30 W. Va. 479 | W. Va. | 1887
J. B. Shepherd and 11 others, residents and tax-payers of the city of Wheeling, on April 19th, 1886, filed their petition in the Circuit Court of Ohio county, alleging therein that the council of said city on January 16th, 1886, adopted an ordinance entitled “An ordinance in relation to the police and fire departments of the city of Wheeling, and the appointments, duties and compensation of the commissioners thereof; ” that the said council subsequently, in pursuance, of said ordinance, elected four persons as commissioners of the police and fire departments of said city, who have duly qualified and are carrying out the provisions of said ordinance; that said ordinance was made contrary to law, and is invalid, for the reason that it confers illegal powers upon said commissioners, and upon other grounds specifically set forth in the petition, but which it is unnecessary to state here ; and they pray that said ordinance, or at least those portions therein referred to, may be superseded, revoked, and annulled. Upon the filing of said petition the court made an order that the city of Wheeling and the four commissioners elected under said ordinance be summoned to answer said petition. After being summoned, the said city and commissioners appeared, and moved the. court to dismiss the same, upon the ground that the statute under which the same was filed is unconstitutional and void; which motion being overruled, they de-
The plaintiffs in error having moved to dismiss the petition of the defendants in error, because the statute under which it was filed is unconstitutional, the first question presented here is: Did the Circuit Court err in overruling said motion ? The statute referred, to is the act of December 22d, 1875, (chapter 72, Acts 1875,) entitled “An act authorizing certain laws and ordinances to be superseded and annulled.” This act, after providing that, upon the petition of 10 tax-payers residing in any city, town, or village aggrieved by an unlawful or erroneous levy, the Circuit Court may supersede such levy in the same manner that said court may now supersede a levy made by a County Court, declares: “Upon like petition, any ordinance of a city, town, or village, made contrary to law, the Circuit Court may supersede, revoke, and annul the same.” This act is assailed upon two grounds : First, because its object is not fairly expressed in its title; and, second, it attempts to vest in the Circuit Court legislative powers. For the purpose of this writ of error it is unnecessary to pass upon the first ground. I shall therefore proceed to consider the second.
The fifth article of our constitution expressly declares that “ the legislative, executive, and judicial departments shall be separate and distinct, so that neither shall exercise the powers properly belonging to either of the others.” It necessarily follows, then, from this positive constitutional inhibition, that if this act, in any degree, requires the Circuit Court to exercise legislative powers, it is to that extent void. The constitution does not define what are legislative or what are judicial powers; but what properly belongs to the one and what to the other of these departments of the government is to b§ determined by reference to th§ es,tqb,lished law
Without attempting to fix a line of distinction between legislative and judicial powers which will be accurate in all cases, there are certain acts and duties appertaining to each about which there can be no doubt or controversy. As is well said in Ratcliffe v. Anderson, it is “ the province of courts to decide what the law is or has been, and to determine its application to particular facts in the decision of causes; the province of the Legislature is to declare what the law shall be in the future; and neither of these departments can lawfully invade the province of the other.” 31 Gratt. 107. Courts determine what the rights of parties are in suits or controversies inter partes which come before them in the ordinary and proper course of judicial proceedings. In determining the rights of the parties to the suit, they incidentally determine the law; but the judicial function is as effectually performed by the court which expresses no formal opinion as by the court which in an opinion announces the reasons for its decision. “ The general and ab
When, in the course of determining the rights of the parties to a particular, suit or controversy, the court finds it necessary to ascertain whether or not a statute is unconstitutional, the court must necessarily pass upon that question ; but in doing so it does not annul or repeal the statute if it finds it in conflict with the Constitution. It simply refuses to recognize it, and determines the rights of the parties just as if such statute had no existence. The court may give its reasons for ignoring or disregarding the statute, but the decision affects the parties only, and there is no judgment against the statute. The opinion or reasons of the court may operate as a precedent for the determination of other similar cases, but it does not strike the statute from the statute-book; it does not repeal, “supersede, revoke, or annul ” the statute. The parties to that suit are concluded by the judgment, but no one else is bound. A new litigant may bring a new suit, based upon the very same statute, and the former decision can not be pleaded as an estoppel, but can be relied on only as a precedent. This constitutes the reason and basis of the fundamental rule that a court will never pass upon the constitutionality of a statute unless it is absolutely necessary to do so in order to decide the cause before it. Cooley Const. Lim. 163. Judge Cooley says: “ Nor will a court listen to an objection made to the constitutionality of an act by a party whose rights it does not. affect, and who has therefore no interest in defeating it. On this ground it has been held that the objection that a legislative act was unconstitutional, because divesting the rights of remainder-men against their will could not be successfully urged by the owner of the particular estate, and could only be made on behalf of the remainder-men themselves. Antoni v. Wright, 22 Gratt. 857. And a party who has assented that his property may be taken under a statute cannot afterwards object that the statute is in violation of a provision in the Constitution de
In a very able opinion by Shaw, C. J., which is approved and in part quoted in the text of Cooley, that eminent judge says: “ It may be well doubted whether a formal act of legislation can ever, with strict, legal propriety, be said to be void; it seems more consistent with the nature of the subject, and the principles applicable to analogous cases, to treat it as voidable. But whether or not a case can be imagined in which an act of the Legislature can be deemed absolutely void, we think it quite clear that when such act is alleged to be void, on the ground that it exceeds the just limits of legislative power, and thus injuriously affects the rights of others, it is deemed to be void only in respect to those particulars, and as against those persons whose rights are thus affected. Prima facie, and upon the face of the act itself, nothing will generally appear to show that the act is not valid; and it is only when some person attempts to resist its operation, and calls in the aid of the judicial power to pronounce it void as to him, his property, or his rights, that the objection of unconstitutionality can be presented and sustained. Respect for the Legislature, therefore, concurs with well-established principles of law in the conclusion that such act is not void, but voidable only; and it follows, as a necessary legal inference from this position, that this ground of avoidance can be taken advantage of by those only who have a right to question the validity of the act, and not by strangers. To this extent only is it necessary to go in order to secure and protect the rights of all persons against the unwarranted exercise of legislative powers; and to this extent only, therefore, are courts of justice called on to interpose.” Wellington v. Petitioners, etc., 16 Pick. 96.
The statute under consideration undertakes to confer upon the judiciary department the power to “supersede, revoke, and annul ” any ordinance of a city or town, made contrary to law, upon the petition of 10 taxpayers residing in such city or town; and the defendants in error contend that this statute authorises the Circuit Court to annul an
The counsel correctly claim that a legislative body repeals a law, and rescinds an order or resolution; but if they intend, by the words used in the brief, that “ courts reverse, supersede, revoke, or annul ” a statute or ordinance, then, they are plainly incorrect. A court may reverse, supersede or annul a judgment or decree; but it can neither revoke a judgment or decree after the term, nor. reverse, supersede, revoke, or annul a statute or ordinance for any reason, under any circumstances, because to do so would be the exercise of legislative power, which is forbidden by the Constitution. But if the defendants in error do not claim that a court can reverse or annul a statute or ordinance, and thus render it void for all purposes, and as to all
The petitioners do not allege any personal grievance or special injury to themselves or their rights. The only basis of their action is that they are residents and tax-payers of the city. Their proceeding is evidently intended to be on behalf of all the other residents and tax-payers of the city as well as themselves. It is not their purpose merely to have said ordinance declared void as to themselves only, but as to the city and all its inhabitants. This is clearly what the legislature intended, as is apparent from the terms of the act; and that this is what the defendants in error intended is manifest upon the face of the petition, as well as from the fact that they rely upon the cases of Probasco v. Moundsville, 11 W. Va. 501, and Wells v. Board of Education, 20 W. Va. 157, to sustgjii their propeeding. Those cases were
For the foregoing reasons, I am clearly of opinion that so' much of chapter 72, Acts 1875, as attempts to confer upon Circuit Courts the power to “ supersede, revoke, or annul ” an ordinance of a city, is unconstitutional, because the power so attempted to be conferred upon said courts is legislative in its character. The Circuit Court of Ohio county therefore erred in overruling the motion to dismiss the petition of J. B. Shephard and others, and for that reason the judgment of said court must be reversed, and said, petition dismissed, with costs.
Reversed.