Trustees of Brooke Academy v. George

14 W. Va. 411, 1878 W. Va. LEXIS 75
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 14, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 W. Va. 411 (Trustees of Brooke Academy v. George) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trustees of Brooke Academy v. George, 14 W. Va. 411, 1878 W. Va. LEXIS 75 (W. Va. 1878).

Opinion

GreeN, PRESIDENT,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The views I entertain of this ease render it unnecessary for me to express any opinion in reference to any of the twenty causes of demurrer assigned by” the defendants, except the second of these causes, “that the act of the Virginia Legislature of December 20, 1862, is unconstitutional, null and void.” And except so far as the decision of this point may involve an expression of opinion necessary on some other causes of demurrer alleged, it would be improper to express any opinion, as the expression of such opinion is unnecessary, and as the “ Board of the Literary Fund” or its successor, and the heirs and distributees of Peter Curran, the parties really interested-in these questions, are not before this Court.

It is argued by the appellants’ counsel, that the seventeenth clause of Peter Curran’s will, which is in these words : “I beqxxeath to the Virginia Literary Fund, all the residue of my estate of whatever kind, after paying all the foregoing bequests,” is a bequest to “ The Board of the Literary Fund ;” that this corporation was composed only of officers of the State; that it was simply an agency of the State; and therefore a bequest to it was a bequest to the State ; that this bequest, by virtue of the second, third and eighth sections of chapter 80 of the Code of Virginia-of 1860, page 419, was valid; and as the donor or testator prescribed no uses to be made of this bequest, he thereby left it to the discretion of the Legislature to dispose of it in any manner in which it [419]*419could dispose of any other funds in the state treasury; and that the disposition made by the Legislature thereof by the act of December 20, 1862, which was a gift of it to the Brooke Academy, was such a disposition as the State could have made of other funds in the treasury, and it was therefore operative and valid.

This argument admits, that if the Legislature had no power or right to appropriate any funds in the treasury to the plaintiff, the trustees of the Brooke Academy, that they have no claim to the residuary fund of Peter Cur-ran’s estate. For according to this view the right of the Legislature to make this appropriation is the same as that to appropriate in like manner a fund in the treasury of the State raised by taxation.

We propose then to consider the question whether the Legislature of Virginia had a right to appropriate to the trustees of the Brooke Academy any fund in the treasury, which had been raised by taxation of the people of the State; for if they had not, then upon the grounds assumed by the plaintiffs’ counsel they can have no legal claims to the residue of Peter Curran’s estate.

It is true, that in creating a legislative department and conferring on it legislative power the people of Virginia must be understood to have conferred full and complete legislative power, to the extent that such power may bo exercised by the governing power of any country, subject only to such restrictions as they saw fit to impose by their Constitution and such as are contained in the Constitution of the United States. And this being the case, a court cannot declare a statute unconstitutional and void solely on the grounds of its unjust and oppressive provisions, or because it is supposed to violate the natural, social or political rights of the citizen not guaranteed by the Constitution itself. Nor can they declare an act unconstitutional and void, because it appears to the minds of the judges to violate the fundamental principles of a republican government, not for[420]*420bidden by tlie Constitution itselfjjto be violated. For a court cannot legitimately substitute its own judgment for that of the Legislature in any case properly within its power under the Constitution; and if it could set aside an act simply because the court believed it unjust or oppressive or in violation of the natural, social or political rights of citizens, or contrary to the fundamental principles of republican government, it would be impossible to set a limit' to its authority, and its discretion alone would become the measure of the extent of its interference a discretion, which would vary with the peculiar notions of each individual judge. A statute therefore, before it can be declared void by the courts, must be clearly in violation of some provision of the Constitution of the State or of the United States.

But if a Legislature passes an act, which is not properly a statute, because not legislative in its character, such an act must be declared void by courts, because the Constitution has conferred on the Legislature only legislative power. No court for instance would hesitate to declare void an act, which enacted that A. and B., who were husband and wife to each other, should be so no longer, but A. should thereafter be the husband of C. and B. the wife of D., or which should enact that the homestead now owned by A. should be no longer his, but should henceforth be the property of B. See Loan Association v. Topeka, 20 Wall. 663. These would be despotic acts not legislative in their character; and therefore the power to pass such acts is not conferred by the Constitution on the Legislature. So an act of the Legislature donating the property of the State to an individual, or a private corporation, in disregard of the public interest is not legislative in its character, and should therefore be declared void by the courts. And so if the Legislature, instead of itself making such a donation, was to authorize a municipal corporation to make such a donation of the property of the municipality, such act would be equally void; and if it authorized a [421]*421municipal corporation to levy a tax for the purpose of raising a fund to make such a donation, it would be ' equally clear, that such act would be void.

Thus it has been held, that the Legislature cannot authorize a town to pay bounties to persons, who have heretofore enlisted in the military service of the United States, or to pay the commutation- required of individuals who have been drafted into such service, or to pay select men for costs and damages sustained by their resisting prosecutions brought against them for refusing to erase names from a check list of the voters for State and United States officers. See Crowell v. Hopkinton, 45 N. H. 9; Freeland et al. v. Hasting et al., 10 Allen 570; Moulton v. Inhabitants of Raymond, 60 Mc. 121; Gore v. Epping, 45 N. H. 539.

But it has been decided, that it is competent for the. Legislature to authorize municipal corporations to raise money by taxation to pay bounties to volunteers, who may enlist in the military service of the United States, when by the law such volunteers are to be credited to the quota of such town. See Brodhead et al. v. The City of Milwaukee et al. 19 Wis. 658; Booth v. Woodbury, 32 Conn. 128; Speer v. Blairsville, 50 Penn. St. 150.

These cases may be perhaps sustained, on the ground that the taxation authorized was not in order to raise money for a mere private purpose. It is admitted that the Legislature can not authorize a tax to be levied for any mere private purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
14 W. Va. 411, 1878 W. Va. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trustees-of-brooke-academy-v-george-wva-1878.