State ex rel. Drake v. Doyle

40 Wis. 175
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 40 Wis. 175 (State ex rel. Drake v. Doyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Drake v. Doyle, 40 Wis. 175 (Wis. 1876).

Opinion

Ryan, C. J.

The facts of this case were discussed at the [185]*185bar, on the motion to quash the alternative writ. But as some of them did not then appear of record, we refrained from any expression of opinion in overruling the motion. All the material facts are now before us for final adjudication.

It appears by the return that the license of the insurance company in force when these proceedings were commenced, expired by limitation pending the alternative writ; and that some three days after the motion to quash the alternative writ was denied, the respondent renewed the license .for another year. His doing so, under the circumstances, may have been an act of questionable propriety. But the fact itself is immaterial here, because it was agreed by counsel, if it were otherwise doubtful, that if a peremptory writ should be granted, it should cover any subsisting license issued by the respondent to the insurance company.

The motion to quash the alternative writ was argued for the respondent by the attorney general. The demurrer to the return was argued for the respondent by the learned counsel who represented the insurance company in the federal court, and a brief was afterwards submitted on his behalf by the attorney general. Different questions were raised for the respondent by the different counsel, which will be considered in proper order.

I. It was stated by the attorney general that the suit of the relator against the insurance company had been settled; that the relator has no further interest in the question, and therefore no further right to the writ. The fact does not appear of record, but it is immaterial.

So far as the private right of the relator is concerned, it is now well settled that this court would not assume original jurisdiction to enforce it. Attorney General v. Railroad Cos., 35 Wis., 425; Attorney General v. Eau Claire, 37 id., 400; State v. Baker, 38 id., 71; State v. Supervisors, id., 554. But, as it is said in Attorney General v. Railroad Cos., “ In a government like ours, 'public rights of the state and private [186]*186rights of citizens often meet, and may well be involved in a single litigation. So it may be in the exercise of the original jurisdiction of the court.” “ The prerogative writs can issue only at the suit of the state or the. attorney general in the right of the state.” They may go on the relation of a private person, and may involve private right.” And the question before us is not upon the private right of the relator, and is independent of the accident that there is a relator in the case. The question on which the exercise of jurisdiction here must turn, is, whether the subject matter of the writ is one quod ad statum reipubliece jvertinet one affecting the sovereignty of the state, its franchises or prerogatives.” Attorney General v. Eau Claire. And on this question there appears to us to be no room for doubt.

Save by the voluntary license of the state, the insurance company has no right to carry on its business within the state. The state sees fit to grant a license to it, upon condition; instantly revocable, upon condition broken. The insurance company breaks the condition; but claims the right, notwithstanding, to act under the license throughout the state; claims that the condition is void, and that the license is therefore independent of the condition on which it was granted. And it assumes to carry on its business throughout the state, under the license, in defiance of the condition. Here is very plainly a direct and proximate interest of the state affecting the state at large, in some of its prerogatives, and raising “ a contingency requiring the interposition of this court to preserve the prerogatives of the state, in its sovereign character.” Attorney General v. Eau Claire.

The statute of the state devolves upon the respondent the imperative duty of revoking the license of the insurance company, upon condition broken, and prohibits a renewal of the license for three years. The respondent claims that the statute so far is void, and wholly disregards it. Upon condition broken, he refuses to revoke the subsisting license of the in[187]*187surance company, and, upon its expiration, renews it. "Whether the respondent he right or wrong in his view, and that is for this court and not for him to determine, it is very certain that it concerns the state at large, that one of its principal officers executes his office in positive and deliberate disregard of a public statute defining its duties.

Such a case, when presented, is one eminently calling for the exercise of our original jurisdiction; one, with or without a relator, eminently fit to be presented to the court for adjudication. The writ of mandamus, in such a case, eminently serves its function as a prerogative writ.

II. It was objected to the statute, by the learned counsel who argued the demurrer, that it provides for no notice to the insurance company, gives it no opportunity of being heard on the question of revocation for condition broken. It might have been more provident to have required such notice; but that rested entirely in legislative discretion. It was for the legislature alone to say whether or not the insurance company should have license to act within the state; and if so, on what conditions, and how revocable, such license should be granted. Authorizing such a license, out of its mere discretion, it was competent for the legislature to impose any conditions, reasonable or unreasonable, and' to provide for revocation, upon any cause or no cause, in any manner it might see fit.

It was for the insurance company to elect whether it would seek or accept the license authorized, on the very terms on which it was offered, at its own peril of the very power of revocation reserved. And, having elected to accept the license, it cannot now set up a vested right in the license, inconsistent with the license and in defiance of the terms and conditions on which it was granted. It voluntarily ran the very risk of summary revocation, exporte, to which it now objects. It took the license eum onere, and has no just ground of complaint that the license is not more favorable to its interests.

"We have carefully examined the numerous authorities cited [188]*188oa this point, and are unable to discover the application of any of them to the revocation of a voluntary license, in the precise manner reserved in the license itself.

III. It was likewise urged that the duty of revocation imposed upon the secretary of state, operates to confer judicial power on that officer.

We cannot think that either the power to grant a license or the power to revoke it involves the exercise of a judicial function. Both appear to us to he plainly and equally ministerial functions. The secretary, upon certain facts appearing to him, is authorized to issue a license; ujion certain other facts appearing to him, is required to revoke it. This is a common condition of ministerial duty. In such a case, the ministerial officer must exercise his personal intelligence in ascertaining the fact, upon which his authority is founded; but he acts upon his peril of the fact, and can in no sense be said to exercise a judicial function. If the use of personal judgment in such cases should be held to be judicial, the distinction between ministerial and judicial functions would be very much removed.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Wis. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-drake-v-doyle-wis-1876.