Court Opinion

ID: 6586292
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:44:17.618748+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:29.157063
License: Public Domain

Powers, J.,
dissenting. The Public Service Commission made an order requiring the defendants to install, maintain and operate suitable gates at a grade crossing at the railroad station Alburgh. The Rutland Railroad Company appealed from that order, and seeks an annulment thereof on the grounds (1) that the findings of the commission are predicated, in whole or in part, upon evidence received after the hearing provided for by law had finally adjourned; and (2) that the act creating the commission is unconstitutional and void.
1. The record before us shows that these proceedings were begun by a petition filed with the commission on September 23, 1911; that a subpoena was duly issued by the clerk of the commission, therein specifying a time and place for a hearing on the petition; that service of this subpoena was duly accepted by the defendants, and that a hearing was had on November 24, 1911, — both defendants being represented by counsel. The commission reports that the question what ought to be done in the matter had caused it a good deal of embarrassment, and had resulted in the employment by the board of an expert who had carefully examined the condition complained of in respect of the crossing and made the commission a detailed report. The commission further reports that on April 8, 1912, an actual count, made under the supervision of its expert, showed that 688 persons traversed the crossing between 5:00 a. m. and 9:00 *371p. m., and that during that time there were 49 train movements over it, and that these figures showed about the daily traffic >at that point. The commission makes some further analysis of these figures and says that “enough has been said to show that this crossing is a very dangerous one. ’ ’ An electric alarm bell is now installed there and operated by the Central Vermont Railway Company, but owing to certain conditions pointed out by the commission it does more harm than good. The commission goes on to say that its expert reports, that all the evidence showed (and the commission so finds) that it is impracticable to install an electric bell system of alarm so connected with the tracks of both defendants as to afford any protection to this crossing. The commission considered the elimination of the crossing; but the large expense involved and the limited appropriation available precluded 'this. “We therefore find,” concludes the commission, “that public safety requires that this crossing be protected by the installation and maintenance of gates and fences for that purpose,” as indicated in the order appealed from.
It is quite apparent from the report of the commission that its findings are based, partly if not wholly, upon the report of its expert. He was not appointed until after the hearing on November 16,-and it is evident that the dangers of the crossing are in a great measure due to the large amount of daily traffic,, by persons and trains, over it. This was wholly ascertained, so far as the facts are shown, by the count supervised by the expert, --without which it would not appear that enough had “been said to show that this crossing is a very dangerous one.”
Besides, it was the evidence before the expert and nqt that before the board that resulted in a finding rejecting the idea of a more efficient electric signal.
So we cannot escape the conclusion that in reaching its ultimate finding the commission made use of evidence taken outside the public hearing, which the defendants had no opportunity to meet either by way of cross-examination, or otherwise. This is not in accordance with the provisions of the law, and the order predicated thereon is irregular and will be set aside.
This conclusion would dispose of the ease, and would ordinarily preclude an examination of the constitutional question raised. For the general rule is that the court will not pass upon *372the constitutionality of a statute unless it is necessary to do so in • order to finally dispose of the case. Blanchard v. Barre, 77 Vt. 420; State v. Wilson, 79 Vt. 379; Post v. Rutland R. Co., 80 Vt. 551; State v. B. & M. Railroad, 82 Vt. 121. But this rule has its exceptions; when the settlement of such question is one of public importance, the court may properly consider and dispose of it, although such a course is not necessary to a disposition of the case. Borgris v. Falk Co., 147 Wis. 327. This is well shown by the statement in Light v. United States, 220 U. S. 523, 55 L. ed. 570: “Where a case in this court can be decided without reference to questions arising under the Federal Constitution, that course is usually pursued, and is not departed from without important reasons. ’ ’
The settlement of the constitutional question involved in the case in hand is of great public importance and it is of the highest consequence that it be passed upon while the Legislature is in session, that such amendments in the law as may be found necessary, if any, may be promptly made, without awaiting another session of that body. So it is deemed best to treat the ease as exceptional and to dispose of the constitutional question presented.
The claim of the defendant is, that by the act creating the commission and defining its powers and duties (No. 126, Acts of 1906) legislative, executive and judicial powers are so blended and conferred upon it as to transgress the provisions made for the separation of those powers by Chapter II of the Constitution of this State.
A consideration of this claim is unembarrassed by two features which may as well be set aside at the outset: We need not consider what powers and duties may, without constitutional objections, be conferred upon the members of the commission as individuals, for the legislation referred to relates solely to the board, as such. Nor are we called upon to examine the constitution of the United States upon the question directly raised, for it contains nothing to prohibit a state, under its own laws, from conferring different governmental powers upon the same body or agency. Livingston’s Lessee v. Moore, 7 Pet. 469, 8 L. ed. 751; Reetz v. Michigan, 188 U. S. 505, 47 L. ed. 563; Consolidated Rendering Co. v. Vermont, 207 U. S. 541, 52 L. ed. 327; Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 211 U. S. 210, 53 L. ed. *373150. Though, as we shall see,. the decisions of the Federal Supreme Court are most valuable guides to a proper decision of the question.
It is one of the fundamentals of the American system of constitutional government that all governmental power shall be separated into three classes and conferred upon three distinct, but coordinate departments, — legislative, executive, and judicial. Such a distribution has always been considered by the American people as necessary to the security of the liberties of the citizen, the certainty of popular government, and the perpetuity of free institutions. The founders of our State believed with Blaekstone that “in all tyrannical governments, the right both of making and enforcing the laws, is vested in one and the same man, or one and the same body of men, and that wherever these two powers are united together, there can be no public liberty.” It was said by Judge Aikens in Bates v. Kimball, 2 D. Chip. 77, that “the necessity of a distinct and separate existence of the three great departments of government was well understood by the people of this State .at the time of the adoption of our Constitution. Its importance to the security of public liberty and private rights had been proclaimed and enforced by some of the wisest and most eminent men of other countries and of this, among whom are Montesquieu, Sir William Blaekstone, Jefferson and Madison.” Accordingly, our first constitution, adopted in 1777, and borrowed from that of Pennsylvania adopted the year before, provided for this distribution of governmental powers, but contained no prohibiting clause. And it must be admitted that during the first septenary of our state government, this constitutional provision was too often disregarded. To a student of the history of the times, however, it is not altogether surprising to find the Legislature, with some frequence, encroaching upon the domains of the other departments, especially that of the judiciary. It passed acts prohibiting the trial of cases involving title to land; prohibited trials predicated upon certain contracts; set itself up as a court of chancery; appointed a commission to decide disputes over titles and made its own decree conclusive; it granted new trials. Nor, during the 'same time, was' the council free from similar transgressions. It remitted a part of a debt contracted in Continental money; authorized the surveyor-general to settle the accounts of *374those running lines under his .direction; passed a resolution requiring certain papers belonging by law to the office of the secretary of state to be deposited with its clerk; substituted a charter of another gore of land for one granted by the Assembly; it granted divorces. All this is not to be taken as an indication that the people lacked in appreciation of the importance of the provisions of the constitution referred to, or that they were indifferent to the limitations imposed by that document, but rather as a result of inexperience in governmental affairs, of impressions and prejudices acquired before they removed to this State, and the pressing necessities of the times. The first Council of Censors promptly and vigorously condemned these practices, revised the Constitution and called a convention to consider and act upon certain proposals of amendment. The result was, that while many of these were rejected, the one containing the prohibiting clause found in section 6 of Chapter II of our present Constitution was adopted: “The Legislative, Executive and. Judiciary departments shall be separate and distinct, so that neither exercise the powers properly belonging to the other,”— since which time transgressions of the kind mentioned have been infrequent.
Our attention is called to the difference in phraseology in different prohibiting clauses, — how some are in terms more restrictive than ours. But I do not consider this of consequence. While these clauses differ somewhat in the terms used, the fundamental purpose and the ultimate object is the same in all, and the result is unaffected by the form of expression. The Constitution of the United States contains no prohibiting clause at all, yet it is held that the powers confided to one of the departments cannot be exercised by any other. Kilburn v. Thompson, 103 U. S. 168, 26 L. ed. 377. In the Alabama Constitution it was provided that “no person or collection of persons, being of one of these departments, shall exercise any power properly belonging to either of the others,” while the Virginia Constitution contained a prohibiting clause just like ours. Yet the Supreme Court of the United States, in Watkins v. Holman’s Lessee, 16 Pet. 25, 10 L. ed. 873, construed them to mean the same thing, saying: “The inhibition of the Alabama Constitution contains in terms, that which arises from the construction of the constitutions of other states.” And it was said by Judge Cooley in *375Butler v. Saginaw County, 26 Mich. 27: ‘ ‘ It is well settled that the apportionment of legislative power to one department of the government will not authorize it to exercise any portion of the judicial power which is apportioned to another department. The apportionment is of itself an implied prohibition upon its exercise by the Legislature.”
But that a complete and absolute separation of these governmental powers was not contemplated when our Constitution was adopted appears from the instrument itself. The governor is therein endowed with the veto power, and has, to a limited extent, a part in legislation. The house of representatives may order, and the senate try impeachments, therein acting as a judicial body. Each house of the general assembly 'may judge of the qualifications of its own members. Moreover, it has been found impossible in practice to keep the departments entirely separate, so that under no circumstances should one perform duties which partake of the character of those appertaining to another. No such exact division of governmental powers is possible. State v. R. R. Com., 52 Wash. 17, 100 Pac. 179; State v. Bates, 96 Minn. 110; So. Ry. Co. v. Melton, (Ga.) 65 So. 665. ‘ ‘ The division of governmental powers into executive, legislative, and judicial,” said the court in Minneapolis etc. R. Co. v. Railroad Com., 136 Wis. 146, 17 L. R. A. (N. S.) 821, “while of great importance in the creation or organization of a state, and from the viewpoint of institutional law and otherwise, is not an exact classification. No such exact delimitation of governmental powers is possible. ’ ’
It may safely be said that it. has come to be everywhere recognized that constitutions do not forbid the exercise by one department of the government of functions partaking of the character of those belonging to another, when that shall be incidentally necessary to the proper discharge of its own duties. Although the powers of one department, in a full and complete sense of the term, cannot be delegated to another department, one department may perform acts which partake of the character of those of another, when they are coupled with the exercise of its own paramount power, and are essential to its complete and efficient use. Watkins v. Holman’s Lessee, 16 Pet. 25, 10 L. ed. 873. Thus, the Legislature cannot delegate to this Court power to make a law; yet it may leave to this Court authority *376to prescribe rules of practice which have the force and effect of a law. Therein the court exercises functions which partake of the legislative character, but only as an incident to the discharge of its proper judicial functions, and because essential to an efficient exercise thereof. So a commission of the character here in question in the prosecution of its duties and as a preliminary to final action, hears and decides after the manner of judicial bodies. The Legislature itself does this in some measure. But these are not transgressions of the limitations of the constitution, because they come within the rule just stated.
Turning now to an analysis of the powers and duties of the commission as established by the act of its creation, we find that by section 23 the supervision and regulation of railroads is entrusted to the commission. Power to that end is conferred with a lavish hand. It would be impossible to find terms with which to make a jurisdiction more inclusive. This power of governmental regulation is one of the attributes of that all-pervading police power, by force of which the state conserves the health, safety, convenience and welfare of its people. This power is committed to the Legislature, and,, subject to certain limitations not here involved, may be exercised directly by legislative enactment or it may be vested in boards created for administrative purposes, to be applied according to a general legislative scheme. The power to supervise and regulate public services does not differ in kind or quality from that which is exercised in safeguarding the public health. L. S. & M. S. R. Co. v. Ohio, 173 U. S. 285, 43 L. ed. 702. It is delegable under the same circumstances and to the same extent. The maxim of the law that legislative power cannot be delegated applies in the one case' in the same way and with the same result as in the other. Much time and learning have been expended by' the courts in distinguishing between functions which are essentially and wholly legislative and so non-delegable, and those which involve the adoption of mere administrative regulations and so are delegable. It would not be profitable to review all that has been said on this subject or at this late day to inquire whether the courts' have pushed the law too far in their anxiety to sustain the acts creating these most useful commissions. It is enough for me to say that it is now the settled law of the American courts that the power now spoken of — the power of *377.governmental regulation — may be turned over to an administrative body without violating the provisions of the constitution. The theory of the cases being that the Legislature lays down the general plan, and only leaves to the commission the power to fill in the details. Wayman v. Southard, 10 Wheat. 1, 6 L. ed. 253; Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364, 51 L. ed. 523; United States v. Girmand, 220 U. S. 506, 55 L. ed. 563. “The elementary proposition,” says Mr. Justice White in Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. v. Corp. Com., 206 U. S. 1, 51 L. ed. 933, “that railroads, from the public nature of the business by.them carried on and the interest which the public have in their operation, are subject, as to. their state business, to state regulation, which may be exerted either directly by the legislative authority, or by administrative bodies endowed with power to that end, is not and could not be successfully questioned, in view of the •long line. of authorities sustaining that doctrine. ’ ’ A more recent, and equally satisfactory statement is found in Southern Ind. Ry. Co. v. Railroad Com., (Ind.) 87 N. E. 966: “The adjudications seem to be agreed that, as the state Legislature possesses the power to regulate the business of railroads, they may •delegate that power to a commission or other administrative body, and what such administrative agent does, within the powers with which it is endowed, is as valid and conclusive as if done by the Legislature itself.”
And this is saying no more than this Court has said; for in Board of Health v. St. Johnsbury, 82 Vt. 276, in speaking of the police power, we said: ‘ ‘ That right, to say the least, embraces such reasonable rules and regulations, established directly by legislative enactment, as will protect the public health and the public safety. And the state may invest local or state boards, created for administrative purposes, with authority in some proper way to safeguard the public health and the public safety.” And, again, in State v. Morse, 84 Vt. 387, in speaking on the same subject, we said: “The power may lawfully be delegated to municipalities, to local or to state boards, * * * and when so delegated, the agency employed is clothed with power to act, as full and efficient as that possessed by the Legislature itself.”
’ The primary object in creating such commissions is to see to it that the legislative purpose and mandate are observed and *378carried out. This purpose may find expression in enactments directly applicable, or in the legislative adoption of the common law. Whichever way it is expressed, the commission is charged with the duty of making it effective. Such a commission is everywhere held to be a mere administrative body. It is neither legislative nor judicial. I am now speaking of a commission the legality of which is admitted, and using the terms “legislative” and “judicial” in their full, legal sense.
The distinction between legislative powers (in this sense) which all agree cannot be delegated and mere administrative duties, the performance of which is essential to the effectiveness - of the law, and which may be delegated, is well shown in State v. Chicago etc. R. Co., 38 Minn. 281,— approved in State v. Great Northern R. Co., 100 Minn. 445,10 Ú. E. A. (N. S.) 250 — wherein it was held that legislative power was not delegated to the commission, but that it was simply- charged with the administration of the law as enacted. See, also, C. B. & Q. R. v. Jones, 149 Ill. 361, L. R. A. 141. In Reagan v. Farmers L. & T. Co., 154 U. S. 362, 38 L. ed. 1014, Mr. Justice Brewer speaks on this subject with his usual directness: ‘ ‘ There can be no doubt of the general power of the state to regulate -the fares and freights which may be charged and received by railroads and other carriers, and that this regulation can be carried on by means of a commission. Such commission is merely an administrative board created by the state for carrying into effect the will of the state as expressed by its legislation.”
This is the theory of the Railroad Commission Cases, 116 U. S. 307, 38 L. ed. 1014, and is the view which has always been entertained by the Supreme Court of the United States. Butterfield v. Stranahan, 192 U. S. 470, 48 L. ed. 525; Union Bridge Co. v. United States, 204 U. S. 364, 51 L. ed. 523; Monongahela Bridge Co. v. United States, 216 U. S. 177, 54 L. ed. 435; Interstate Com. Com. v. Goodrich Transit Co., 224 U. S. 194, 56 L. ed. 729; United States v. Grimaud, 220 U. S. 505, 55 L. ed. 563,— the last named case being a most instructive one. And it is a fact of much significance that, while the power of the Interstate Commerce Commission has been extended from time to time, it has not been invested with judicial power, nor has the Federal Supreme Court ever modified its view that it is a mere administrative body.
*379Upon such a body, the functions of a court cannot be conferred. State v. Wolfer, (Minn.) 138 N. W. 315; George v. People, 167 Ill. 447; People v. Mallary, 195 Ill. 582, 88 Am. St. Rep. 212; Louisville etc. R. Co. v. McChord, 103 Fed. 216; Schoultz v. McPheeters, 79 Ind. 373; In re Dumford, 7 Kan. App. 87, 53 Pac. 92; Hayburn’s Case, 2 Dall. 409, 1 L. ed. 436; United States v. Ferreira, 13 How. 40, and note on United States v. Todd prepared by Chief Justice Taney under the direction of the court; see, also, Interstate Com. Com. v. Brinson, .154 U. S. 447, 38 L. ed. 1047, wherein Mr. Justice Harlan refers to these cases, and says of the statute involved in the Hayburn and Todd cases and which was held to be inoperative: “It thus appears that the Act of 1792, above referred to, attempted to impose upon the courts of the United States duties purely administrative in character.”
Moreover, the power of regulation is legislative in character, and in exercising it the administrative body must be classed as a legislative agency. The particular branch of this power which has been most frequently before the courts is the rate-making power. Interstate Com. Com. v. Cin. etc. R. Co., 167 U. S. 479, 42 L. ed. 243, was a case involving the question whether the Interstate Commerce Commission was invested with power to establish rates. In deciding that that power had not then been conferred upon that commission, Mr. Justice Brewer says: “It is one thing to inquire whether the rates which have been charged and collected are reasonable, — that is a judicial act; but an entirely different thing to prescribe rates which shall be charged in the future, — that is a legislative act. * * # It will be perceived that in this case the Interstate Commerce Commission assumed the right to prescribe rates which should control in the future, and their application to the court was for a mandamus to compel the companies to comply with .their decision; that is, to abide by their determination as to the maximum rates to be observed in the future. * # # The power given is the power to execute and enforce, not to legislate. The power given is partly judicial, partly executive and administrative, but not legislative. # # * The power to prescribe a tariff of rates for carriage by a common carrier is a legislative and not an administrative or judicial function. * * *”
Prentis v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 211 U. S. 210, 53 L. ed. 150, involved the validity of passenger rates fixed by the *380corporation commission of Virginia. The point was made that the courts of the United States could not interfere because the commission was a court within the meaning of Rev. Stat., .§720. In rejecting this claim, the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Holmes, says: “A judicial inquiry investigates, declares, and enforces liabilities as they stand on present or past facts and under laws supposed already to exist. That is its purpose and end. Legislation, on the other hand, looks to the future and changes existing conditions by making a new rule, to be applied thereafter to all or some part of those subject to its power. The establishment of. a rate is.the making of a rule for the future, and therefore is an act legislative, not judicial, in kind. * * * ”
■ To the same effect is the statement of Mr. Justice Field in the Sinking Fund Cases, 99 U. S. 761. Atchison etc. Ry. Co. v. Denver etc. R. Co., 110 U. S. 667, 28 L. ed. 291, was a proceeding to compel one railroad to unite with another to form a through line and for the exchange of business. The court declined to interfere on the ground that the remedy was legislative rather than judicial.
In McChord v. L. & N. R. Co., 183 U. S. 483, 46 L. ed. 289, an injunction was- sought to restrain the Kentucky railroad commission from proceeding under an alleged unconstitutional statute of that state to establish maximum passenger and freight-rates. The injunction was denied on the ground that to grant it would be to restrain legislation. Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, in expressing the unanimous opinion of the court, says: ‘1 The fixing of rates is essentially legislative in its character, and the general rule is that legislative action cannot be interfered with by injunction. ’ ’
The significance of this case should not be overlooked. From it we learn that while these commissions are held to be administrative agencies, to which these matters may be committed without an unconstitutional' delegation of legislative power, their functions are so far legislative in character as to be free from interference in advance. There can .be but one conclusion drawn from the cases:' The delegation of the power of regulation does not and cannot change its character. It remains a legislative function,' and the body to which it is committed is a legislative agency — Mr. Justice Bradley in Railroad Co. v. Minnesota, 134 U. S. 466, 33 L. ed. 970 — without whose action legislation is *381incomplete and inefficient. It is only in theory and in a technical sense that the orders of a commission differ from a legislative .enactment, and the delegation of the power to prescribe rules of this character is to be defended quite as much upon the ground of necessity as on legal principles. “It is not the mode of doing a thing, nor by the pretended capacity in which it is done, but by the nature of the act itself that its propriety or impropriety is to be determined, ’ ’ said Judge Aikens in Bates v. Kimball, 2 D. Chip. 77. He also drew the distinction between a legislative and judicial act just where it was drawn in the Prentis ease above referred to, saying: “That which distinguishes a judicial from a legislative act is that the one is a determination of what the existing law is in relation to a particular thing done or happened; while the other is a predetermination of what the law shall be for the regulation and government of all future cases falling within its provisions.” Whether this rule would answer as a test in all cases that might arise, I need not stop to consider, — it certainly is one frequently to be found in the books. Chairman Knapp, whose intelligence and experience add great weight to his opinions, testified before the Committee on Interstate Commerce -in the United States Senate, Vol. 4, pp, 3299, 3300, as follows: “ To my notion regulation is legislation. * * * A tariff is a law. It is a rule of action of general application. So long as it is in force it has all the characteristics and all the binding obligations of a statute. To depart from it is a misdemeanor, *' * * and in the very nature of the case, the proposal to use the methods of a court to deal with a purely legislative question is incongruous and unsuitable. ’ ’
A moment’s reflection will convince anyone, it seems to me, that it is the rule or order of the commission (administrative though you may call it) which alone is of any practical importance to the railroad or the public. It is this which is to have operative effect upon the carrier; it is this which is to accomplish the reform and correct the abuse; it is this which must be obeyed; it- is this, the disobedience of which is made penal. Without it legislation is incomplete. Legislation does not end and administration begin until this act of the commission is added to what has gone before. There is an implied confession of all this in the holdings that the commission may be authorized to “fill in the details” of legislation.
*382So the question here presented is not alone, can administrative functions be conferred on a court, but can these administrative functions be conferred on a court? Or, to state it the other way, can full judicial power be conferred upon such an administrative board?
Let it be borne in mind all along that in all practical senses, • — -to all intents and purposes, — it is the commission which does the legislating. Theorize about it as much as we may, it must be confessed that its orders so closely resemble and bear such close affinity to legislative enactments that it takes an expert to distinguish between them. For example: The difference between a legislative mandate to erect a gate at a certain railroad crossing and -a commission’s order to do the same thing cannot be pointed out except by drawing a distinction so subtle as to elude the untrained mind.
Except in the limited and incidental way already specified judicial powers cannot be conferred on such a commission without confusing that which the constitution says shall be kept separate. Whether our Public Service Commission is a court in a judicial sense, depends, of course, not upon what it is called by the Legislature, but on the powers conferred upon it. Such, a body is not to be held non-judicial simply because it is called a commission, nor is it to be held to be a judicial body simply because the Legislature denominates it a court. It was said in State v. Wilson, 121 N. C. 472, 28 S. E. 554, that the railroad commission of that state was an administrative, and not a judicial court, and that while it had been made -by statute a court of record, the object was simply to give authenticity to its records and proceedings, as the act added nothing to its duties or powers. ' But our legislation does not stop there; it goes further; by section 8 of the act in question it confers upon the commission “the powers of a court of record, both at law and in equity, in the determination and adjudication of all matters over which it is given jurisdiction,” and the power to issue any process which either of those courts may issue to enforce its judgments and decrees. The majority says it is not a court. If this means that it is not a court because the constitution forbids conferring judicial powers upon such a commission, and that the attempt to do so in this case is unconstitutional, I agree.. If it means that assuming the validity of the act it is not a court, I ask why? *383What inore is needed to- make it a court ? What element is lacking? It seems perfectly plain to me that it is a court. Its functions are, in the respect I am now speaking of, clearly those of the judiciary; they “properly belong” to the judiciary department ; they are not incidental, they are primary. If there is a distinction between administrative courts and judicial courts, there can be no question but this commission comes within the latter class. “The award of executions,” said Chief Justice Taney, in Gordon v. United States, 117 U. S. appx. 697, “is a part and an essential part of every judgment passed by a court exercising judicial power. ’ ’
Within its own domain, this commission is clothed with the most extensive judicial powers ;• indeed, there is no court known to the law that can do more within the sphere of its own activities than this one can. And it is apparent that it was so considered when we decided Central Vt. Ry. Co. v. Hartford, 82 Vt. 145; and Hyde Park v. St. J. & L. C. R. Co., 83 Vt. 562.
We have here then a court exercising, practically if not technically, the most important legislative and judicial functions in the very same matter. This certainly cannot be, unless the theory of the constitution is to be utterly rejected.
The difficulty is not met by those who say that the commission, being an administrative body, is not exercising any of the powers of which the constitution speaks. The question may well be asked, what is it doing? It is certainly a governmental agency. Carty’s Admr. v. Winooski, 78 Vt. at p. 108. Its powers and authority must come from the state government, and, therefore, must fall into one of the three classes. “No power can be properly a legislative and properly a judicial power at the same time; and as to mixed powers, the separation of the departments precludes the possibility of their existence.” Bates v. Kimball, 2 D. Chip. 77. If we were to hold that this commission as constituted by this statute could" stand this constitutional test, then the State Board of Health, Local Boards of Health, State Board of Pharmacy, State Board of Dental Examiners, State Board of Medical Registration, State Fish -and Game Commissioner, State Cattle Commissioner, Commissioner of Weights and Measures, and various other boards that exercise administrative functions under the police power, may be invested by the Legislature with equal judicial power and authority *384within their respective spheres; they may sit in the judgment seat, issue writs of injunction, mandamus, and perhaps quo warranto and other process, and exercise judicial authority “equal in all respects” to that of the regular courts of the state. Moreover, if this law is upheld, the Legislature can confer this power of regulation of public service corporations upon its own committee, appointed from its own members, and by appropriate legislation authorize it to sit continuously and to exercise these vast judicial powers. Indeed, it may do all this itself. Not only this, but all the duties of all these commissions may be loaded on to the county court, the court of chancery, or. even this Court, to the extent of crowding out the exercise of its proper judicial duties.
Nor is this an excursion into the realms of fancy; our table is already spread for just this kind of a repast. There is now pending in this Court an appeal from an order of this commission made in the matter of the Burlington Union Station, taken under No. 288, Acts of 1910, which authorizes us, — and so, of course, requires us — upon hearing, to revise, modify or reverse the order of the commission, and to order the taking of testimony in such manner as we deem best.
The authorities, I confess, are not in harmony on these questions, but the following are in accord with the view herein expressed.
In Tyson v. Washington County, 78 Neb. 211, 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 350, it is held that the question whether a drainage ditch will be conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, or whether the route thereof is practicable, are questions of governmental or administrative policy, and are not of judicial cognizance; and that jurisdiction over them by appeal or otherwise cannot be conferred upon the courts by statute, on account of the constitutional separation of the powers of government, — approving State v. Johns’on, hereinafter cited.
In Supervisors v. Todd, 97 Md. 247, 62 L. R. A. 809, an act of the Legislature imposing upon a court the duty of receiving and acting on petitions for the submission to the voters of the question whether or not intoxicating liquors should be sold, was void under a constitutional separation of governmental departments.
*385In Spencer’s Appeal, (Conn.) 61 Atl. 1010, it was held that a statute giving an appeal from the decision of the railroad commissioners in the matters relating to grade crossings, and providing that the court, on appeal, might re-examine the question of the propriety and expediency of the order appealed from, and, in ease the order is not affirmed, may make any other order in the premises that it may deem proper and which might have been made by the railroad commissioners, was unconstitutional. The court says that the acts of the commission are administrative all through, and that the court below, in what it did, was not exercising judicial functions. ‘ ‘ They were distinctly administrative, and therefore such as it was powerless to exercise, no matter what authority legislation may have sought to confer.”
, It was said in Railroad Com. v. Neville, 96 Tex. 394, that the Legislature had. conferred on the court the question of the reasonableness of rates as they affected the rights of railroads and shippers, which was, as'presented, a judicial question, and that legislative power was not conferred lipón the court. But that “the making of rates by the commission is the exercise of legislative authority, which the court can not exercise.”
In Dewry v. Des Moines Co., 143 la. 466, it was held that a determination by a board of supervisors, that the establishment of the district and the making of the contemplated public improvement therein, is not advisable on the ground that such action would not be conducive to the public health, convenience or welfare, or to the public benefit or utility, is discretionary and of a legislative character, which is not'reviewable in the courts, because of the constitutional separation of the powers of government. It is to be observed that it seems that in Iowa they distinguish between constitutional courts and statutory courts, and hold that the latter may be given legislative or administrative, as well as judicial functions. No such distinction, however, exists in this State.
The very question was squarely met in Western Union Tel. Co. v. Myatt, 98 Fed. 335; and State v. Johnson, 61 Kan. 803, 49 L. R. A. 662. These cases involved the validity of a statute of the state of Kansas not materially different from our own. They arose about the same time, but the results were reached upon independent reasoning. Both declared the statute unconstitutional on the ground that it sought to confer upon the *386Court of Visitation, as it was there called, powers legislative, administrative and judicial in violation of the constitution of the state of Kansas. The opinion of the state court was criticised in the argument before us, but to my mind it is sound, logical and satisfactory.
The limitations upon the powers of judicial bodies in these administrative matters appears from what has been said by the Supreme Court of the United States.
Mr. Justice Brewer, in Reagan v. Farmers L. & T. Co., 154 U. S. 362, 38 L. ed. 1014, says: “The courts are not authorized to revise or change the body of rates imposed by a Legislature or a commission; they do not determine whether one rate is preferable to another or what under all the circumstances would be fair and reasonable as between the carriers, and the shippers; they do not engage in any mere administrative work. ’ ’
That I do not mistake the force of this statement of Judge Brewer, appears from St. Louis etc. R. Co. v. Gill, 156 U. S. 649, 39 L. ed. 567, wherein it is said in speaking of that case, “The opinion of this court on appeal was that while it was within the power of a court of equity in such case to decree that the rates so established by the commission were unreasonable and unjust, and to restrain their enforcement, it was not within its power to establish rates itself. After recognizing the previous cases as establishing the proposition that, while it is not the province of courts to enter upon the merely administrative duty of framing a tariff of rates for carriage,” it was within the scope of their authority To protect the constitutional rights of the carrier.
In the Express Cases, 117 U. S. 1, 29 L. ed. 791, in speaking of the action of the trial court in fixing and regulating the terms upon which the railroad company and express company should do business, the court said: “In this way, as it seems to us, the court has made an arrangement for the business intercourse of these companies, such as, in its opinion, they ought to have made for themselves. * * # The regulation of matters of this kind is legislative in its character, not judicial. To what extent it must come, if it comes-at all, from Congress, and to what extent it may come from the states, are questions we do not now undertake to decide, but that it must come, when it does come, from some source of legislative power, we do not doubt.”
*387And this is the very ground on which was put Atchison etc. R. Co. v. Denver etc. R. Co., 110 U. S. 673, 28 L. ed. 294, and Pullman’s Palace Car Co. v. Mo. Pac. Ry. Co., 115 U. S. 587, 29 L. ed. 499, — that the court could not make for the parties such a business arrangement as they ought to have made for themselves.
One further question stands for consideration: Are these provisions of the act which confer judicial powers upon the commission such an integral part of the legislative plan as to vitiate the whole act? The majority says that they are hot. That is to say, after holding that the ease demands a consideration of the constitutional question raised, the majority only goes far enough into a consideration of that question to enable it to say that the provisions attacked can be separated from the rest and the latter stand, — leaving, the whole question of whether or not there are any unconstitutional provisions in the statute, and if so, what they are, in uncertainty.
In considering the question of the divisibility of the statute we should look, not only to the structure of the act itself, but to the circumstances which preceded and attended its passage. For many years we had had a commission with more or less authority over the railroads of the state. It was and is now admitted that this was purely administrative and therefore legal. Previous to the passage of the Act of 1906, the commission had practically no power to enforce its own orders, but were authorized, as is the Interstate Commerce Commission and the statutory state commissions to proceed in the courts for their enforcement. I note the fact that the commission in its annual reports had been-asking for more power. In the two which preceded the passage of the act in question the commission “recommended” that the whole law be revised and reconstructed so as to strengthen the commission. What the commission wanted was “a law with teeth.” The majority says that the primary purpose of the act was to strengthen the administrative functions of the commission. But when Central Vermont Ry. Co. v. Hartford, 82 Vt. 145, was before us it was considered by the unanimous court that power of enforcement of the orders of the commission was the primary purpose of the passage of the act. This appears from what was said by Chief Judge Eowell in the opinion in that case: “When No. 125, Acts of 1906, was passed, the railroad commissioners had practically no power to enforce *388their orders. They had been enforced mostly, if at all, by the Supreme Court on appeal, exercising equity powers for the purpose; and sometimes there was a punitive sanction for noncompliance. When said last mentioned act was passed, though considerable had been accomplished elsewhere in respect of legislative regulation and control of railroads, this State had never conferred sufficient authority upon the railroad commissioners to make them very effective in that regard; and No. 126, Acts of 1906, which, though passed after No. 125, took effect before it, seems to have been the first time the Legislature took the matter in hand with a view to remedy that shortage of authority by conferring enough more to enable the commissioners to deal with the matters within their jurisdiction more effectively and speedily than they had ever been able to do before. This is evidently why the board is given such ample authority both to judge and execute its judgments. * # * * In passing No. 126, the Legislature seems to have had a unified and comprehensive plan in mind, and evidently intended to provide a singleness of means to carry it into effect, * * *”
If any further evidence was required to establish the fact that the primary purpose of No. 126 was to confer authority upon the board to carry into effect its own orders, it is to be found in the acts of the same session which had been passed before it. It appears that by Nos. 118, 119, 120, 122 and 125, Acts of 1906, that very Legislature had legislated upon every single administrative matter of any consequence covered by section 23 of No. 126, but had said not a word about authorizing the commission to enforce its own orders. By these acts ample authority over highway crossings, rates, demurrage, furnishing cars, cattleguards and farm crossings, gates, signals and flagmen, connections with other roads, crossing other roads, mortgages, and so forth had been conferred on the commission; and through all this legislation V. S. 3990, as amended by No. 68, Acts of 1902, which authorized this Court, sitting in equity, upon application of the board, to compel compliance with its orders remained untouched. What the status of these prior acts would be if No. 126 should fail for unconstitutionality is a question which has not been discussed, and so I give it no attention.
What “shortage of authority” was there, then? What more power did the commission require in order to deal with *389matters within its jurisdiction “more effectively and speedily?” Nothing, to be sure, except the power to execute its own orders. Accordingly, No. 126 gathered up and re-enacted the administrative duties which the board had already been given, and possibly (I cannot say) may have added something of.small consequence thereto; doing this as an incident of the grant of the missing power, — the power to put into execution its own orders. Notice, too, that the last section of No. 126 expressly repeals V. S. Chap. 172, which includes section 3990 covering the authority of the commission to go to the court for the enforcement of its orders. Can it be believed that the Legislature, when it was attempting to strengthen the hands of the commission, would have passed this act repealing the section giving it the authority to enforce its orders through the courts, if it had known that the provision giving the board power to enforce its own orders was unconstitutional and void?
How are the orders of the board to be enforced if that part of the act fails? It may easily be imagined that a case might arise where the railroad company would prefer to pay the penalty than to comply. Take the case of the Burlington Union Station. It involves the expenditure of something like half a million dollars. The maximum penalty for disobedience of the commission’s order is $5,000. Who can say which the companies will like best? Can the commission proceed in the courts? I think not. Their power is purely statutory, and is only what the statute makes it. Rutland Ry. L. & P. Co. v. Clarendon Power Co., 86 Vt. 45, shows this. A railroad commission is a tribunal unknown to the common law and possesses only such powers as are conferred upon it by statute. State v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., (Fla.) 54 So. 394; Wabash R. Co. v. Comrs., (Ind.) 95 N. E. 673, and eases cited; Railroad Comrs. v. Oregon R. & N. Co., 17 Ore. 65, 2 L. E. A. 195.
Consequently, unless the Legislature has conferred upon the commission authority to do so, it cannot maintain an action to enforce its order. Wabash R. Co. v. Comrs., supra; Railroad Com. v. Railroad Co., 26 S. C. 353.
Is there any other way that the court can proceed by way of mandamus or otherwise? Possibly. But if there is, its interference is a matter of independent discretion upon full hearing, —quite a different thing than the act in question contemplates.
*390To me it is utterly unbelievable that a Legislature in an effort to confer more power would have been willing to take a course which would take away what little the board then had. I cannot think that the Legislature would have approached this effort saying “but from him that hath not shall be taken away even that which he hath.”
It is not the question of what other acts the Legislature would have passed, it.is simply the question would they have passed this act with the objectionable provisions stricken out? On this question, the burden of proof, so to speak, is on the act. If it contains one unconstitutional provision, we must be able, in order to save any of it, to say affirmatively that the Legislature would have passed it had they realized that a part would fail. Again T call upon the Supreme Court of the United States for a correct statement of the rule: “Moreover, even in a case where legal provisions may be severed from those which are illegal, in order to save, the rule applies only where it is plain that congress would have enacted the legislation with the unconstitutional provisions eliminated.” Employer’s Liability Cases, 207 U. S. 463.
This Court correctly indicated the primary purpose of this act in Cent. Vt. Ry. Co. v. Hartford, supra. If the court was right then, the majority is wrong now. For, of course, that purpose has not changed. To me, it seems apparent that the grant of judicial power was an essential and inseparable feature of the legislative plan, — without which the act would be incomplete and inadequate to accomplish the legislative intent, and the whole act must fail. State v. Scampini, 77 Vt. 92; State v. Paige, 78 Vt. 286.
I have not reached this conclusion without a keen and appreciative sense of the responsiblity resting upon me; nor have T been unmindful of the rule which requires all reasonable doubts to be solved in favor of the statute. But I also have in mind that other unbending rule that when a statute is in plain conflict with the fundamental law “it is the duty of the courts to so adjudge, and thereby give effect to the constitution.”
We are living in a time of great political unrest. From one. direction comes the call that the government be restored to the people; from another comes the warning that constitutional government is imperiled; from all directions comes the demand, *391clamorous, persistent, and not always reasonable, for more and more drastic regulation of public service corporations. It is a time when legislative usurpations may be expected to be more frequent. It is a time for judges to be fearless, and courts to be firm. It is a time for that “recurrence to fundamental principles” which is “necessary to preserve the blessings of liberty, and keep government free.”
I am authorized to say that Watson, J., concurs in this dissent.