275 N.W. 569 | Iowa | 1937
The defendant was charged in a justice court in Henry County under two informations, one charging the unlawful possession of a channel catfish during the closed season, and the other charging the taking of the fish with illegal devices, to wit: hoopnets. It is alleged in both of the informations *505
that the act charged is contrary to certain sections of the "Iowa Angling Regulations" so as to violate the provisions of section 1789 of the Code, imposing a misdemeanor penalty for "violation of the provisions of the rules and regulations adopted by the commission." The defendant was convicted and fined in the justice court and appealed to the district court, where he interposed demurrers to the informations for the reason that the crimes charged therein are a violation not of a statute but of rules and regulations of the state conservation commission, adopted pursuant to an attempted void and unconstitutional delegation of legislative power, in contravention of Article
Both informations seek to impose the misdemeanor penalty prescribed by section 1789 of the Code of Iowa for violation of rules and regulations adopted by the State conservation commission under a statutory grant of power, contained in section 1703-d12 of the Code. There is no statute which, by express terms, prohibits the doing of the acts complained of in the informations. The State contends that section 1703-d12, subdivision 5, effectually empowered the conservation commission to adopt and promulgate rules and regulations for the protection of fish, etc., and make the violation thereof crimes. We cannot so hold.
In the case of Goodlove v. Logan,
"Such rules and regulations may * * * relate to * * *."
This court held that the legislature had delegated to the highway commission power,
"* * * first to say whether there shall be any law, and, second, what that law shall be * * *."
Our opinion in that case, and our prior and subsequent holdings recognize that the legislature may, as said by the United States Supreme Court in Field v. Clark,
[1] The legislature may not delegate its purely legislative power. The courts thruout the land have held this. Nevertheless, it has been recognized from the very earliest times that this does not prevent the legislature from invoking the aid of other governmental departments in effectuating its policies. This court has endeavored, within constitutional limits, to pursue a "common sense" policy in determining the extent to which delegation may be permitted, and to give due consideration to the necessities of governmental coordination and the practical difficulty of adapting legislation to complex conditions involving a host of detail. Hampton, Jr., Co. v. U.S.,
In the recent case of State v. Manning,
"The three branches, executive, judicial, and legislative, are coordinate parts of our government, and the line of demarcation between the three in matters of the character here involved is not easily defined according to any fixed standard of interpretation. As early as the year 1825, no less renowned authority than Chief Justice Marshall, in recognition of this difficulty under such circumstances as confront us in this case, said:
"`The line has not been exactly drawn which separates those important subjects, which must be entirely regulated by the legislature itself, from those of less interest, in which a *507
general provision may be made, and power given to those who are to act under such general provisions, to fill up the details.' Wayman v. Southard, 10 Wheat., 1, 41,
"Our own court has given expression to the same thought in McLeland v. Marshall County,
"`The exact line of demarcation between legislative power and administrative duties in some cases is not easily determinable. It may be stated, in a general way, that it is for the legislature to determine what the law shall be, to create rights and duties, and provide a rule of conduct. This does not necessarily mean that the legislature must lay down a strict rule that must be followed by an administrative officer, but that an executive or commission may be vested by the legislative branch of the government with discretion, within certain limits, in carrying out the provisions of a statute.'
"Likewise, in In re Appeal of Beasley Brothers,
"`In the nature of things, there is no high wall or definite line of demarcation between the different governmental departments. Necessarily they gradually merge and blend into each other. Administrative officials must on numerous occasions in practice (subject to review by the courts) act judicially. Occasionally administrative functions * * * must be exercised by courts. But, in the main, the three classes of governmental powers are separate and distinct.'"
No government, embodying the principles of the separation of power could function if the legislature were prohibited from conferring power or authority of any character upon executive or administrative officials. The cases demonstrate that no such arbitrary prohibition is intended. In determining whether a statute authorizing the adoption of rules and regulations involved an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power, the issue is not whether any such authority has been delegated but rather is as to the nature of the authority involved.
If it is "strictly and exclusively legislative" in character, it cannot be delegated. If it is not of that restricted character, it may be.
When the legislature declares a general rule and prescribes the circumstances under which it shall apply but in such general *508 terms as to require that authority be delegated to others "to fill up the details" by rule or regulation, the weight of authority is that the "strictly and exclusively legislative" power has not been delegated. When the legislature lays down an intelligible and complete declaration of policy which is definite in describing the subject to which it relates or to the field wherein it shall apply, and the character of regulation which is intended to be imposed, it is proper to leave to a nonlegislative body the manner in which that general policy shall apply to varying situations.
The Supreme Court of the United States in the recent case of Panama Refining Company v. Ryan (1935),
"The Constitution has never been regarded as denying to the Congress the necessary resources of flexibility and practicality, which will enable it to perform its function in laying down policies and establishing standards, while leaving to selected instrumentalities the making of subordinate rules within prescribed limits and the determination of facts to which the policy as declared by the legislature is to apply. Without capacity to give authorizations of that sort we should have the anomaly of a legislative power which in many circumstances calling for its exertion would be but a futility."
[2] In the Goodlove v. Logan case,
When we come to analyze the language of section 1703-d12, *509 we find that it grants what Justice Cardozo of the United States Supreme Court described in the Panama Refining Company case, supra, as a "roving commission" and a "vagrant and unconfined" power to establish and make law. There is no sufficient "yardstick" or statement of legislative policy in the broad grant of power to the conservation commission to "adopt rules and regulations — whenever * * * such regulations shall be desirable for the proper use and conservation of the resources of the State." Such delegation of power, without definition of legislative policy and standard, amounts to surrender by the legislature to the commission of its duties. This cannot be done in keeping with the spirit and intent of the Constitution, and it is therefore our holding that the rules and regulations so adopted and published by the state conservation commission are without authority and void.
It follows that the district court was right in sustaining the demurrers to the informations referred to and involved in this appeal. And this case must be, and it is hereby, affirmed. — Affirmed.
Chief Justice and all Justices concur.