95 Wis. 390 | Wis. | 1897
The police power of the state is relied on to support the rule in question. This power has been defined in varying language, but of substantially the same general import. “ All laws for the protection of life, limb, and health, for the quiet of the person, and for the security of property,” fall within the general police power of the government. “All persons and property are subjected to all necessary restraints and burdens, to secure the general comfort, health, and prosperity of the state; ” and it has been said that “ it is co-extensive with self-protection, and is hot inaptly termed 1 the law of overruling necessity.’ It is that inherent and
There is no statute in this state authorizing compulsory vaccination, nor any statute which requires vaccination as one of the conditions of the right or privilege of attending the public schools; and, in the absence of any such statute, we think it cannot be maintained that the rule relied on is a valid exercise of the rightful powers of the state board of health. The state board of health is a creation of the statute, and has only such power as the statute confers. It has no common-law powers. To lawfully exclude the relator’s children from the city schools for the cause relied on required such a change in the existing law as the legislature alone could make, a change that should make vaccination of pupils
The application of the views there expressed is, we think, decisive against the validity of the rule under consideration. The language of the statute (S. & B. Ann. Stats, sec. 14095) is wery general, and goes to the extent of authorizing the state board of health “ to make such rules and regulations and to take such measures as may, in its judgment, be necessary for the protection of the people from Asiatic cholera, or other ■dangerous contagious diseases,” and by sec. 1409d it is declared that the term “ dangerous and contagious diseases,” as used in the act, “shall be construed and understood to mean such diseases as the state board of health shall designate as contagious and dangerous to the public health.” The provisions of the statute import and include, an absolute ■delegation of the legislative power over the entire subject 'here involved, and this, too, without any previous legislative provision for compulsory vaccination, or as a condition of 'enrollment of children of proper school age as pupils in "the public school, or of their right to attend such schools. Without any other legislative authority than the right thus ■conferred, the state board of health assumed the power to so far control the public schools of the state as to require “the proper school authorities in their respective localities to enforce the rule in question.” It cannot be • doubted but that, under appropriate general provisions of law in relation to the prevention and suppression of dangerous and contagious diseases, authority may be conferred by the legislature upon the state board of health ór local boards to make reasonable rules and regulations for carrying into effect such general provisions, which will be valid, and may be enforced accordingly. The making of such rules and .-regulations is an administrative function, and not a legis
There must.be, at least, circumstances apparently rendering such a rule or regulation necessary for the preservation of the public health. It would be a very extraordinary condition that would justify such a sweeping and far-reaching exercise of the power to make a rule of the character of the one in question either justifiable or proper, as the statute provides for making rules and regulations of local application only. Whether rules and regulations framed by an administrative body are reasonable or not is a question that may be determined in the. courts, and, were there no other question in regard to the validity of this rule, we should feel compelled to declare it void as unreasonable and unnecessary. Kosciusko v. Slomberg, 68 Miss. 469; In re Smith, 146 N. Y. 68; School Directors v. Breen, 60 Ill. App. 201-208.
The question as to the validity of legislation making vaccination of children attending school compulsory is not presented by the record, and in respect to it we express no opinion. Two of the relator’s children, affected by the rule of exclusion, are within the age prescribed for compulsory education of children by ch. 187, Laws of 1891; but, as this objection may be obviated by subsequent legislation, there is no occasion now to express any opinion in respect to it.
It follows from these views that the judgment of the circuit court is correct.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.