1. Acts of the Philippine Legislature creating a coal company
and a bank, the stock of which is largely owned by the Philippine
government, provide that the power to vote the stock shall be
vested in a "Committee," in the one case, and in a "Board of
Control," in the other, each consisting of the Governor-General,
the President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives.
Held, that the voting of the stock in the
election of directors and managing agents of the corporations is an
executive function, and that the attempt to repose it in the
legislative officers named violates the Philippine Organic Act. P.
277 U. S.
199.
2. In the Philippine Organic Act, which divides the government
into three departments -- legislative, executive, and judicial --
the principle is implicit, as it is in state and federal
constitutions, that these three powers shall be forever separate
and distinct from each other. P. 201..
3. This separation, and the consequent exclusive character of
the powers conferred upon each of the three departments of the
government, is basic and vital -- not merely a matter of
governmental mechanism.
Id.
4. It may be stated as a general rule inherent in the American
constitutional system that, unless otherwise expressly provided or
incidental to the powers conferred, the legislature cannot exercise
either executive or judicial power, the executive cannot exercise
either legislative or judicial power, and the judiciary cannot
exercise either executive or legislative power.
Id.
Page 277 U. S. 190
5. Legislative power, as distinguished from executive power, is
the authority to make laws, but not to enforce them or to appoint
the agents charged with the duty of enforcing them. The latter are
executive functions. P.
277 U. S.
202.
6. Not having the power of appointment unless expressly granted
or incidental to its powers, the legislature cannot engraft
executive duties upon a legislative office, since that would be to
usurp the power of appointment by indirection.
Id.
7. The appointment of managers (in this instance, corporate
directors) of property or a business in which the government is
interested is essentially an executive act which the legislature is
without capacity to perform, directly or through its members. P.
277 U. S.
203.
8. Whether or not the members of the "board" or "committee" are
public officers in the strict sense, they are at least public
agents charged with executive functions, and therefore beyond the
appointing power of the legislature.
Id.
9. The instances in which Congress has devolved on persons not
executive officers the power to vote in nonstock corporations
created for governmental purposes lend no support to a construction
of the Constitution which would justify Congressional legislation
like that here involved, considering the limited number of such
instances, the peculiar character of the institutions there dealt
with, and the contrary attitude of Congress towards governmentally
owned or controlled stock corporations. P.
277 U. S.
204.
10. The powers here asserted by the Philippine Legislature are
vested in the Governor-General by the Organic Act --
viz.,
by the provision vesting in him the supreme executive power, with
general supervision and control over all the departments and
bureaus of the government; the provision placing on him the
responsibility for the faithful execution of the laws, and the
provision that all executive functions of the government must be
directly under him or within one of the executive departments under
his supervision and control. P.
277 U. S.
205.
11. Where a statute contains a grant of power enumerating
certain things which may be done, and also a general grant of power
which, standing alone, would include those things and more, the
general grant may be given full effect if the context shows that
the enumeration was not intended to be exclusive. P.
277 U. S.
206.
12. In § 22 of the Organic Act, the clause in the form of a
proviso placing all the executive functions directly under the
Governor-General or in one of the executive departments under his
direction
Page 277 U. S. 191
and control, and the proviso preceding it which grant certain
powers to the legislature, are both to be construed as independent
and substantive provisions. P.
277 U. S.
207.
13. An inference that Congress has approved an Act of the
Philippine Legislature reported to it under § 10 of the
Organic Act cannot be drawn from the failure of Congress to
exercise its power to annul, reserved in that section, where the
Act reported contravenes the Organic Act, and is therefore clearly
void. P.
277 U.S. 208.
Affirmed.
Certiorari, 275 U.S. 519, to two judgments of ouster rendered by
the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands in proceedings in the
nature of
quo warranto, which were brought in that court
by the Philippine government against the present petitioners to
test their right to be directors in certain corporations described
in the opinion.
Page 277 U. S. 197
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases, presenting substantially the same question, were
argued and will be considered and disposed of together. In each
case, an action in the nature of
quo warranto was brought
in the court below challenging the right to hold office of
directors of certain corporations organized under the legislative
authority of the Philippine
Page 277 U. S. 198
Islands; No. 564 involving directors of the National Coal
Company, and No. 573 involving directors of the Philippine National
Bank.
The National Coal Company was created by Act 2705, approved
March 10, 1917, subsequently amended by Act 2822, approved March 5,
1919. The Governor-General, under the provisions of the amended
act, subscribed on behalf of the Philippine Islands for
substantially all of the capital stock. The act provides:
"The voting power of all such stock owned by the government of
the Philippine Islands shall be vested exclusively in a committee,
consisting of the Governor-General, the President of the Senate and
the Speaker of the House of Representatives."
The National Bank was created by Act 2612, approved February 4,
1916, subsequently amended by Act 2747, approved February 20, 1918,
and Act 2938, approved January 30, 1921. The authorized capital of
the bank, as finally fixed, was 10,000,000 pesos, consisting of
100,000 shares, of which, in pursuance of the legislative
provisions, the Philippine government acquired and owns 97,332
shares; the remainder being held by private persons. By the
original act, the voting power of the government-owned stock was
vested exclusively in the Governor-General, but, by the amended
acts now in force, that power was
"vested exclusively in a board, the short title of which shall
be 'Board of Control,' composed of the Governor-General, the
President of the Senate, and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives."
The Governor-General was also divested of the power of
appointment of the president and vice-president of the bank,
originally vested in him, and their election was authorized to be
made by the directors from among their own number. Provision was
also made for a general manager to be appointed or removed by the
board of directors with the advice and consent of the board of
control. The manager was to be chief executive of the bank, with an
annual
Page 277 U. S. 199
salary to be fixed by the board of directors with the approval
of the Board of Control. Further duties were conferred upon the
Board of Control in connection with the management of the bank
which it does not seem necessary to set forth.
It is worthy of note that this voting power has been similarly
devolved by the legislature upon at least four other corporations:
the National Petroleum Company, by Act 2814; the National
Development Company, by Act 2849; the National Cement Company, by
Act 2855, and the National Iron Company, by Act 2862 -- and the
suggestion of the Solicitor General that this indicates a
systematic plan on the part of the legislature to take over,
through its presiding officers, the direct control generally of
nationally organized or controlled stock corporations would seem to
be warranted.
In pursuance of the first-quoted provision, petitioners in No.
564 were elected directors of the National Coal Company by a vote
of the government-owned shares cast by the President of the Senate
and the Speaker of the House, and, in pursuance of the second
quoted provision, petitioners in No. 573 were elected directors of
the National Bank in the same way. The Governor-General,
challenging the validity of the legislation, did not participate in
either election. While there are some differences between the two
actions in respect of the facts, they are differences of detail
which do not affect the substantial question to be determined.
On behalf of the Philippine government, respondent in both
cases, it is contended that the election of directors and managing
agents by a vote of the government-owned stock was an executive
function intrusted by the Organic Act of the Philippine Islands to
the Governor-General, and that the acts of the legislature
divesting him of that power and vesting it, in the one case, in a
"board," and, in the other, in a "committee," the majority of which
in
Page 277 U. S. 200
each instance consisted of officers and members of the
legislature, were invalid as being in conflict with the Organic
Act. The court below sustained the contention of the government and
entered judgments of ouster against the petitioners in each
case.
The congressional legislation referred to as the "Organic Act"
is the enactment of August 29, 1916, c. 416, 39 Stat. 545, which
constitutes the fundamental law of the Philippine Islands and bears
a relation to their governmental affairs not unlike that borne by a
state constitution to the state. The act contains a Bill of Rights
many of the provisions of which are taken from the federal
Constitution. It lays down fundamental rules in respect of
taxation, shipping, customs duties, etc. Section 8 of the act
provides: "That general legislative power, except as otherwise
herein provided, is hereby granted to the Philippine Legislature,
authorized by this Act." And, by § 12, this legislative power
is vested in a legislature, to consist of two houses, one the
Senate and the other the House of Representatives. Provision is
made (§§ 13, 14 and 17) for memberships, terms, and
qualifications of the members of each house. By § 21, it is
provided "that the supreme executive power shall be vested in an
executive officer, whose official title shall be
the
Governor-General of the Philippine Islands.'" He is given
"general supervision and control of all of the departments and
bureaus of the government in the Philippine Islands as far as is
not inconsistent with the provisions of this act."
He is made "responsible for the faithful execution of the laws
of the Philippine Islands and of the United States operative within
the Philippine Islands." Other powers of an important and
comprehensive character also are conferred upon him. By § 22,
the executive departments of the Philippine government, as then
authorized by law, are continued until otherwise provided by the
legislature. The legislature is authorized by appropriate
legislation to
Page 277 U. S. 201
"increase the number or abolish any of the executive
departments, or make such changes in the names and duties thereof
as it may see fit," and "provide for the appointment and removal of
the heads of the executive departments by the Governor-General."
Then follows the proviso:
"That all executive functions of the government must be directly
under the Governor-General or within one of the executive
departments under the supervision and control of the
Governor-General."
Section 26 recognizes the existing Supreme Court and courts of
first instance of the Islands, and continues their jurisdiction as
heretofore provided, with such additional jurisdiction as should
thereafter be prescribed by law.
Thus, the Organic Act, following the rule established by the
American Constitutions, both state and federal, divides the
government into three separate departments -- the legislative,
executive, and judicial. Some of our state constitutions expressly
provide in one form or another that the legislative, executive, and
judicial powers of the government shall be forever separate and
distinct from each other. Other Constitutions, including that of
the United States, do not contain such an express provision. But it
is implicit in all, as a conclusion logically following from the
separation of the several departments.
See Kilbourn v.
Thompson, 103 U. S. 168,
103 U. S.
190-191. And this separation and the consequent
exclusive character of the powers conferred upon each of the three
departments is basic and vital -- not merely a matter of
governmental mechanism. That the principle is implicit in the
Philippine Organic Act does not admit of doubt.
See Abueva v.
Wood, 45 Phil.Rep. 612, 622, 628,
et seq.
It may be stated then, as a general rule inherent in the
American constitutional system, that, unless otherwise expressly
provided or incidental to the powers conferred, the legislature
cannot exercise either executive or judicial power; the executive
cannot exercise either legislative or
Page 277 U. S. 202
judicial power; the judiciary cannot exercise either executive
or legislative power. The existence in the various Constitutions of
occasional provisions expressly giving to one of the departments
powers which by their nature otherwise would fall within the
general scope of the authority of another department emphasizes,
rather than casts doubt upon, the generally inviolate character of
this basic rule.
Legislative power, as distinguished from executive power, is the
authority to make laws, but not to enforce them or appoint the
agents charged with the duty of such enforcement. The latter are
executive functions. It is unnecessary to enlarge further upon the
general subject, since it has so recently received the full
consideration of this Court.
Myers v. United States,
272 U. S. 52.
Not having the power of appointment unless expressly granted or
incidental to its powers, the legislature cannot ingraft executive
duties upon a legislative office, since that would be to usurp the
power of appointment by indirection, though the case might be
different if the additional duties were devolved upon an appointee
of the executive.
Shoemaker v. United States, 147 U.
S. 282,
147 U. S.
300-301. Here, the members of the legislature who
constitute a majority of the "board" and "committee," respectively,
are not charged with the performance of any legislative functions
or with the doing of anything which is in aid of the performance of
any such functions by the legislature. Putting aside for the moment
the question whether the duties devolved upon these members are
vested by the Organic Act in the Governor-General, it is clear that
they are not legislative in character, and still more clear that
they are not judicial. The fact that they do not fall within the
authority of either of these two constitutes logical ground for
concluding that they do fall within that of the remaining one of
the three among
Page 277 U. S. 203
which the powers of government are divided.
Compare Myers v.
United States, supra, pp.
272 U. S.
117-118.
Assuming, for present purposes, that the duty of managing this
property -- namely, the government-owned shares of stock in these
corporations -- is not sovereign, but proprietary, in its nature,
the conclusion must be the same. The property is owned by the
government, and the government in dealing with it, whether in its
quasi-sovereign or its proprietary capacity, nevertheless
acts in its governmental capacity. There is nothing in the Organic
Act or in the nature of the legislative power conferred by it to
suggest that the legislature, in acting in respect of the
proprietary rights of the government, may disregard the limitation
that it must exercise legislative, and not executive, functions. It
must deal with the property of the government by making rules, and
not by executing them. The appointment of managers (in this
instance, corporate directors) of property or a business is
essentially an executive act which the legislature is without
capacity to perform directly or through any of its members.
Whether the members of the "board" or the "committee" are public
officers in a strict sense we do not find it necessary to
determine. They are public agents, at least, charged with the
exercise of executive functions, and therefore beyond the
appointing power of the legislature.
Stockman v. Leddy, 55
Colo. 24, involved a case very much like that now under
consideration. The state legislature had created a committee of its
own members to investigate the rights of the state in the flowing
waters therein. The committee was authorized to determine what
steps were necessary to be taken to protect the rights of the
state, to employ counsel, etc. There was no claim that the
investigation was for the purpose of ascertaining facts to aid in
future legislation or to assist the legislature in its legislative
capacity, but it was for the purpose
Page 277 U. S. 204
of enabling the committee itself to reach a conclusion as to
what should be proper to do in order to protect the rights of the
state. The court, in holding the act unconstitutional, said (p.
31):
"In other words, the General Assembly not only passed an act --
that is, made a law -- but it made a joint committee of the Senate
and the House as its executive agent to carry out that law. This a
clear and conspicuous instance of an attempt by the general
assembly to confer executive power upon a collection of its own
members."
And the court held that this was invalid under the provisions of
the state constitution respecting the tripartite division of
governmental powers.
See also Clark v. Stanley, 66 N.C.
59;
State ex rel. Howerton v. Tate, 68 N.C. 546.
Petitioners seek to draw a parallel between the power of
Congress to create corporations as appropriate means of executing
governmental powers and the acts of the Philippine Legislature here
under consideration. To what extent, the powers of the two bodies
in this respect may be assimilated we need not stop not to
determine, since the power of the legislature to create the two
corporations here involved is not doubted. But it is argued further
that Congress, in creating corporations for governmental purposes,
has sometimes devolved the voting power in such corporations upon
persons other than executive officers. In the case of the
Smithsonian Institution, cited as an example, Congress provided for
a governing Board of Regents composed in part of members of the
Senate and of the House. There are two or three other instances in
respect of nonstock organizations of like character. On the other
hand, as pointed out by the Solicitor General, in the case of
governmentally organized or controlled stock corporations, Congress
has uniformly recognized the executive authority in their
management, generally providing in express terms that the shares
shall be voted
Page 277 U. S. 205
by an executive officer, and in no instance attempting to grant
such power to one or more of its members. Many instances of this
kind are cited by the Solicitor General, but it is not necessary to
repeat his enumeration. It is enough to say that, when we consider
the limited number of acts of Congress which fall within the first
class spoken of above, as well as the peculiar character of the
institutions dealt with and the contrary attitude of Congress
toward corporations of a different character, such acts cannot be
regarded as lending support to a construction of the Constitution
which would justify congressional legislation like that here
involved. As this Court said in
Myers v. United States,
supra, pp.
272 U. S.
170-171:
"In the use of congressional legislation to support or change a
particular construction of the Constitution by acquiescence, its
weight for the purpose must depend not only upon the nature of the
question, but also upon the attitude of the executive and judicial
branches of the government, as well as upon the number of instances
in the execution of the law in which opportunity for objection in
the courts or elsewhere is afforded. When instances which actually
involve the question are rare, or have not in fact occurred, the
weight of the mere presence of acts on the statute book for a
considerable time, as showing general acquiescence in the
legislative assertion of a questioned power, is minimized."
And we are further of the opinion that the powers asserted by
the Philippine Legislature are vested by the Organic Act in the
Governor-General. The intent of Congress to that effect is
disclosed by the provisions of that act already set forth. Stated
concisely, these provisions are: that the supreme executive power
is vested in the Governor-General, who is given general supervision
and control over all the departments and bureaus of the Philippine
government; upon him is placed the responsibility
Page 277 U. S. 206
for the faithful execution of the laws of the Philippine
Islands, and, by the general proviso already quoted, all executive
functions must be directly under the Governor-General or within one
of the executive departments under his supervision and control.
These are grants comprehensive enough to include the powers
attempted to be exercised by the legislature by the provisions of
law now under review.
Myers v. United States, supra.
It is true that § 21 contains a specific provision that the
Governor-General shall appoint such officers as may now be
appointed by the Governor-General, or such as he is authorized by
this act to appoint, or whom he may hereafter be authorized by law
to appoint. And it is said that the effect of this is to confine
the Governor-General's powers of appointment within the limits of
this enumeration. The general rule that the expression of one thing
is the exclusion of others is subject to exceptions. Like other
canons of statutory construction, it is only an aid in the
ascertainment of the meaning of the law, and must yield whenever a
contrary intention on the part of the lawmaker is apparent. Where a
statute contains a grant of power enumerating certain things which
may be done and also a general grant of power which, standing
alone, would include these things and more, the general grant may
be given full effect if the context shows that the enumeration was
not intended to be exclusive.
See, for example, Ford v. United
States, 273 U. S. 593,
273 U. S. 611;
Portland v. N.E.T. & Co., 103 Me. 240, 249;
Grubbe
v. Grubbe, 26 Or. 363, 370;
Swick v. Coleman, 218
Ill. 33, 40;
Lexington ex rel. v. Commercial Bank, 130
Mo.App. 687, 692;
McFarland v. M., K. & T. Ry. Co., 94
Mo.App. 336, 342.
Applying these principles, we are unable to accept the
contention that the enumeration here in question is exclusive in
the face of the general provisions already quoted, and particularly
of that one which declares that
Page 277 U. S. 207
all executive functions are vested directly in the
Governor-General or under his supervision and control. It is true
that this provision is in the form of a proviso, and it is argued
that it is therefore nothing more than a definition by negation of
the power given to the legislature in the same section. But an
analysis of the section, which is reproduced so far as pertinent in
the margin,
* shows, though
not wholly beyond doubt, that the power given to the legislature is
itself a proviso. In other words, both the grant of power to the
legislature and the grant of power to the Governor-General are in
form provisos to the general provisions of § 22 which precede
them. It is difficult to assign to either proviso the general
purpose of that form of legislation, which is merely to qualify the
operation of the general language which precedes it. We think,
rather, that both provisos are to be construed as independent and
substantive provisions. As this Court has more than once pointed
out, it is not an uncommon practice in legislative proceedings to
include independent pieces of legislation under the
Page 277 U. S. 208
head of provisos.
See Georgia Banking Co. v. Smith,
128 U. S. 174,
128 U. S. 181;
White v. United States, 191 U. S. 545,
191 U. S. 551;
Cox v. Hart, 260 U. S. 427,
260 U. S.
435.
Finally, it is urged that, since no action has been taken by
Congress under § 19 of the Organic Act,, requiring all laws
enacted by the Philippine Legislature to be reported to Congress,
which reserves the power to annul them, the legislation now under
review has received the implied sanction of Congress, and should
not be disturbed.
Clinton v.
Englebrecht, 13 Wall. 434,
80 U. S. 446,
is cited in support of this contention. In that case, jurors were
summoned into the legislative courts of the territory of Utah under
the provisions of acts of Congress applicable only to the courts of
the United States. This Court held that the jurors were wrongly
summoned, and a challenge to the array should have been sustained.
The Court, however, proceeded also to examine the jury law enacted
by the territorial legislature, and declared it to be valid. In the
course of the opinion, it was said that, since the simple
disapproval by Congress at any time would have annulled that law,
it was not unreasonable to infer that it was approved by that body.
In the later case of
Clayton v. Utah Territory,
132 U. S. 632, an
act of the same territory providing for the appointment of certain
officers was held to be void as in contravention of a provision of
the territorial Organic Act vesting in the Governor the power to
appoint such officers. Dealing with the same point here made, this
Court said (p.
132 U. S.
642):
"It is true that, in a case of doubtful construction, the long
acquiescence of Congress and the general government may be resorted
to as some evidence of the proper construction, or of the validity,
of a law. This principle is more applicable to questions relating
to the construction of a statute than to matters which go to the
power of the legislature to enact it. At all events, it can hardly
be admitted as a general proposition that, under the power of
Page 277 U. S. 209
Congress reserved in the organic acts of the territories to
annul the acts of their legislatures, the absence of any action by
Congress is to be construed to be a recognition of the power of the
legislature to pass laws in conflict with the act of Congress under
which they were created."
The inference of an approval by Congress from its mere failure
to act, at best, rests upon a weak foundation. And we think, where
the inference is sought to be applied, as here, to a case where the
legislation is clearly void as in contravention of the Organic Act,
it cannot reasonably be indulged. To justify the conclusion that
Congress has consented to the violation of one of its own acts of
such fundamental character will require something more than such
inaction upon its part as really amounts to nothing more than a
failure affirmatively to declare such violation by a formal
act.
Whether the Philippine Legislature, in view of the alternative
form of the provision vesting all executive functions directly
under the Governor-General or within one of the executive
departments under his supervision and control, might devolve the
voting power upon the head of an executive department or an
appointee of such head, we do not now decide. The legislature has
not undertaken to do so, and, in the absence of such an attempt, it
necessarily results that the power must be exercised directly by
the Governor-General or by his appointee, since he is the only
executive now definitely authorized by law to act.
The judgments in both cases are
Affirmed.
*
"Sec. 22. That, except as provided otherwise in this Act, the
executive departments of the Philippine government shall continue
as now authorized by law until otherwise provided by the Philippine
Legislature. When the Philippine Legislature herein provided shall
convene and organize, the Philippine Commission, as such, shall
cease and determine, and the members thereof shall vacate their
offices as members of said Commission:
Provided, that the
heads of executive departments shall continue to exercise their
executive functions until the heads of departments provided by the
Philippine Legislature pursuant to the provisions of this Act are
appointed and qualified. The Philippine Legislature may thereafter,
by appropriate legislation, increase the number or abolish any of
the executive departments, or make such changes in the names and
duties thereof as it may see fit, and shall provide for the
appointment and removal of the heads of the executive departments
by the Governor-General:
Provided, that all executive
functions of the government must be directly under the
Governor-General or within one of the executive departments under
the supervision and control of the Governor-General. . . ."
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES, dissenting.
The great ordinances of the Constitution do not establish and
divide fields of black and white. Even the more specific of them
are found to terminate in a penumbra shading gradually from one
extreme to the other. Property must not be taken without
compensation, but, with
Page 277 U. S. 210
the help of a phrase (the police power), some property may be
taken or destroyed for public use without paying for it if you do
not take too much. When we come to the fundamental distinctions, it
is still more obvious that they must be received with a certain
latitude, or our government could not go on.
To make a rule of conduct applicable to an individual who, but
for such action, would be free from it is to legislate -- yet it is
what the judges do whenever they determine which of two competing
principles of policy shall prevail. At an early date, it was held
that Congress could delegate to the courts the power to regulate
process, which certainly is lawmaking so far as it goes.
Wayman v.
Southard, 10 Wheat. 1,
23 U. S. 42.
Bank of the United States v.
Halstead, 10 Wheat. 51. With regard to the
Executive, Congress has delegated to it or to some branch of it the
power to impose penalties,
Oceanic Steam Navigation Co. v.
Stranahan, 214 U. S. 320; to
make conclusive determination of dutiable values,
Passavant v.
United States, 148 U. S. 214; to
establish standards for imports,
Buttfield v. Stranahan,
192 U. S. 470; to
make regulations as to forest reserves,
United States v.
Grimaud, 220 U. S. 506, and
other powers not needing to be stated in further detail.
Houston v. St. Louis Independent Packing Co., 249 U.
S. 479;
Union Bridge Co. v. United States,
204 U. S. 364;
Ex parte Kollock, 165 U. S. 526.
Congress has authorized the President to suspend the operation of a
statute, even one suspending commercial intercourse with another
country,
Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649, and
very recently it has been decided that the President might be given
power to change the tariff,
J. W. Hampton, Jr., & Co. v.
United States, 276 U. S. 394. It
is said that the powers of Congress cannot be delegated, yet
Congress has established the Interstate Commerce Commission, which
does legislative, judicial and executive acts, only softened by a
quasi; makes regulations,
Inter-Mountain Rate
Cases,
Page 277 U. S. 211
234 U. S. 476,
234 U. S. 486,
issues reparation orders and performs executive functions in
connection with Safety Appliance Acts, Boiler Inspection Acts, etc.
Congress also has made effective excursions in the other direction.
It has withdrawn jurisdiction of a case after it has been argued.
Ex parte
McCardle, 7 Wall. 506. It has granted an amnesty,
notwithstanding the grant to the President of the power to pardon.
Brown v. Walker, 161 U. S. 591,
161 U. S. 601.
A territorial legislature has granted a divorce.
Maynard v.
Hill, 125 U. S. 190.
Congress has declared lawful an obstruction to navigation that this
Court has declared unlawful.
Pennsylvania v. Wheeling &
Belmont Bridge Co., 18 How. 421. Parallel to the
case before us, Congress long ago established the Smithsonian
Institution, to question which would be to lay hands on the Ark of
the Covenant, not to speak of later similar exercises of power
hitherto unquestioned, so far as I know.
It does not seem to need argument to show that, however we may
disguise it by veiling words, we do not and cannot carry out the
distinction between legislative and executive action with
mathematical precision, and divide the branches into watertight
compartments, were it ever so desirable to do so, which I am far
from believing that it is, or that the Constitution requires.
The only qualification of such latitude as otherwise would be
consistent with the three-fold division of power is the proviso in
§ 22 of the Organic Act "that all executive functions of the
government must be directly under the Governor-General or within
one of the executive departments," etc. Act of August 29, 1916, c.
416, 39 Stat. 553, U.S.C. Tit. 48, § 1114. That does not
appear to me to govern the case. The corporations concerned were
private corporations which the legislature had power to
incorporate. Whoever owned the stock, the corporation did not
perform functions of the government. This
Page 277 U. S. 212
would be plain if the stock were in private hands, and if the
government bought the stock from private owners, the functions of
the corporations would not be changed. If I am right in what I have
said, I think that ownership would not make voting upon the stock
an executive function of the government when the acts of the
corporation were not. I cannot believe that the legislature might
not have provided for the holding of the stock by a board of
private persons with no duty to the government other than to keep
it informed and to pay over such dividends as might accrue. It is
said that the functions of the Board of Control are not legislative
or judicial, and therefore they must be executive. I should say,
rather, that they plainly are no part of the executive functions of
the government, but rather fall into the indiscriminate residue of
matters within legislative control. I think it would be lamentable
even to hint a doubt as to the legitimacy of the action of Congress
in establishing the Smithsonian as it did, and I see no sufficient
reason for denying the Philippine Legislature a similar power.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS agrees with this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS (dissenting).
I think the opinion of the majority goes much beyond the
necessities of the case.
The Organic Act is careful to provide:
"That all executive functions of the government must be directly
under the Governor-General or within one of the executive
departments under the supervision and control of the
Governor-General."
A good reason lies behind this limitation which does not apply
to our federal or state governments. From the language employed,
read in the light of all the circumstances, perhaps it is possible
to spell out enough to overthrow the challenged legislation. Beyond
that it is unnecessary to go.