Hanley v. Wetmore

6 A. 777, 15 R.I. 386, 1886 R.I. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 4, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 6 A. 777 (Hanley v. Wetmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanley v. Wetmore, 6 A. 777, 15 R.I. 386, 1886 R.I. LEXIS 47 (R.I. 1886).

Opinion

Dureee, C. J.

The principal object of this suit is to have the court make a decree declaring that the proposition of amendment to the Constitution of the State, denominated the fifth amendment, which was recently voted upon, has not become an amendment to the Constitution, because it was not submitted to be voted upon in the manner prescribed by the Constitution, and because, among the votes cast for or against its adoption, 4,200 were received from persons who were not qualified to vote, being registry voters whose taxes had been paid by others, and without their votes it did not receive the requisite three fifths majority. The amendment declares that “ the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors to be used as a beverage shall be prohibited,” and that “ the General Assembly shall provide by law for carrying the amendment into effect.” The suit is brought by James Hanley, Rowland L. Rose, Thomas Grimes, Samuel A. Wesson, and Nicholas Molter, who describe themselves as “ of the city and county of Providence, in the State of Rhode Island, and all citizens of the United States and of the State of Rhode Island, and qualified electors in said city,” and who allege that “ they and each of them are, and have been for the ten years last past, legally engaged in the business of selling malt, spirituous, and intoxicating liquors for a beverage in this State, under and by authority of licenses granted to them in pursuance of the laws of this State, and are the owners of property of great value acquired in the lawful pursuit of said business, the value and use of which is greatly depreciated and injured by the amendment, ... if the same has been legally adopted.” The suit is brought against “ George P. Wetmore, of the city and county of Newport, in said State of Rhode Island, individually and as governor of said State ; Joshua M. Addeman, of the city and county of Providence, in said State, individually and as secretary of state of said State; and Samuel P. Colt, of the town and county of Bristol, in said State, individually and as attorney general of said State.” The bill, in addition to the declaratory decree aforesaid, asks for discovery. The defendants demur, raising two questions, or sets of questions, namely, first, whether the bill states a case which is of equitable cognizance or jurisdiction; and if so, second, whether it states a case which entitles the complainants to the discovery and decree *388 prayed for. By our direction the case has been argued only on the question of jurisdiction, and that question only is before us for decision.

In support of the demurrer for want of jurisdiction, the defendants contend that the court has no right to entertain the suit, first, because the question whether the amendment has been duly adopted is not a judicial question to be decided by the court, but a political question to be decided by, or as provided by, the General Assembly, and has been so decided, the decision having been proclaimed a few days after this suit was instituted ; and, second, because the bill does not show that the defendants have any such interest in, or relation to, the subject-matter of the suit as entitles the complainants to call upon them to answer or defend it. The second point comes up the more properly for adjudication first, for it would be useless for us to decide that the question involved is judicial if, after so deciding, we could go no further for want of proper parties.

The suit, as we have seen, is brought against the defendants both as individuals and as state officers. It asks for discovery and a declaratory decree. The complainants, however, do not show any ground for discovery unless they are entitled to the decree ; for they do not ask for it in aid of any suit at law, and moreover, if the defendants are not proper parties for the reasons alleged, then they are mere witnesses, and it is well settled that a suit for discovery does'not lie against mere witnesses. Story’s Eq. Juris. §§ 74, 1499 ; Pomeroy’s Eq. Juris. § 119. The only question, then, is, Are the complainants entitled to the declaratory decree ? for, if they are, there is no dispute but that they are entitled to discovery. Our statute, Pub. Stat. R. I. cap. 192, § 22, provides that “ No suit in equity shall be defeated on the ground that a mere declaratory decree is sought, and the court may make binding declarations of right in equity without granting consequential relief.” The provision is copied from an English statute, and in England it has been decided that it enlarges the jurisdiction only so far as to .enable the court to make declaratory decrees in cases where remedial decrees would be proper if asked for. Daniell’s Chan. Plead. & Prac. 1001, note, 2181, note ; Rooke v. Lord Kensington, 2 Kay & J. 753, 760. We know of no reason why our act should be *389 more broadly construed. At the most, our act cannot be held to authorize a declaratory decree in any suit, unless a case is stated in the bill which shows a right to actual relief, either immediate or prospective, against the defendants. The English construction is that the right must be immediate. We do not say that this construction is too narrow; but for this case we grant the broadest construction which, it seems to us, can be seriously contended for.

Does the bill show any relation existing between the parties which entitles, or which can ever entitle, the complainants to relief in equity against the defendants as individuals? We cannot discover that it does. For anything that appears, the complainants have no right or claim, at law or in equity, which they could ever enforce against the defendants, as individuals, if we were to declare that the amendment has not been adopted. For anything that appears, the defendants, as individuals, have no right or claim which they could ever enforce against the complainants, if we were to declare the amendment duly adopted. The decree, therefore, if we were to make it, would be utterly nugatory. It would not bind the parties, for the parties do not hold any relation to each other by virtue of which it can apply between them. It would not bind anybody but the parties ; for, the suit being between the parties as individuals, it is elementary law, that nobody but parties and privies can be bound by it. It would be decree in the air, a mere opinion or obiter dictum, obligatory upon nobody. If the suit be a suit against the defendants as individuals, the defendants might consent to the decree which is asked for, and it would neither do them any harm or the complainants any good. It would be brutum fulmén. Of course the court will not make such a decree.

Does this bill show any relation between the parties such as does or ever can entitle the complainants to relief against the defendants as state officers ? No such relation is averred, and none such occurs to us which we can take judicial nqtice of. It is true the Constitution makes it the duty of the governor to “ take care that the laws be faithfully executed; ” but the governor in performing this duty has no arbitrary power, but must himself proceed according to law. He could not, upon his own finding *390 that buildings belonging to the complainants are used for the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors for a beverage, proceed to shut them up or destroy them, or to destroy the liquors in them.

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Bluebook (online)
6 A. 777, 15 R.I. 386, 1886 R.I. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanley-v-wetmore-ri-1886.