Superx Drugs Corp. v. State Board of Pharmacy

125 N.W.2d 13, 372 Mich. 22, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 264
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1963
DocketCalendar 32, Docket 50,087
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 125 N.W.2d 13 (Superx Drugs Corp. v. State Board of Pharmacy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Superx Drugs Corp. v. State Board of Pharmacy, 125 N.W.2d 13, 372 Mich. 22, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 264 (Mich. 1963).

Opinions

Black, J.

(dissenting). Executive as well as legislative attempts to interfere with, trespass' upon, or even coerce the judicial department are nothing new in the history of tripartite government. On account thereof the judiciary, sworn as it is to uphold and maintain the constitutionally requisite prerogatives of each department, has on historic occasion been compelled to meet head-on all such attempted invasions-and, doubtless, will be so compelled as long as three-divisional government endures. - This case, regrettably, confronts us with just such an occasion.

During President Jefferson’s administration congress “actually closed down the supreme court for a year.” 1 Later on President Jackson “commented,’'’ upon one of the court’s decisions: “Well, John Marshall has made his decision; -now let him enforce it.” 2 And Jefferson continued unto death his effort to subordinate the court to the other constitutionally coequal departments. In that oft-quoted Jarvis letter Jefferson wrote: “Our judges are as honest [24]*24as other men, and not more so. They have, with others, the same passions for party, for power, and the privilege of their corps. Their maxim is ‘Boni judiéis est ampliare jurisdictionem’, and their power [is] the more dangerous as they are in office for life, and not responsible, as the other functionaries are, to the elective control.” And in another letter Jefferson characterized the opinions of the court this way:4

“An opinion is huddled up in conclave, perhaps by a majority of one, delivered as if unanimous, and with the silent acquiescence. of lazy or timid associates, by a crafty chief judge, who sophisticates the law to his mind, by the turn of his own reasoning.”

President Roosevelt’s unprecedented court-packing bill of 1937, and the modern drumfire of attacks upon the supreme court in and out of congress,5 have proved again and again that the judiciary must defend — sternly and promptly — its separational independence. That it has done so is both history and good for a country which reveres and prospers under a system of departmental separation, the case-hardened core of which is that each of the constitutional divisions must be kept completely independent of the others, so that the acts of each shall not be controlled by, or subjected to, directly or indirectly, the coercive influence of either of the others.

This Court, too, on 1 notable occasion where the essayed opening wedge was small but the principle great, did not hesitate (even in the absence of a pending action or proceeding) to advise the executive and legislative departments that it would countenance no trespass upon or interference with the [25]*25judicial power, by sucb other departments. See “Letter from the Judges to the Governor,” dated and signed in our courtroom April 12, 1881, by Michigan’s nationally distinguished Justices Cooley, Campbell, Marston, and Graves (Matter of Head Notes, 43 Mich at 641).6 And see Dearborn Township v. Dearborn Township Clerk, 334 Mich 673, 682, where, relying principally on Justice Cooley’s opinion of People, ex rel. Sutherland, v. Governor, 29 Mich 320 (18 Am Rep 89), the seated Court declared unanimously that “In many decisions this Court has upheld and jealously guarded the right to keep distinctly separate one department from another.” Such guardianship is due from this Court —now.

We cannot blink the sordid fact that this has become a “political” case. It was made so last March by successive partisan intrusions, each gratuitous and wholly unwarranted, first by a Republican governor and then by a retorting Democratic State chairman, Mr. Ferency; all while the Court awaited due pleadings and orderly submission of the case. Now that a decision is due, we may no longer ignore such intrusions lest more of the same are encouraged by that silence which, in matters political, seems always to be taken as cowed submission or, worse, total indifference. Nor may any member of this Court pretend that he lives and works so far from the world of reality as to know nothing about the governor’s hosanna-heralded entry into this yet pending case, and nothing about Chairman Ferency’s immediate and equally indefensible counter-entry therein. It is true today, as formerly, that “Courts are not supposed to be blinded bats,” and that “What [26]*26■all know, the courts must judicially know.”7" There is a point, indeed, where judicial purblindness ends and judicial notice begins..

This ease is before us upon invocation of the Court’s original jurisdiction. No circuit judge ever could have decided it. Nor could any such judge adjudicate any issue the parties so far have presented by their pleadings and briefs. And no one, the governor included, was ever possessed of right — either in fact or law — to conclude that Judge Coleman’s special report to us, a report supposedly made for our exclusive consideration and appraisal, might or could be regarded as a judicial decision or judgment of any kind. Such reports are sought by this Court solely for aid and explanation in original ■eases, and the right and duty to accept or reject them is committed solely to our determination. Let that sink in.

So when the governor, somehow advised of the content of Judge Coleman’s report prior to the very existence thereof being known to the Justices,8 proceeded in public print to attack the defendant drug director upon alleged strength of that report,, he opened and fully unleashed. Pandora’s' box of' politics upon this Court and upon a pending case with respect to which both he and Chairman.Ferency should have kept still until, by judgment entered here, the judicial function is brought to due end'. (At that time, of course, free speech and acid comment will become the right of everyone,, governors and political chairmen included.) .

And when the governor threatened in front page headlines to remove the defendant drug director, for grounds allegedly found in Judge Coleman’s re[27]*27port, lie erred in another direction, this time in grievous fact. That report, as we find upon careful scrutiny thereof, provides no ground for. judicial animadversion against the drug director distinguished from the defendant .State hoard of pharmacy. Nor did Judge Coleman hint any such reproach against or censure of the director. The fact is that the director has no right to vote upon any matter which the statute commits to the hoard for administrative decision, and this record - discloses conclusively that the director acted only in accordance with instructions of his own superintendent, that is, the defendant board. Hence, if judicially cognizable error was committed- by anyone, against this plaintiff in the course of these -administrative proceedings, the error was that of the board; not the director.

It is not amiss -at this juncture to observe that the governor did himself no credit by openly taking 1 side of this- case when his appointed legal adviser, Mr. Van Dusen, was ■ upon judicially noticeable record a member of this plaintiff’s law firm. See each- annual issue of the Martindale-IIubbell Law Directory, starting with the year 1959 (1963 issue vol 2 at page 3005); also the official and current State Bar roster (42 MSBJ, No 6, p 185).

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140 N.W.2d 436 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1966)
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143 N.W.2d 755 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1966)
Superx Drugs Corp. v. State Board of Pharmacy
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233 F. Supp. 705 (W.D. Michigan, 1964)
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Bluebook (online)
125 N.W.2d 13, 372 Mich. 22, 1963 Mich. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/superx-drugs-corp-v-state-board-of-pharmacy-mich-1963.