119 N.E. 1027 | NY | 1918
On July 2, 1917, one of the members of the state industrial commission proposed to that body a resolution that every mutual compensation insurance company and every self-insurer should pay into the state fund, under section
The resolution was neither adopted nor rejected. All that the commission did was to recite that there was doubt about its power, and to certify to the Appellate Division a question of law to be answered by that court. The following is the question certified: "Has the state *15
industrial commission power and authority under the provisions of section
At the Appellate Division the Self-Insurer's Association, an unincorporated body of insurers, was allowed to appear and file a brief. Like permission was granted to the New York Central Railroad Company. Till then the attorney-general stood before the court alone. Even afterwards there were no adverse parties. There were merely friends of the court striving to enlighten its judgment. The Appellate Division did not order anything to be done or foreborne. It could not. It merely answered a question. Its order was that the question propounded be answered in the affirmative. It thereupon granted leave to the intervenors to appeal to this court. The same question that was certified to the Appellate Division has been certified to us.
The determination of such an appeal is not within our jurisdiction. The practice is said to be justified under section 23 of the act. That section authorizes an appeal to the Appellate Division from an award or decision of the commission. It then provides that "the commission may also, in its discretion certify to such Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, questions of law involved in its decision." Appeals may be taken to this court subject to the same limitations as in civil actions (Matter ofHarnett v. Steen Co.,
Nothing in these provisions sustains the practice followed. The commission made no decision. There was no case or controversy before it. No summons to attend a hearing had been given to the insurance carriers. *16 No carrier had appeared. The members of the commission, debating their powers among themselves, asked and obtained the advisory opinion of a court. Without notice to the carriers to be affected by their action, they fortified themselves in advance by judicial instruction. In such circumstances the answer of the Appellate Division bound no one and settled nothing. We do not know that the commission will ever adopt the proposed resolution. If it does, and so notifies the carriers, the legality of its action will remain open for contest in the courts. No advice that may now be given in response to a request for light and guidance can prejudge the issue or control the outcome.
In that situation our duty is not doubtful. The function of the courts is to determine controversies between litigants (Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson,
The record now before us supplies a pointed illustration of the need that the judicial function be kept within its ancient bounds. Some of the arguments addressed to us in criticism of the resolution apply to all awards for death benefits; others to awards made before June, 1916; others to awards where one of the dependents is a widow. It is thus conceivable that the proposed resolution may be valid as to some carriers and invalid as to others. We are asked by an omnibus answer to an omnibus question to adjudge the rights of all. That is not the *18 way in which a system of case law develops. We deal with the particular instance; and we wait till it arises.
The appeal must be dismissed without costs to either party.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, POUND, CRANE and ANDREWS, JJ., concur.
Appeal dismissed.