Griffith v. Commissioners of Crawford County

20 Ohio St. 1
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 Ohio St. 1 (Griffith v. Commissioners of Crawford County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Commissioners of Crawford County, 20 Ohio St. 1 (Ohio 1851).

Opinion

Hitchcock, C. J.

Although present in court during the argument of these cases, still, having been necessarily absent when the question of jurisdiction, the only question which seems to have been considered, was settled, I do not consider myself responsible for the decision made. With that decision, however, 1 have no disposition to complain. Had the judge delivering the opinion, satisfied himself with stating the point decided, and the reasons which induced the court to come to the conclusion at which it arrived, I should have remained silent. But since that judge has gone beyond this, and has expressed his individual opinion upon the main question involved in these cases, it seems to me to be an incumbent duty to examine that question, and to express my own views upon it.

[542]*542The question is simply this: whether the laws of the state authorizing the commissioners of a county, with the assent of a ^majority of the electors of the county, to subscribe stock to a railroad company, incorporated for the purpose of aiding in the construction of a railroad, which shall pass through the county, are constitutional. Every question of this character is of the first importance; as its solution may depend upon the exercise'of power by one department of the government over another. But in the present cases, it is of much more than ordinary importance. The railroads in the state which have been already constructed, have been in part constructed by the aid of city and county subscriptions. To secure the payment of this stock, so subscribed, bonds have been executed; and these bonds have been sold in the market, for the purpose of raising means to carry on the work. They are now in the hands of bona fide holders, who have received them, in part at least, upon the faith of the incorporated bodies by whom they were issued.

Other roads-are in the course of construction; and the means by which they are being constructed, have been derived from a similar source. To hold that the laws under which these bonds were executed, are unconstitutional, is to hold that the bonds themselves are’ void; and the bona fide holders will be compelled to lose the many millions which they have advanced 'upon them, In addition to this, if these laws are held to be unconstitutional, an entire stop will be put to works of this character. For many years to come railroad improvements must cease in this state. Not only so, but' if the judge is correct in his obiter dictum opinion, the roads already constructed may be destroyed. Notwithstanding all this, however, if those laws are unconstitutional, clearly so, the duty of the court is obvious—it must refuse to enforce them. But no court will, where such consequences are to result, act hastily, nor without the most serious deliberation.

The power of a court, in a proper case, to declare a legislative enactment unconstitutional, does not, at the present day, seem to bo seriously doubted. In this particular, a great change has come over the jmblie mind, since the adoption of constitutional forms of government in these United States; and especially *so in this state, since the adoption of our constitution of 1802. In the early history of this country, it will be seen that the right of judicial tribunals to exercise this power was strongly contested by some of [543]*543our most able men. In the front rank of these stood Mr. Jefferson, whose opinions have been more respected, by a portion of the community, than the opinions of any other man who has occupied a public station in the country. He uniformly denied the right of any court to decide upon the constitutionality of laws, and held, that in the exorcise of such power, a court was guilty of judicial usurpation. In his opinion, the power to correct irnconstitutional as well as injudicious legislation rested alone with-the people; and the power was to be exercised through the ballot-box.

Such was the opinion entertained by a majority of the public men of this state, at the time of, and soon after the adoption of our own constitution. The journals of the general assembly show, that one judge of the Supreme Court, and one president judge of the court of common pleas, were impeached for the exercise of this power. True, they were not found guilty by the high court of impeachment, the constitution requiring the concurring vote of two-thirds of the members of that court to convict; and in each case the vote was one less than this constitutional majority.

As before remarked, however, this power seems now very generally conceded to .the courts; and I can not well see how it could be otherwise. The constitution is the paramount law of the state. This instrument the judges of the court, as well as the other officers of the government, are sworn to maintain and defend. In it the powers of the several branches of the government are well defined. If the general assembly, in the exercise of its legislative power, transcend the limits prescribed for it, such an enactment is not a law, and no court can, consistently with the oath imposed upon its members, enforce it as law.

But although this power exists in the courts, it should be exercised with extreme caution. Before a court can be ^justified in disregarding a legislative enactment, on- the ground that it conflicts with the constitution, such conflict must be evident, clear, unmistakable. It must be in opposition both to the letter and spirit of the instrument. If, after full examination, any doubt exists, the enactment must be enforced. If error occurs in the determination of a question of this character, it is far better the error should be committed in sustaining the legislative enactment, than in refusing to enforce it. It is no light or trivial thing for a court to disregard a legislative act, on constitutional grounds. Such hitherto has been the principle by which the courts of the country have been. [544]*544governed; and when they shall depart from it, well may they be denominated, in the language of Mr. Jefferson, “sappers and miners of the constitution.”

At the February term of the Supreme Court of the United States, 1796, in the case of Hylton v. The United States, 3 Dallas, 171, a question was raised as to the constitutionality of a law of Congress of Juno 5, 1794, laying “ a tax on carriages for the conveyance of persons, kept for the use of the owner.” The court held the law to be constitutional. Judge Chase, in delivering his opinion, uses this language: “As I do not think the tax on carriages is a direct tax, it is unnecessary for me to determine, at this time, whether this court constitutionally possesses the power to declare an act of Congress void, on the ground of its being made contrary to, and in violation of the constitution; but if the court have such power, I am free to declare that 1 will never exercise it but in a very clear case.”

At the February term of the same court, 1800, in the case of Cooper v. Telfair, 4 Dallas, 14, the constitutionality of a law of Georgia was drawn in question. In commenting upon the subject, Justice Washington says: “ The presumption must always be in favor of the validity of laws, if the contrary is not clearly demonstrated."

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Bluebook (online)
20 Ohio St. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-commissioners-of-crawford-county-ohio-1851.