Upon the demurrer to the relation and the motion to quash it, the contention is made that it appears from the facts alleged that no sufficient grounds are presented for the issuance of a writ to prohibit the defendants, as civil service commissioners, from proceeding to enforce the provisions of eh. 363, Laws of 1905, against relator and all the other officers and employees of the banking department, as within the classified civil service of the state under the terms and provisions of the act. It is obvious that the legislature has undertaken to classify the civil service of the state and to provide for appointment to and promotion therein according to merit and fitness, to be ascertained, so far as practicable, by appropriate competitive examinations, and to that end created a civil service commission, charged with the duties and powers necessary to carry into effect the provisions of this act. The jurisdiction of this commission extends to and covers the prescribed classified civil service. Appointments in the unclassified civil service are not subject to the terms and conditions of the act. Relator avers that under sec. 8 of the act all officers and employees in the state banking department are within the unclassified civil service of the state. This section provides: “The civil service .shall be divided into the unclassified service and the classified service. The unclassified service shall comprise,” among others, “all officers and employees in any department for the creation of which a vote of two thirds of all members elected to each house is required.” It must then be determined whether relator and the other officers and employees serving in the banking department of the state, as created and established by cli. 231, Laws of 1903, are within
“Sec. 4. The legislature shall have power to enact a general banking law for the creation of banks, and for the regulation and supervision of the banking business, provided that the vote of two thirds of all members elected to each house, to bo taken by yeas and nays, be in‘favor of the passage of such law.”
The intent and scope of this provision are obvious from the language employed, which imports that the people thereby expressly delegated to the legislature the power to create banks and to provide for their regulation and supervision. The occasion for such specific delegation of power by the people to the legislature is manifest from the history of these constitutional provisions. Originally the people reserved to themselves the control of the creation of banks under the provisions of secs. 4 and 5, art. XI, of the constitution, which declared that: “The legislature shall not have power to create, authorize, or incorporate, . . . any bank, or banking power -or privilege, or any institution or corporation having any banking power or privilege whatever,” except with the consent of the people expressed by ballot, and then any law granting such power should be inoperative until approved by a vote of the electors at a general election. These provisions were abrogated by the adoption by the people of the above amendment at the general election in 1902, whereby unrestricted( power over the subject of banking was given to the legislature, both in respect to the creation of banks and the regulation and supervision of the banking business.
The first legislative action, exercising the right to frame laws under the power thus conferred, is embodied in ch. 234,
It is evident from these and kindred provisions of this act that the creation of the banking department and the establishment of the office of commissioner of banking was designed and intended as part of a general banking law for the creation of banks and for the regulation and supervision of the banking business. The powers so conferred afford the strongest evidence that the establishment of the department with the commissioner in its charge is a part of the general scheme and purpose of the legislature to accomplish the purposes and to-exorcise the power conferred by the constitutional provision. It is not suggested that the scheme thus adopted is not an ap- , propriate method for attaining effective regulation and supervision of the banking business. It seems that a proper administration of these powers requires an instrumentality like this department to carry out efficiently the legislative action on this subject, and that this makes it an integral and necessary part of the legislative scheme for the control of the banking-business. Upon these considerations the conclusion seems inevitable that the creation of this department, with the office of commissioner of banking, by ch. 234, Laws of 1903, required the affirmative vote of two thirds of all members elected to each house of the legislature in favor of the passage of the-law, and that the department officers and employees are embraced in the unclassified civil service of the state, as prescribed by ch. 363, Laws of 1905, and hence are not subject to the power, duties, and authority vested in the civil service-
The questions suggested upon the argument and fully presented in the respective briefs of counsel, as to whether or not the provisions of the civil service act are violative of any constitutional provisions, require no discussion here, since relator is not subject to the provisions of the act and can in no sense be affected Or injured by the enforcement of its provisions.
By the Court. — Judgment is ordered that an absolute writ of prohibition issue forthwith, commanding the defendants, as members of the state civil service commission, to absolutely refrain from proceeding to enforce any of the powers vested in them by ch. 363, Laws of 1905, or any of the penalties prescribed by this act, against relator or any other officer or employee in the banking department of the state,- — without costs; the relator to pay the fees of the clerk of this court.