State ex rel. Smyth v. Kennedy

83 N.W. 87, 60 Neb. 300, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 153
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1900
DocketNo. 11,226
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 83 N.W. 87 (State ex rel. Smyth v. Kennedy) 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
State ex rel. Smyth v. Kennedy, 83 N.W. 87, 60 Neb. 300, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 153 (Neb. 1900).

Opinions

Sullivan, J.

This action was evidently instituted to secure a decision [303]*303overruling the case of State v. Moores, 55 Nebr., 480. The Moores (Jase lays down the doctrine that whatever the court may conceive to be the spirit of the constitution is to be regarded as part of the paramount law. While the decision, by recognizing and enforcing the asserted right of local self-government, is conceded to rest upon a sound political principle, it was rendered by a divided bench and, as a judicial pronouncement, has been much criticised. If it is to be acquiesced in and accepted as a rule of construction, the constitution of the state is to be fully known, only, by studying the theories of the judges who are chosen to expound it; it will expand or contract with every fluctuation of the popular will which produces a change in the personnel of the court; and the limitations upon legislative* power will be as unknown and unknowable as were the rules of equity in the days when the chancellor’s conscience was the law of the land. It is the opinion of the writer that the decision is thoroughly vicious; that it strikes a lethal blow at a coordinate branch of the government and ought to be repudiated and condemned'. But since the members of the court who participate in this decision are not in accord upon the question of constitutional law here involved, further discussion of that question is unnecessary, and would be unprofitable. There is another point in the case upon which we are agreed and which is decisive of the controversy. The judgment must be in favor of the respondents whether the ordinance under which they claim is valid or. void.

Briefly stated, the facts in the case of State v. Moores were these: Acting under the provisions of sections 166 and 167 of chapter 12a, Compiled Statutes of 1897, which conferred, or assumed to confer, upon him authority to appoint fire and police commissioners for cities of the metropolitan class, Governor Holcomb appointed James H. Peabody, D. D. Gregory, William C. Bullard and R. E. L. Herdman as fire and police commissioners for the city of Omaha. The persons so appointed duly qualified [304]*304and entered at once upon the discharge of their official duties. Afterwards there was filed in this court by the state, on the relation of the attorney general, an application for a writ of quo warranto against the governor’s appointees, the purpose of the action being to obtain an adjudication upon the validity of the sections of the statute under which they had been commissioned. While this action was pending the mayor and council of Omaha provided by ordinance for a board of fire and police commissioners and appointed respondents herein, Matthew II. Collins and Victor H. Coffman, together with two other persons, namely, Peter W. Birkhauser and Charles J. Karbach, to act as members of such board. The persons so appointed by the city authorities intervened in the a.ction and asserted their claims. They contended that the ordinance under which they had been commissioned was valid, and that the statute under which Peabody, Gregory, Bullard and Herdman had been appointed was void. The cause was regularly submitted for decision, and the court, upon due consideration, decided that the ordinance was válid and that sections 166 and 167 of the city charter, so far as they assumed to confer upon the governor authority to appoint fire and police commissioners, were contrary to the scope and purpose of the constitution and, therefore, void. By the judgment rendered the appointees of the governor were declared to be intruders and were ousted from the offices which they held, and the appointees of the mayor and council were installed in their places. This judgment was executed, and it is still in force. The case now before us was commenced during the present term of the court. It also is an information in the nature of a quo warranto, whereby the state, on the relation of the attorney general, demands of the respondents, who are members of the board of fire and police commissioners of Omaha, holding under the authority of the mayor and council, an exhibition of the authority under which they are assuming to act. After the cause was pending, Gov[305]*305ernor Poynter, acting on the assumption that sections 166 and 167, aforesaid, are not in any respect violative of the supreme law, appointed James H. Peabody, William J. Broatch, Harry C. Miller and John J. O’Connor as members of the board of fire and police commissioners for the city of Omaha. Those persons have intervened in the action and filed a pleading in which they assert their claims to the offices held by the respondents. So it appears that we are again called upon to adjudicate between the appointees of the governor and the appointees of the mayor and council the identical matters which were adjudicated in the first case.

One of the defenses interposed by the respondents is that the judgment in the Moores Case, whether right or wrong, is binding and conclusive upon the parties to this litigation. Counsel for the interveners, on the other hand, contend that while the doctrine of res adjudícala applies to ordinary suitors, it has no application to a sovereign state. The question thus raised is an important one and we have given it careful consideration, reaching the conclusion, after much reflection and thorough investigation of the authorities, that when a state invokes the judgment of a court for any purpose, it lays its sovereignty aside and consents to be bound by the decision, whether such decision be favorable or adverse. While the state as a political community is not obliged to submit to the jurisdiction of its own courts, it ought, in reason and justice, to be bound whenever it voluntarily appears in court and without reservation submits a matter in controversy for adjudication. The courts possess a portion of the sovereign power; they have authority to decide between litigants; and authority to decide implies, always, power to make their judgments effective. It is said by Mr. Justice White in New Orleans v. Citizens Banh, 167 U. S., 371, 399, that “the very essence of judicial power is- that when a matter is once ascertained and determined it is forever concluded when it arises again under the same circumstances and conditions [306]*306between parties or their privies.” It is claimed by counsel for the interveners that there is a distinction between the effect of a judgment for or against a state, when appearing as a suitor in its corporate capacity, and the effect of a judgment upon a matter pertaining to its sovereignty. The authorities, excepting perhaps State v. Cincinnati Gas Light & Coke Co., 18 Ohio St., 262, give no ■countenance to the claim. In 7 Comyns’ Digest, title “Quo Warranto,” 201, it is said: “The judgment in quo warranto is final; for it is in the nature of a writ of right. And, therefore, if judgment be .against the king, the king shall be forever bound as to the thing adjudged.” In 3 Blackstone’s Commentaries, p. 263, the author says : “The judgment on a writ of quo warranto (being in the nature of a writ of right) is final and conclusive, even against the crown.” “And such substantially,” said Lewis, P., in Shumate v. Fauquier County, 84 Va., 574, “is the effect of a judgment in the more modern proceeding by information in the nature of a quo warranto.” In McClesky v. State, 4 Tex. Civ. App., 322, 23 S. W. Rep., 518, which was a proceeding by information in the nature of a quo warranto to dissolve the incorporation of a town, it was held that a former judgment in favor of the respondents in a similar proceeding was, under the doctrine of

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Bluebook (online)
83 N.W. 87, 60 Neb. 300, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-smyth-v-kennedy-neb-1900.