McGovern v. Mitchell

63 A. 433, 78 Conn. 536, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 83
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 7, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 63 A. 433 (McGovern v. Mitchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGovern v. Mitchell, 63 A. 433, 78 Conn. 536, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 83 (Colo. 1906).

Opinion

Hamersley, J.

In 1818 the people of Connecticut first enacted a “ Constitution, and form of civil government ” for this State. In the first Article they established certain maxims and limitations of power as fundamental to the exercise of power by each department of government. In Article Second they divided the powers of government into three distinct departments and confided each to a separate magistracy, to wit: the legislative to one, the executive to another, and the judicial to another. In Article Third they established a body politic styled “The General Assembly.” This body was composed of two distinct houses or branches, and was empowered, both by express provision and necessary implication, to exercise by joint action of both houses and separate action of each house the powers necessary to the existence of such a body politic and to the transaction of its appropriate business. They vested in the two distinct houses of this body, convened in General Assembly, “ the legislative power of this State,” and prescribed the forms *546 arid proceedings by which this legislative power should be exercised in-the enactment of laws. In Article Fourth they vested “the supreme executive power of the State” in a governor, and established other officers named for the exercise of other executive .power, and prescribed the term of office, -mode of appointment and essential duties of all these officers. In Article Fifth they established two courts, a Supreme Court of Errors, and a Superior Court. Each court was composed of members or judges who exercised jointly or separately the power of the court. They vested “ the judicial power of the State ” in these two courts thus coin-posed, and in such inferior courts as the General Assembly might from time to time establish. These five articles contain the simple framework of our Constitution, which is not essentially affected by the remaining articles. Article Sixth relates to the qualifications of electors. Article Seventh severs the connection between church and state which under the charter government to some extent existed. Article Eighth confirms the charter of Yale College and makes perpetual the existing school fund. Article Ninth provides for impeachments and defines treason. Article Tenth provides a form of oath for members of the General Assembly and executive and judicial officers; an annual election of selectmen and members of local police in each town; defines the effect of the Constitution upon existing rights, duties, obligations and officers ; and forbids the constitutional executive and judicial officers, members of Congress, and United States officers, to be members of the General Assembly. As the constitutional executive and judicial officers could not be’ members of the General Assembly, except that the governor should take a part in its legislation and the lieutenant-governor should be presiding officer of the Senate, the duty of the legislature to establish by law a compensation for the constitutional officers of other departments was modified, as to the governor and lieutenant-governor, by the provision in Article Fourth preventing any law establishing compensation for the governor, lieutenant-governor, senators and representatives, from varying the compensations of the persons *547 who had taken part in its enactment. Article Eleventh provides for amendments to the Constitution.

In the establishment of three distinct departments of government the Constitution, by necessary implication, pre-1 scribes those limitations and imposes those duties which essential to the independence of each and to the performance; by each of the powers of which it is made the depositary. State v. Conlon, 65 Conn. 478, 488. The judges of the preme Court of Errors and the judges of the Superior Court, respectively, constitute those courts. The judges of each court in their joint or separate action exercise the power of that court; each, equally with every other, represents in his official action the judicial power of the State vested in the court of which he is a member. In view of the nature and extent of his duties, the Constitution, in imposing them upon him, secures to him by necessary implication an adequate maintenance, and imposes upon the legislative department the duty of establishing by law an adequate compensation. Unless this compensation were adequate, unless it were cer-J tain, unless it were uniform for each court, the independence of the judicial department would be necessarily impaired. A court, each of whose members depended for his livelihood, not upon a certain sum fixed by the legislative department in obedience to the Constitution, but upon occasional grants ; not upon a sum fixed for each member in view of the equal services required of all, but upon a sum fixed for him in view of the discriminating value which the legislature for the time being might attach to his services, cannot be the independent judicial department created for the special purpose, among others, of giving an independent judgment as to the validity of the acts of its co-ordinate departments.

A broad grant to one department of the entire power of legislation, limited by the duties imposed upon it to other departments of government, and by the maxims adopted in Article First as fundamental to government; a distinct executive department; and a distinct judicial department, the independence of its members guaranteed by their separate and direct commission from the enacting sovereignty, the *548 certainty of their tenure of office, and the duty laid upon the legislative department to provide for their independent maintenance by legislation, and by legislation alone, a certain, uniform, and adequate compensation,—these are the essential features of our Constitution, their clearness unclouded and their force unhampered by superfluous language or weakening detail. All subsequent amendments have aimed to leave these essential features untouched.^ Our people have persistently resisted every temptation to endanger by unnecessary detail the safe simplicity of these essential features, or to fetter the freedom of legislative action within the lines of granted power. The broad grants, limitations of power, and impositions of duties inherent in the establishment of distinct and co-ordinate departments for the administration of government, are possibly more effectual as to each included particular than a detailed specification. State v. Conlon, 65 Conn. 478, 488; Norwalk St. Ry. Co.'s Appeal, 69 id. 576, 586-598. Our Constitution, therefore, expresses as effectually as if framed in precise language, the following mandates : “ The legislature shall have power to enact laws for regulating the administration of government by public servants, and for establishing, increasing or decreasing their compensation as the exigencies of public service may require. The legislature shall not have power to enact laws encroaching upon functions exclusively vested in the Supreme Court of Errors and in the Superior Court, or destroying the in-j dependence of the members of these courts, and shall enact flaws establishing from time to time for all members of each jcourt a certain, uniform, and adequate compensation.”

The amount of the compensation to be paid to the judges each of these courts was left to be determined by such laws as the General Assembly might think proper to enact time to time.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A. 433, 78 Conn. 536, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgovern-v-mitchell-conn-1906.