Mathews v. Hedlund

119 N.W. 17, 82 Neb. 825, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 366
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1908
DocketNo. 15,350
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 119 N.W. 17 (Mathews v. Hedlund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathews v. Hedlund, 119 N.W. 17, 82 Neb. 825, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 366 (Neb. 1908).

Opinion

Root, C.

Appeal from a judgment of the district court for Lancaster county affirming the action of the state board of [827]*827health in revoking defendant’s license to practice medicine, surgery and obstetrics in Nebraska.

1. The state board of health has filed a motion to dismiss this case for want of jurisdiction of the court to review said order in error proceedings. The argument of counsel, although forceful and learned, urges no better reasons in favor of his client’s contention than were presented in Munk v. Frink, 75 Neb. 172, wherein the identical point was considered and decided against said board. We are asked to overrule Munk v. Frink, supra, for the alleged reasons that the board is not inferior in jurisdiction to the district court; that in said proceedings it exercises administrative functions only, and that its. orders may not be reviewed by petition in error. It is conceded by counsel, and doubtless it is the law, that the legislature may provide for a review in court of the orders of administrative boards. The organic act creating the territories of Nebraska and Kansas vested the judges of the district court with chancery and common law jurisdiction. Ann. St. 1907, sec. 211. The territorial legislature in 1855 adopted parts of the then Iowa code to regulate the procedure of courts in Nebraska. Section 545, p. 39, 1 Complete Session Laws of Nebraska, 1855-1865, provided that whenever specially authorized by law, and also' in all cases where an inferior tribunal or officer exercising judicial functions is alleged to have exceeded their proper jurisdiction, or is otherwise acting illegally, the writ of certiorari might issue. In 1858 the territorial legislature enacted a very comprehensive code of civil procedure and therein abolished writs of error and certiorari. Code, 1858, sec. 539. It is also provided in section 520 of said code that a judgment rendered or final order made by a county court, justice of the peace, or any other tribunal, board or officer, exercising judicial functions, and inferior in jurisdiction to the district court, might be reversed, vacated or modified by the district court. In the constitution of 1866, and that of 1875, the district courts were by the people given common law and chancery juris[828]*828diction, and the cited sections of the 1858 code were carried into and made part of our present code. In Traphagen v. Township of West Hoboken, 39 N. J. Law, 232, in an elaborate and well-reasoned opinion, it was held that the legislature could not deprive a court vested with common law jurisdiction of the power to review by certiorari the action of statutory tribunals, unless an adequate remedy was substituted. Section 901 of the code provides that, in case said code does not furnish a procedure for the enforcement or protection of a right, or the redress or prevention of a wrong, the practice theretofore in use might be adopted to prevent a failure of justice. This is a copy of section 619 of the code of 1858.

In commenting upon this legislation, Mr. Justice Norval, in Moline, Milburn & Stoddard Co. v. Curtis, 38 Neb. 520, 532, reasons that a case might arise in Nebraska wherein the writ of certiorari could be issued. We are not advised that a district court in Nebraska has ever issued such a writ and the reason for this inaction, we are of opinion, is that section 580 of the code has furnished a sufficient remedy. It seems plain from a consideration of the organic act, the constitution and the codes that the people did not purpose to cut down the right of review in the courts, but rather intended that, in all cases where at common law the action of a special or statutory tribunal or inferior court might be reviewed by certiorari or writ of error, the losing party might prosecute error to the district court. Out of an abundance of caution, and apprehensive that the courts might not receive and interpret the code in the liberal spirit in which it was conceived, section 901, supra, was enacted. Recourse has not been necessary to the old common law remedy because the courts of Nebraska have accepted the spirit as well as the letter of the code. Under section 580, supra, the orders of a county board of equalization were reviewed by the district court, and later by us in Sioux City & P. R. Co. v. Washington County, 3 Neb. 30, 40. In Minkler v. State, 14 Neb. 181, the district court reviewed on error the ac[829]*829tion of a board of county commissioners in removing a surveyor for misfeasance in office. Like proceedings were had in Hopkins v. Scott, 38 Neb. 661, where a county treasurer had been removed from office by the county commissioners. In State v. Palmer, 18 Neb. 644, Mr. Justice Maxwell suggests that the order of a county superintendent changing the boundaries of a school district may be reviewed in the district court under section 580, supra. And in State v. Scott, 17 Neb. 686, we held that the action of the commissioner of public lands and buildings forfeiting the lease of school land for nonpayment of rent could be reviewed by error proceedings in the district court: In Ayres v. Moan, 34 Neb. 210, the orders of a board of county commissioners overruling a remonstrance, and calling a special election to locate a county seat, were reviewed by the district court under section 580, supra. It will therefore be observed that the personnel of the board is not a test of the jurisdiction of the courts to review the orders made, hut rather the nature of the power exercised by that board. In the instant case the legislature selected three state officers and vested them with power to subpoena and examine witnesses, to take depositions according to the code, and to determine certain facts. While sitting as that special board, their functions approximate the judicial, and they are as well within the scope of section 580 of the code as were any of the officers referred to in the Nebraska cases cited, supra. The legislature has convened many times since the decision in Sioux City & P. R. Co. v. Washington County, supra, and it has not expressed its disapproval of our construction of section 580 of the code. Rather it will be noticed that, at the first session of the legislature subsequent to our decision in Hopkins v. Scott, supra, that neither a board of supervisors nor its presiding officer had authority to settle and allow a bill of exceptions, section 331 of the code was so amended as to authorize the presiding officer of any board to settle and allow such a bill. Thereby it seems to us the legislature [830]*830clearly indicated that in its judgment the courts had not exceeded their jurisdiction in the many and diverse proceedings reviewed by them under section 580, supra. We are safe in concluding that the legislative, branch of the government does not agree with counsel that the courts have usurped power in extending their jurisdiction to cases like the one at bar.

It is urged that one cannot have a property right in a license to practice- medicine; that, it is within the police power to name the conditions upon which such a permit shall issue and may be enjoyed, and that the holder thereof takes the privilege with the condition annexed that his license may be revoked at any time by the power that gave it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 N.W. 17, 82 Neb. 825, 1908 Neb. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathews-v-hedlund-neb-1908.