State ex rel. Husting v. Board of State Canvassers

150 N.W. 542, 159 Wis. 216, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 399
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 150 N.W. 542 (State ex rel. Husting v. Board of State Canvassers) 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. Husting v. Board of State Canvassers, 150 N.W. 542, 159 Wis. 216, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 399 (Wis. 1914).

Opinions

The following opinions were filed January 12, 1914:

Conformable to the purpose as aforesaid of following at a later time the decision by an opinion covering the questions involved in the cause and discussed by counsel in submitting it, this has been agreed to so far as stated impersonally:

Maeshall, J.

Upon the court in this cause devolved the duty of determining the legislative intent, if possible, with any reasonable degree of certainty, embodied in ch. 328, Laws ■of 1911 (sec. 86, Stats.), and if that should be accomplished, perhaps, to determine to what extent the enactment is -constitutional and how it applies to the facts required to be dealt with in the particular case, and if that should not be accomplished, to adjudge the act void for insolvable indefiniteness.

The field of duty suggested is the very highest and the most •onerous,incident to the supreme judicial function. While it requires a superlative degree of respect for the lawmaking power, it calls for a correlative degree of appreciation of the trust reposed here in respect to the matter, and of industry and courage to fully discharge it, regardless of the wishes of immediate parties to the litigation, or of any person or number of persons, and regardless of consequences to the personal [224]*224instrumentalities bere. Tbe individual is bere today, tomorrow, comparatively speaking, another is in bis place; but tbe court lives on in its great impersonality, vindicating tbe wisdom wbicb founded our system of government according as tbe design of it shall be appreciated and those who give it vitality come up to tbe ideal standard contemplated by tbe designers. No other attempt at a popular system has been enduring because no other system has bad within itself tbe means, without violence, of remedying every defect wbicb time and experience might develop or changed conditions re quire. There is no element in our system so vital to its efficiency for insuring to tbe people continued and full possession of their rights, as the independent division of tbe whole, vitalized by instrumentalities selected by tbe people, and answerable for tbe fidelity with which they perform their solemn obligation, only to tbe people. Tbe restiveness sometimes observed, even in tbe learned profession of law, and often outside of it, because of tbe exercise of this particular function so as to produce results contrary to individual or factional, and sometimes popular notions, is rather evidence of defective conception of “that fundamental instrument under wbicb all enjoy all tbe rights most dear to freemen, and to tbe support of wbicb we are bound by tbe most solemn obligations wbicb can possibly be imposed upon members of a social political organization,” than of usurpation or faulty administration.

Perhaps it takes long judicial experience to appreciate bow very important it is to have an independent authority to determine from the mass of things coming from legislative activity, what is legitimate and what is not, what is understandable and what is not, and what fits into existing law so as to be capable of being administered, and what does not. In this mass of things there are bound to be omissions, ambiguities, inconsistencies, contradictions within and between tbe within and tbe without, and sometimes violations of fundamental law. It was from that viewpoint that tbe power to’ [225]*225do wbat we are called upon to do in this case, was created and lodged here. The necessity for activity of that power has grown very much in recent years, as the apparent and real necessity for regulation of things has been vitalized by a rapidly increasing mass of legislation, and perhaps by methods which have been very deterrent of individual study of enactments by those responsible for their appearing upon the statute books.

The field of the judicial function in dealing with such a law as we have before us, is closely fenced about. The court, while firmly maintaining its own function, must not pass beyond into the domain of legislative power. Eor the purpose of getting the sense out of an enactment, which the legislature purposed putting into it, not substituting some different sense therefor, or putting sense into the enactment where none can be evolved from it, words may be transferred, or rejected as surplusage, or given a very restrictive or comprehensive meaning, according to the evident intent, or supplied where manifestly in place by necessary or reasonable implication, and other liberties may be taken with an enactment, where necessary to solve uncertainty, so long as the effort goes no further than to reasonably read out of the legislative language that which was intended to be placed therein, and was discoverably so placed. But after exhausting all reasonable efforts to. that end, if the discovered sense violates constitutional restrictions, the court must put its stamp of disapproval on it. It has no discretion in the matter.

If the law, given effect in its letter, would lead to consequences absurd or so unreasonable that by no fair probability was it so intended, yet a meaning from another viewpoint can be seen in the language which would avoid such consequences, and may probably have been intended, that should be adopted. But if some parts of an act are bad, fundamentally, or otherwise incapable of execution, yet such parts were not so far the inducement to the entirety that the legislature would probably not have enacted the balance by itself, [226]*226then the residue is to be approved and the invalid or fatally indefinite or contradictory parts condemned. If the enactment is so uncertain that the court is unable to determine, with any reasonable degree of certainty, what the legislature intended, or it is so incomplete that it cannot he executed, there is no other course open hut to condemn it as void for uncertainty, as this court has done on other occasions, and other courts have done so often that the duty in that regard has become a matter of unwritten law. Norton v. Reed, 6 Wis. 522; State v. Wentler, 76 Wis. 89, 44 N. W. 841, 45 N. W. 816; Lewis’s Sutherland, Stat. Constr. (2d ed.) § 86 and cases cited. As well said in State ex rel. Crow v. West Side St. R. Co. 146 Mo. 155, 47 S. W. 959:

“An act of the legislature, to be enforceable as a law, must prescribe a rule of action, and such rule must be intelligibly expressed. ... It is manifest that an act of the legislative department cannot he enforced when its meaning cánnot be determined by any known rules of construction. The courts cannot venture upon the dangerous path of judicial legislation to supply omissions, or remedy defects in matters committed to a co-ordinate branch of the government. It is far better to wait for necessary corrections by those authorized to make them, or, in fact, for them to remain unmade, however desirable they may be, than for judicial tribunals to transcend the just limits of their constitutional powers.”

We may well state here a few familiar rules governing the subject of interpretation and construction of statutes. They are a part of the unwritten, and as binding on courts as written, law.

(1) A statute is not to be viewed as if it were o-pen to construction as matter of course. That is the first and primary rule for judicial guidance. It has been most commonly phrased as by Vattel (Law of Nations, book 2, § 263) :

“It is not allowable to interpret what has no need of interpretation. . . . When the meaning is evident and leads to no absurd conclusion, there can be no reason for refusing to

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.W. 542, 159 Wis. 216, 1914 Wisc. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-husting-v-board-of-state-canvassers-wis-1914.