to which the party is entitled of right, the question whether there shall be a remedy or not can depend upon the circumstance that in the particular case the ministerial action is required of a superior officer when there is no reason in its nature why it might not have been required of an inferior.
A view similar to this has been taken in some cases, and the courts have undertaken to decide what are and what are not properly executive duties, and to assert a right to control the governor’s action in some eases, while admitting their want of jurisdiction to do so in others.— The State v. The Governor, 5 Ohio St., 528; Bonner v. Pitts, 7 Geo., 473; Cotten v. The Governor, 7 Jones, N. C., 545 ; Chamberlain v. The Governor, 4 Minn., 309; Pacific R. R. v. The Governor, 23 Mo., 353; Magruder v. The Governor, 25 Md., 173. These cases for the most part are rested upon the dictum of chief justice Marshall in Marburg v. Madison, 1 Branch, 187, that one of the heads of department in the federal government might be compelled by mandamus to perform a mere ministerial duty; a dictum which cannot be understood as expressive of the opinion of that eminent judge that the president was subject to the like process, but which is wholly inapplicable to a case like the present, unless it goes to that extent. For it cannot justly be claimed, when federal and state governments have
But when duties are imposed upon the governor, whatever be their grade, importance or nature, we doubt the right of the courts to say that this or that duty might properly have been imposed upon a secretary of state, or a sheriff of a county or other inferior officer, and that inasmuch as in case it had been so imposed, there would. have been a judicial remedy for neglect to perform it, therefore there must be the like remedy when the governor himself is guilty of a similar neglect. The apportionment of power, .authority and duty to the governor, is either made by the people in the constitution, or by the legislature in making
There is as to all the authority specially confided to the •governor, whether by the constitution or the laws, no safe or logical doctrine but this: that reasons of a conclusive nature must be presumed to have been found, requiring the particular authority to be confided to the chief executive as one properly and peculiarly, if not exclusively pertaining to the department which he represents.
It is not attempted to be disguised on the part of the relators that any other course than that which leaves the head of the executive department to act independently in the discharge of his duties might possibly lead to unseemly conflicts, if not to something worse, should the courts undertake to enforce their mandates and the executive refuse .to obey; but it is insisted that no such considerations are .admissible in the present ease, in which the governor, though questioning our jurisdiction, professes a willingness to be governed by our decision upon it. The decision of .this question, however, is to be a precedent in the state,
But it is said that this conclusion will leave parties who have rights, in many cases, without remedy. Practically, there are a great many such cases, but theoretically, there are none at all. All wrongs, certainly, are not redressed ■by the judicial department. A party may be deprived of a right by a wrong verdict, or an -erroneous ruling of a judge, and though the error may be manifest to all others than those who are to decide upon his rights, he will be without redress. A person lawfully chosen to the legislature may have 'his seat given by the house to another, and be thus wronged without remedy. A just claim against the ‘state 'may he rejected by the board of auditors, and neither the governor nor the courts can give relief. A convicted person may conclusively demonstrate his innocence to the ■governor, and still be denied a pardon. In which one of these cases could the denial of redress by the proper tribunal constitute any ground for interference by any other authority? The law must leave the final decision upon
The cases of Hawkins v. The Governor, 1 Ark., 570 ; State v. The Governor, 25 N. J., 331 ; People v. Bissell, 19 Ill., 229; Dennett, Petitioner, 32 Me., 510; and Mauran v. Smith, 8 R. I., 192, which reach the same conclusion, are so full and satisfactory in their reasoning, that we might have deemed it proper to dismiss the case with a simple reference to them, if there had not been opposing decisions, which are supposed to detract from the weight of their authority. Those opposing decisions, as we think, have not been sufficiently observant of the distinction between the governor, as being himself a distinct and independent department of the government, and those administrative officers, who, though clothed with important powers, must be subject in the performance of their duties to the regulation, direction and control of the legislature, executive and judiciary, according as the intervention of one or the other in a particular case shall become proper or necessary.
For the reasons stated we must decline to make any order to show cause.