On April 1, 1907, the following opinion was filed:
Thе relator, the attorney general of the state, applied to this court for a writ of mandamus to compel the judges of the district court of the Second judicial district of the state to appoint a member of the board of control of Ramsey county, as provided by Sp. Laws 1883, p. 189, c. 51. An order to show cause why the writ should not issue was made, and upon the return the respondents appeared and moved to discharge the order and dismiss the proceedings upon the ground that the statute which assumed to impose the duty of making such appointment is unconstitutional and void, because it imposes upon the judiciary duties and functions which are not judicial and which belong to another department of the government of the state.
We are satisfied that Sp. Laws 1883, p. 189, c. 51, in so far as it requires the judges of the district court to appoint the members of the board of control, is unconstitutional. The order is therefore discharged, and the proceedings dismissed. An opinion will be filed hereafter.
On April 12, 1907, the following opinion was filed:
In 1872 the legislature enacted a special law, entitled “An act to authorize the county of Ramsey and city of St. Paul to issue bonds to build an almshouse and hospital and for other purposes.”
From time to time the judges of the district court made certain aрpointments under the statutes, but now refuse to fill a vacancy which has occurred in the board, for the reason, as alleged, that the statute originally and as amended is unconstitutional, because it attempts to confer powers and impose duties other than judicial upon the judiciary. The relator, the attorney general of the state, presented an information to this court and prayed that a writ of mandamus issue commanding the judges of the district court to fill the vacancy now existing in the board of control of Ramsey county. An order to show cause was thereupon issued, and upon the return day the respondents appeared and moved to discharge the order and dismiss the action on the ground that the several acts of the legislature referred to in the information, so far as they, or any of them, purport to confer or impose upon the respondents the duty of appointing the members or directors of the said board of control, are unconstitutional. The relator contends that the duties imposed by these statutes are judicial in character; that, even if they are not judicial, they may properly be imposed upon the courts by the legislature without violating any constitutional provision; that the legislature may require the'members of the judicial department of the- state gоvernment to perform any services which will not interfere with the proper exercise of the powers which are expressly conferred upon them by the constitution; and that no distinction in this respect is made between judicial and nonjudicial functions. The argument is plausible, and is urged with ability and ingenuity.
1. The question involved in this case is of such importance that we feel justified in stating the history of the doctrine of the separation of powers, and examining with some care and at considerable length the cases in which it has been considered.
(a) The tendency to sacrifice established principles of constitutional government in order to secure centralized control and high efficiency in administration may easily be carried so far as to endanger the very foundations upon which'our system of government rests. That system, devised and elaborated with infinite care and wide knowledge of history and political theory, rests upon certain conceded fundamental
Constitution-making began with the states and culminated in the constitution of the nation. The idea that the powers of the government should be distributed among different bodies of men had taken possession of the minds of the statesmen and people of the formative period. They were familiar with the contrary theory, and with the works of the political writers in which such theories were advocated. But they believed, with Paley, that “the first maxim of a free state is that the law should be made by one set of men and administered by another; in other words, that the legislative and judicial character be kept separate. When thеse offices were united in the same person or assembly, particular laws are made for párticular cases, springing oftentimes from particular motives and directed to private ends. Whilst they are kept separate, general laws are made by one body of men without foreseeing whom they may affect; and, when made, they must be applied by the other, let them affect whom they will.” They had read in Montesquieu’s Spirit of Laws that “when the legislative and executive powers are united in the same person or in the same body of magistrates there can be no liberty. * * * Again, there is no liberty if the judiciary power be not separated from the legislative and executive. Were it joined with the legislative, the life and liberty of the subjects would be exposed to arbitrary control, for the judge
In speaking of-the old constitution of Virginia, Jefferson said: “All the powers of government, legislative, executive, and judicial, result to the legislative body. The concentrating these in the same hands is the precise definition of a despotic government. It will be no alleviation that these powers will be exercised by a plurality of hands and not a single one.” Jefferson, Notes on Virginia, p. 195; 1 Story, Const. Law, § 525.
Prior to 1787 twelve commonwealths adopted constitutions, and of these six inserted therein a general clause distributing the principal govermental powers among the executive) legislative, and judicial departments. The first constitution of Massachusetts, adopted in 1780 (part 1, art. 30), provided that “in the government of this commonwealth the legislative department shall never exercise the executive and judicial powers or either of them; the executive shall never exercise the legislative and judicial powers or either of them; the judicial shall never exercise the legislative and executive powers or either of them, to the end it may be a government of laws and not of men.” The constitution of New Plampshire, adopted in 1784 (part 1, art. 1, §i 37), declared that “the legislative, executive and judicial [powers] ought to be kept as separate from and independent of each other as the nature of a free government will admit, or as is consistent with that chain of -connection that binds the whole fabric of the constitution in one indissoluble bond. of union and amity.” Maryland declared “that the legislative, executive, and judicial powers of government
After the general adoption of this form of government by the former colonies, and before the meeting of the constitutional convention of 1787, Turgot published a pamphlet which ■ criticised the Americans for their departure from that simple form with power concentrated in the legislature which was so attractive to the philosophical mind. In reply to this, John Adams published his famous defense of American government, which is a veritable storehouse of political history and theory, and which served to confirm American statesmen in the correctness of the theories which they had adopted.
When the national convention of 1787 met, it adopted as its first resolution, that “a national government ought to be established consisting of a supreme legislature, judiciary and' executive.” Journals of the Convention, pp. 82-83, 129, 207, 215. “From this fundamental proposition,” says Judge Story, “sprang the subsequent organization of the whole government of the United States, and it lies at the bottom of all our Constitutions, state as well as national.” See The Federalist (Lodge’s Ed.) No. 47; Webster’s Works, vol. 4, p. 122. Since that time all the states, except New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin, Kansas, Delaware, North Dakota, and Washington, have adopted constitutions which contain a distributing clause expressly providing for the division of governmental powers among three departments. All the states that have adopted this clause, except Rhode Island, Connecticut, and North Carolina, have further provided that no person or persons exercising the functions of one department shall assume or discharge the functions of any other department. The constitutions of all the states, except Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Jersey, North Carolina, Louisiana, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, and South Carolina, provide that the powers shall be separated except in cases expressly directed or permitted. South Dakota provides that “the powers of the government of the state are divided into three distinct departments, the legislative, executive and judicial; and the powers and duties of each are prescribed by this constitution.” (Article 2.)
The constitution of the United States and the constitutions of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Wisconsin, Kansas, Delaware, Washington,
The constitution of every state, except New York, expressly vests by separate provisions the legislative powers in the legislature, the executive in the governor and certain other officers, and the judicial in the judiciary.
Irrespective of the existence of a distributing clause, it is held that the creation of these departments operates as an apportionment of the different classes of powers. Poore, Fed. and State Constitutions and Charters; Stimson, Am. St. Law, § 200; Bondy’s Separation of Governmental Powers, c. 3. As all departments derive their authority from the same constitution, there is an implied exclusion of each department from exercising the functions of the others. In Dash v. Van Kleeck,
(b) The constitution of the United States does not in terms prohibit one department of the government from exercising the powers which are therein conferred upon either of the other departments, but the federal courts have uniformly held that only judicial functions may be
Chief Justice Jay, Justice Cushing, and District Judge Duane, in the New York district, declined to act as judges, but consented to perform the duties imposed by the act as commissioners. In a memorandum stating their views the judges agreed: “That by the constitution of the United States, the government thereof is divided into three distinct and independent branches, and that it is the duty of each to abstain from and to oppose encroachment on either. That neither the legislature nor the executive branches can constitutionally assign to the judicial any duties but such as are properly judicial and to be performed in a judicial manner. That the duties assigned to the circuit ■courts by this act are not of that description, and that the act itself does •not appear to contemplate them as such. * * * As, therefore, the business assigned to this court by the act is not judicial, nor directed to be performed judicially, the act can only be considered as appointing ■commissioners for the purposes mentioned in it, by official instead of personal descriptions. That the judges of this court regard themselves as being the commissioners designated by the act, and therefore as being at liberty to accept or decline that office. That as the objects of
In the district of Pennsylvania, Justices Wilson and Blair and District Judge Peters reached the same conclusion, but thought proper to express to the president “the sentiments which on a late painful occasion governed us with regard to an act passed by the legislature of the Union.” In this remarkable letter the judges call attention to the division of power made by the national constitution and say: “It is a. principle important to freedom that in government the judicial should be distinct from and independent of the legislative department. To this important principle the people of the United States in forming their constitution have manifested the highest regard.” Two reasons are assigned why the courts should not act under the law: “First. Because the business directed by this act is not of a judicial nature. It forms no part of the power vested by the constitution in the courts of the United States. The circuit court must consequently have proceeded without constitutional authority. Second. Because, if upon that business the court had proceeded, its judgments (for its opinions, are its judgments) might under the same act have been revised and controlled by the legislature and by an officer in the executive department. Such revision- and control we deemed radically inconsistent with the independence of that judicial power which is vested in the courts.”
Justice Iredell and District Judge Sitgreaves in the district of North-Carolina also communicated to the president their reasons for declining to act under the law.
These opinions and letters are printed in a note to Hayburn’s Case,
In 1792 an application was made to the supreme court of the United States for a writ of mandamus to compel the circuit court to act under the statute. The question was fully argued and the case was submitted,, but before a decision was rendered the objectionable provisions of the statute were repealed by congress. Before the act was repealed, how
The treaty of 1819 between the United States and Spain provided that “The United States will cause satisfaction to be made for the injuries, if any, which by process of law shall be established to. have been suffered by the Spanish officers and individual Spanish inhabitants by the late operations of the American army in Florida.” (Article 9.) For the purpose of carrying this provision into effect, congress, by. acts passed in 1823 and 1824, directed the judge of the territorial court of Florida to receive, examine, and adjudge all cases of claims for-losses and report his decisions, if in favor of the claimants, together with the evidence on which they were founded, to the secretary of the
The leading case of Kilbourn v. Thompson,
In U. S. v. Waters,
Gordon v. U. S., 2 Wall. (U. S.) 561,
The same principle was applied in Re Sanborn,
Ex parte Gans (D. C.)
In re Town of Mt. Morris, 41 Hun (N. Y.) 29, illustrates the nature of judicial power. The statut.es under consideration provided that, whenever adjoining towns were liable to construct a bridge over a stream dividing such towns, three freeholders might petition the commissioners of highways, and, if they refused to repair or build the .bridge for any cause the freeholders, upon affidavit and notice of motion, might apply to the supreme court or to a judge thereof at chambers, for an order requiring such commissioners to act, and the court or judge should make an order thereon as the justice of the case required. If the motion was granted, the judge or court was required to specify the amount of money needed, and how much thereof should be raised by each town. “To determine the liability of towns to erect and maintain bridges, to enforce such liability, and to order the mode in which it shall be performed, are acts peculiarly judicial in their character. An analogous appellate jurisdiction in respect to the laying out, altering, or discontinuing roads has for a long time been vested in the courts by statute.”
In re Davies,
A recent case which illustrates the nature of the judicial power is Citizens v. Town,
The New Jersey decisions are not entirely consistent. In Re Cleveland, 51 N. J. L. 311,
In Ross v. Board, 69 N. J. L. 291,
In County v. Mitchell,
In Board v. Todd,
In Robey v. County,
In Beasley v. Ridout,
In State v. Barker,
In State v. Rogers, 71 Ch. St. 203,
In City v. Zanesville, 64 Oh. St. 67,
In case of Supervisors of Election,
Connecticut retained her colonial charter until 1818, and all legislative and judicial power was vested in the assembly. The earlier cases decided under the new constitution adopted the view that there was not an entire separation of powers. But in Appeal of Norwalk Street Ry. Co.,
In Bradley v. City,
In Burgoyne v. Board,
The power to create municipal corporations and to enlarge or contract their boundaries is legislative, and cannot be exercised by the courts. State v. Simons,
In Houseman v. Montgomery,
The courts of Kentucky have been somewhat liberal in sustaining acts which impose other than strictly judicial duties upon the courts. See Morton v. Woodford,
(d) The previous decisions of this court are entirely consistent in their recognition of the general principle of the separation of powers. Article 3 of the constitution provides that “the powers of the government shall be divided into three distinct departments, legislаtive, executive and judicial; and no person or persons belonging to, or constituting one of these departments shall exercise any of the powers properly belonging to either of the others, except in the instances expressly
In Sanborn v. Commissioners of Rice County,
In Re Senate,
Home Ins. Co. of St. Paul v. Flint,
On an application for a writ of mandamus, directed to the governor of the state, commanding him to execute and deliver to the petitioner a deed of certain lands under the provisions of an existing statute, it was held that the ministerial duties imposed by the statute were not subject to the control of the judiciary. The court said: “The constitutional provision by which the departments of government are made distinct and indеpendent are broad and general, and recognize no such distinction. If the judicial department can so far control the executive as to compel the performance of ministerial duties, then the two are no more distinct and independent, except in degree, than if the judiciary could compel the executive to perform all its duties, whatever their nature.”
In State v. Young,
In State v. Ueland,
In Foreman v. Board of County Commrs. of Hennepin County,
The power to lay out and open highways is legislative in its nature, and in no sense, except in some of its details, judicial; but G. S. 1878, c. 13, § 76, which provided for the so-called judicial highways, was sustained as a special judicial proceeding analogous to that which was provided for the condemnation of rights of way for railway purposes. State v. MacDonald,
State v. Crosby, supra, noted a modern tendency to sustain statutes which impose duties of an uncertain or mixed character upon the courts; and in State v. Bates,
■ 2. The statute under consideration requires the judges of the district court to appoint the members of the board of control of the city of St. Paul. Although there are some decisions to the contrary; it is generally conceded that the power to appoint to a public office is in its nature an executive function. State v. Barker,
The members of the board of control, which this statute requires-the judges to appoint, have no connection with the judiciary. They are charged with the administration of important affairs which are-remote from the duties of the courts, and they are under the complete control of the other departments of the government. If the district judges can be required to appoint the members of this board,, there is no reason why they may not be required to appoint the mayor,, the members of the board of public works, the county commissioners,, the chief of police, and all other city and county officers. The supreme court may as well be required to appoint the state board of’ control, the bank examiner, the regents of the state university, and the members of all other numerous state boards and commissions. If the legislature may require the courts to make these appointments, there seems to be no reason why it cannot also require them to supervise their appointees, remove them, investigate their actions, report, concerning their administration, and even administer the departments.. themselves. Such a doctrine would render nugatory the constitutional prohibition and entirely revolutionize the system of government.
The suggestion that the judges of the district court may be compelled to act as individuals, instead of as judges, is not pertinent to this case. The statute purports to impose the duty upon “the judges of the-district court of the Second judicial district, county of Ramsey, state of Minnesota, or a majority thereof.” It requires them to act as judicial officers. Its mandate is directed to the judges of the district:
We have 'not discussed the policy of imposing other than judicial functions upon the judiciary, but it is apрarent that the founders of our system of government intended to confine the courts to their judicial duties, and thus prevent them from becoming involved in the turmoil of political life. The disposition to impose such nonjudicial functions upon the judges is manifestly due to the public confidence in their fairness and disinterestedness, and to the belief that they will not be influenced by selfish, unworthy, or partisan motives. It is possible that for a time the public would be benefited by the performance of such functions by the court, but the inevitable result in the end would be to lessen its efficiency and prestige as the guardian and conservator-of the constitution and laws and the rights of individuals under the law. In view of the fact that appointments have heretofore been made by the judges under the authority of this statute, it is proper to state that the persons thus appointed are de facto officers, and their acts as such are valid.
Our conclusion is that chapters 51 and 54, pp. 189, 192, of the Special Laws of 1883, in so far as they require the judges of the district court, or a majority of them, to appoint the directors or members of the board of control of Ramsey county, are unconstitutional, because they assume to impose upon the members of the judiciary powers and functions which are by the constitution of the state assigned to another department of the government.
The order to show cause is therefore discharged, the writ denied, and the proceedings dismissed.
Notes
Printed in Laws 1902, p. 165.
