264 N.W. 227 | Minn. | 1935
Thereafter the attorney general of the state moved the court for an order striking out the return of King and setting aside the appearances made by the counsel employed by him. In the affidavit supporting the motion the attorney general states that he tenders a proposed answer which he advises the state auditor to adopt as the answer and return to the alternative writ. The court denied the motion, but in the memorandum attached to the order indicated that "all parties" conceded the right of the attorney general "to appear and be heard in answer to the writ, and file his return thereto." The attorney general seeks to review the order by appeal and on certiorari. Respondent raises no objection to the jurisdiction of this court, but there can be no doubt that the order is not appealable. It is not a final order. And it may well be doubted whether certiorari may be resorted to to bring to this court for review an order which neither disposes of an issue in the proceeding nor excludes the attorney general from asserting the rights or interests of the state therein in any manner he may see fit. But, since this court has a certain discretion in the matter of reviewing nonappealable orders by certiorari and neither party to the mandamus action questions the right of this court to pass on the merits of the order, we shall so do without further consideration of the procedure. The question before us is: Where in a mandamus proceeding against the state auditor he has signed and verified his return or answer, also signed by legal counsel employed at his own expense, has the attorney general the absolute right to have such return or answer stricken and the counsel of the auditor ousted from participating in the proceeding?
The authority and duty of the attorney general to enter and participate in any litigation wherein he deems the interests of the *47
state or any of its departments are involved is conceded. And we need not go outside of our own decisions to vindicate the power and authority of the attorney general, a constitutional state officer. State ex rel. Young v. Village of Kent,
But while it is conceded that the attorney general may come into any litigation in which the rights or interests of the state are at stake, it is readily conceivable that situations may arise where the dispute is between two departments of the state or between two state officers or between a state department and a state officer as to whether one has so complied with the law that the other must approve or be forced to approve what the one has done. The state auditor is a constitutional officer. Minn. Const. art.
"* * * that any board or department of the state government have the right to personally appear in their own defense before this court, and that the attorney general, although he is by statute the legal adviser of the departments of the state government and entitled to represent them in actions, sustains, nevertheless, in such actions a relation similar to that of attorney and client, and he may not overrule or entirely disregard rights of defense or of personal appearance that such departments may desire to assert."
There is nothing in our statutes which forbids a state officer from answering when sued as such, or from employing attorneys to appear for him in such suit. I Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 109 and 114, which provides that the attorney general shall appear for the state in the supreme and federal courts in all cases where the state is directly interested; also in all civil causes of like nature in the district court whenever, in his opinion, the interests of the state require it; and that he shall act as attorney for all state officers, and when public welfare, in his judgment, requires, he may employ a special attorney and fix the compensation; and whenever the attorney general, the governor, and the chief justice of the supreme court in writing certify that it is necessary in the proper conduct of the legal business of the state to employ additional counsel, the attorney general may employ such counsel. In § 114 two exceptions are found. The first is: "Except as herein provided, no board, commission or officer shall hereafter employ any attorney at the expense of the state." And this concluding sentence of the section: "Except as herein stated no additional counsel shall be employed, and the legal *50
business of the state shall be performed exclusively by the attorney general and his assistants." The first exception impliedly concedes that an officer may employ his own counsel when sued, but that counsel so employed cannot be paid by the state. The last exception charges the attorney general and his assistants with all the legal business of the state; but it is evident that the main purpose of the whole section is to prevent officers, boards, and commissions of the state employing legal counsel at the expense of the state. We are of the opinion that the court below did not err when refusing to strike the return and answer of the auditor from the files. The attorney general is permitted to come into the case and represent the interests of the state or any of its departments therein as he may deem proper. Should he come to the conclusion that the commissioner of highways purchased these lands for the construction or improvement of a trunk highway, and that the price is not so excessive as to vitiate the transaction, the court would undoubtedly permit his proposed answer to be amended or his pleading so framed as to espouse the cause of the relator in this proceeding. We are not without example of litigation where the attorney general came into a case, but the case was permitted to be carried on to the great advantage of the state, mainly by attorneys not connected with or employed by the attorney general. Regan v. Babcock,
We are cited to authorities from other states by the attorney general, all of which have been examined. They are all, as far as general statements therein are made of the authority and power of the attorney general to appear for the state in any litigation involving the state's rights or interests, substantially the same as in our cases first above referred to. But when considered in connection with the issues and parties involved, the cited cases afford us little, if any, assistance. For instance, Orton v. State,
"It suffices that section 509 [of the administrative Code] makes it unlawful for any department or officer to employ an attorney to represent such department or officer 'in any matter or thing relating to the public business, * * * without the approval in writing of the attorney general'; and section 903 (b) makes it his power and duty 'to represent the Commonwealth, or any department * * * or officer thereof, in any litigation to which the Commonwealth or such department * * * or officer may be a party.' " It is further stated in the opinion [
Under the circumstances detailed in the affidavits of the attorney general and the respondent upon the hearing of the motion, the trial court rightly refused to strike out the return made by respondent and rightly refused to strike the names of the attorneys who appeared for him without expense to the state.
The appeal is dismissed; and, on certiorari, the order of the court below is affirmed.