132 Wis. 461 | Wis. | 1907
The relator, as an elector and taxpayer of Milwaukee, seeks, by quo warranto, to test the title of the respondents to office of jury commissioners, appointed by the circuit judges for the second judicial circuit in compliance” with sec. 2533a, Stats. (1898), and claiming to exercise the functions of that office under that and following sections.
The appeal is from order sustaining demurrer to the complaint upon the ground of relator’s incapacity to sue, at least without joining attorney general, and for absence of facts to constitute cause of action. The ground of attack is upon the constitutionality of the law creating the office. The principal assault is for asserted breach of sec. 9 of art. XIII of the state constitution, the provisions of which, so far as germane to the discussion, are as follows:
“All county officers whose election or appointment is not provided for by this constitution shall be elected by the electors of the respective counties, or appointed by the boards of supervisors or other county authorities, as the legislature shall direct. . . . All officers whose offices may hereafter be created by law shall be elected by the people or appointed, as the legislature may direct”
This section of our constitution was taken, substantially verbatim, from the constitution of 1846 of New York. Const. 1846, art. 10, § 2. It had received no authoritative construction by the ultimate court of that state prior to its adoption here in 1848, but, before serious questions arose in this state upon it, it did receive exhaustive discussion and construction in an opinion by DeNio, J., in People ex rel. Wood v. Draper, 15 N. Y. 532, both the reasoning and decision in which were' almost at once accepted and approved by this court. State ex rel. Crawford v. Hastings, 10 Wis. 525; Chicago & N. W. R. Co. v. Langlade Co. 56 Wis. 614, 14 N. W. 844; State ex rel. Hamilton v. Krez, 88 Wis. 135, 59 N. W. 593; O'Connor v. Fond du Lac, 109 Wis. 255, 85 N. W. 327; State ex rel. Harley v. Lindemann, ante, p. 47, 111 N. W. 214; State ex rel. Williams v. Samuelson, 131 Wis. 499, 111 N. W. 712. The general propositions declared in that case, and so accepted and approved,, were that the purpose of this section of the constitution was to protect in a general way the policy of local self-government in cities and counties, to the extent at least that
It will thus be observed that tbe courts have indicated a reasonably close discrimination in recognizing as a newly created local officer one who exercised any duties which at tbe time of tbe constitution were performed by local officers, and, while it may be that some functions were at tbe time of tbe constitution imposed upon then existing town, city, or county officers which were so entirely incidental and casual and so without relation to tbe characteristics of their respective offices, or, indeed, of local government at all, that, when tbe legislature might deem it best to relieve such officers of such incidental duties and confer them upon one specially created to exercise them, the latter’s office may with propriety be held to be newly created, yet the line of demarcation between such a situation and that condemned by tbe various
The extent to which local self-government per se is withdrawn by the constitution from legislative interference has been a subject of much discussion and more declamation. It has been declared and reiterated in most of the eases already cited, both with reference to the constitution of New York and the constitution of this state, that the constitution addressed itself to an already organized civil government, which included, as a very important element thereof, the c&ntrol of some local affairs by the towns, villages, cities, and counties existing in the state; and it has been broadly contended, not without support from dicta in decided cases, that a purpose must be inferred from the constitution to preserve intact and to their fullest extent the functions of local government which were existent at the time of the constitution. The trouble with this view is that the constitution nowhere in terms restricts the legislature from modifying or diminishing the scope of local self-government. That instrument, in the broadest terms, confers all legislative power upon the legislature; and within that legislative power is, of course, the prescribing of the extent to which powers of government shall be delegated to subordinate political divisions of the state. Hence, in order that a court may hold invalid any attempted legislation in that respect, there must be found elsewhere in the constitution limitation of that power, either by express words or by clear, certain, and necessary implication. The framers of the constitution, had- they so
That this field of legislative discretion was not taken away from the legislature is suggested by all the years of practical construction which have followed the constitution. Questions of excise and license have at some times been delegated, in whole or in part, to the ultimate political subdivisions, and at others have been regulated by the state legislature. The care of paupers, insane, and other incompetents has been changed from town or city to county, and in varying respects has at times been deemed best controlled by the gen- ■ eral state government. In New York, containing as it always has the extraordinary metropolitan aggregation of people, about the city of New York, we find that in the regulation of such subjects as the public health,, excise, the police, the water supply, the assessments of some kinds of property,
“But there is nothing in it wbicb requires that these local divisions should always possess tbe same measure of administrative power, or that local functionaries should always exist within them possessing tbe samé functions as when the constitution was adopted. Tbe counties and cities must not only be preserved, but tbe legislature must do. nothing respecting them wbicb will render them less suitable for tbe purposes for wbicb they are recognized and employed by tbe constitution. ... If we were to establish tbe principle that tbe legislature can never reduce tbe administrative authority of counties, cities, or towns, can never resume in favor of the central power any portion of tbe jurisdiction of those*470 local divisions, or change the partition of it among them, as it existed when the constitution was adopted, we should, I think, make an impracticable government. It is the business of the legislature to adjust, in the interest of the whole people of the state, the distribution of the powers of government, taking care that no direct provision of the constitution is violated, and that no arrangement which it has made is incidentally disturbed. ... It follows that it belongs to the legislature to arrange and distribute the administrative functions, committing such portions as it may deem suitable to local jurisdictions, and retaining other portions to be exercised by officers appointed by the central power, and changing the arrangement from time to time, as convenience, the efficiency of administration, and the public good may seem to require.”
Upon such reasoning it was held competent to withdraw from the cities all power of control over their local police and to intrust it to officers representing a larger district or the state at large. This case has been followed in New York by many others, all recognizing it as authoritative. People v. Pinckney, 32 N. Y. 377; Metropolitan Board of Excise v. Barrie, 34 N. Y. 657; People ex rel. McMullen v. Shepard, 36 N. Y. 285; Metropolitan Board of Health v. Heister, 37 N. Y. 661; People ex rel. Board of Comm'rs v. Oneida Co. 170 N. Y. 105, 62 N. E. 1092; Allison v. Welde, 172 N. Y. 421, 65 N. E. 263; People ex rel. Met. St. R. Co. v. Board of Tax Comm'rs, 174 N. Y. 417, 67 N. E. 69.
We can see no reason to disagree with the views thus expressed, at least as to such functions as are obviously not essential to the existence of counties,.cities, villages, and towns,, or to their efficiency to accomplish those purposes for which the constitution employs them, or such powers as are not essentially characteristic of specific local officers named in the constitution and by it required to exist and persist. State ex rel. Crawford v. Hastings, 10 Wis. 525; McCabe v. Mazzuchelli, 13 Wis. 478; State ex rel. Kennedy v. Brunst, 26 Wis. 412; State ex rel. Sweet v. Cunningham, 88 Wis. 81,
That providing juries for the courts of the state is not so essential to the existence and efficacy of a county is too obvious to justify much discussion. The trial courts, of which our circuit court is the lineal descendant, were not local, but were part of the judicial branch of the central government long before the law of England became the common law of the United States, and it was but an accidental result of the fact that the justices in eyre were accustomed to hold court in each of the counties that they made use of the officers of the county to select men from whom juries in individual cases might be drawn. This is apparent from the fact that from very early times the power of such courts was recognized to supply defect or failure of action on the part of such county officers by making up a jury list of their own with the aid of a person temporarily appointed, called an elisor. Both in England and in the older states jury lists have as often been supplied by town officers or officers of election districts as by county officers, and at the time Wisconsin became a separate territory they were selected by the assessors of the several townships, and, in case of failure, by express direction of the judges of the court. At the time of our constitution the function of making up a list from which jurors were to be drawn was imposed upon the county boards, then consisting in some counties of three commissioners elected by a vote of the entire county, and in .others of supervisors chosen one by each town. The drawing of the jury involved attention of the clerk of the court, of the' sheriff or under-sheriff, and of a justice of the peace. This method was generally continued by the Revised Statutes of 1849 until about 1861, when the county boards were made up of representatives of the respective assembly districts; where
Erom this brief summary it is obvious that neither before nor since our constitution was adopted has it been deemed by legislators essential to tbe existence or purposes of a county that county officers should select tbe list from which tbe jury for a term of court was to be drawn, or control tbe drawing from such list. In Perry v. State, 9 Wis. 19, was sustained a statute authorizing tbe judge of a circuit court to select grand and petit jurors for bis term of court, and it was said that tbe manner of designating tbe persons who are to act as jurors at any term of court is clearly within tbe control of tbe legislature. A careful examination of every reference to counties and tbeir functions contained in tbe constitution convinces us that there are none of .those functions which will be impaired or embarrassed by intrusting either tbe make-up of jury lists or tbe selection of jurors therefrom to others than county officers. Hence we reach tbe conclusion that within tbe legislative power conferred by tbe constitution upon tbe legislature of this state is full authority to locate this function wherever deemed best, and, if tbe legislature should conclude to confer it otherwise than upon a county or a city, then most obviously tbe officer to wbom it would be intrusted would not only be neither a county nor a city of
Before we exert that highest of judicial prerogatives to declare that tbe concurrent legislative branch of tbe government has attempted to act beyond its competency, we must be convinced thereof beyond reasonable doubt, and, if there might within reason be any theory or purpose which would bring the questioned legislation within its power, it is our duty to assume such basis for it. Erom the views already expressed we think it necessarily results that it would be entirely competent for the legislature to adopt a policy that the selection of jurors should be conferred upon the circuit courts of the state. The jurors are called into' being for the purpose of enabling those courts to perform their judicial functions; and, while there may be peril of oppression in too close intimacy between the court and the original make-up of the jury list, there may be other perils involved in the localization of such selection or in intrusting it to officers more likely to be affected by local excitement or political influence. This, however, presents merely a field of public policy in which discretion and selection are intrusted, not to the courts, but to the legislature, and over their determination none but the electorate can properly sit in review. In deference to the duty of high respect which we owe to all attempts by the legislative branch of the government to' perform its duties, we feel bound to conclude that the legislation now attacked at least reasonably evinces the purpose to make the selection of jurors a function of the judicial circuits to be exercised by the judges thereof through the medium of commissioners as aids to such judges in each county of the circuit, and that, such purpose existing, there is no obstacle in the policy of local self-government evinced by the constitution. This being the legislative purpose, the function ceases to be any part of county government, and those who
A further contention that defendants are such county officers as sec. 4, art. VI, of the constitution commands shall be elected by the electors is fully met and refuted by State ex rel. Williams v. Samuelson, supra.
2. Another earnest contention is made against this statute that it imposes upon the circuit judges duties of an executive or administrative character which they cannot receive. This contention might open the door to a wide field of research and discussion which has been very recently illuminated by the supreme court of Minnesota in State ex rel. Young v. Brill, 111 N. W. 639, where it was held that, even under a constitution like ours, which merely confers all executive power upon the governor, the power of appointing to office is excluded from the judiciary for the stated reason that such appointing power is distinctly executive. The most significant case in Wisconsin on this subject is Foster v. Rowe, 128 Wis. 326, 107 N. W. 635, where we held that the ap
Having concluded that tbe legislature bas, witbin its rightful discretion, deemed wise to impose tbe selection of jurors upon tbe circuit courts of tbe state as a function thereof, we can entertain no serious doubt that appointment of jury commissioners to aid in so doing very legitimately falls witbin the principle just, discussed. Tbe courts cannot proceed to judgment, which is tbe consummation of' their judicial function, without tbe aid of jurors, and we can see no reason to doubt that tbe machinery for obtaining such jurors with promptness and certainty and of suitable quality is so germane to tbe judicial function that there is no imposition of executive power in authorizing tbe courts or the judges thereof to select or direct such machinery. It is a practice which has authority from much of precedent approved by decision. Perry v. State, 9 Wis. 19; Ex parte Virginia, 100 U. S. 339; People ex rel. Hawes v. Walker, 23 Barb. 304; Allison v. Welde, 172 N. Y. 421, 430, 65 N. E. 263; State v. Mounts, 36 W. Va. 179, 14 S. E. 407; State v. Kendle, 52 Ohio St. 346, 39 N. E. 947; 23 Cyc. 538; 24 Cyc. 210; 21 U. S. Stats. at Large, 43, ch. 52, sec. 2.
3. The law in question is also assailed because, as asserted, it imposes unconstitutional tests upon persons to be selected as jury commissioners, in that it requires that they shall be citizens of the United States, qualified electors of this state, possessed of their natural faculties, and not infirm or decrepit, of good character, approved integrity and sound judgment, able to read and write the English language understandingly, and freeholders of the county for which the jury .list is to be made. Some of the arguments apparently go to the length of contending that no qualifications whatever can be placed upon the eligibility to public office, but that question
Some other grounds of invalidity of this statute are suggested by the briefs filed, but do not seem to us serious enough to warrant their discussion.
Our conclusion is that, by this statute assailed, the legislature has imposed the duty of selecting jurors upon the judicial circuits of the state, and that the office of jury commissioner is one either of the state or of such circuits and not a county office, and did not exist either in name or duties at the adoption of the constitution, but has been since created, so that the incumbents may be selected in legislative discretion. It results both that the relator, a private individual, has not legal capacity to maintain this action in the name of the state without first applying to the attorney general— see. 3466, Stats. (1898), — and that the complaint fails to state facts inconsistent with defendants’ title to their offices. Hence the demurrer was properly sustained upon both grounds.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.