OPINION OP THE COURT BY
PREAR, C.J.These applications for writs of mandamus to compel the Commissioners of Fire Claims to amend their awards in certain cases, were heard together both in the lower court and in this court on appeal.
Much property having been destroyed in the city of Honolulu during December, 1899, and January, 1900, under or in consequence of orders of the Board of Health in suppressing bubonic plague, provision was made by Act 15 of the Laws of *4831901 for the appointment of a Commission to bear and determine claims for damages for such loss of property and for tbe payment thereof to tbe amount of $1,500,000. Tbe respondents are tbe Commissioners appointed under tbat Act.' They have, we understand, practically completed tbeir labors, tbat is to say, have beard and decided all of tbe nearly 7,000 claims that were presented to them but tbeir functions have not ceased by limitation of law.
Tbe petitioners in tbe second case-, Sing Chan Company, presented a claim for $11,816.92 for property so destroyed, and tbe petitioner in tbe first case, tbe insurance company, presented a claim for $1,500 as assignee of the Sing Chan Company claim up to tbat amount, tbe insurance company having obtained tbe assignment upon paying Sing Chan Company tbat amount under a policy of insurance upon tbat property.
Tbe Commission, after bearing tbe claims, found tbat tbe value of tbe property destroyed was $7,877.95, but awarded tbe Sing Oban Company only $4,590.85, being tbe total loss found, less amounts previously paid under three insurance policies on the property, and upon the award tbe following was noted: “This claimant having subrogated to tbe following insurance companies, td-wit, Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Co., Policy 354,106, $1,500; Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co., Policy 627,873, $1,000.00; Royal Insurance Co., Policy 5,853,660, $787.10; this award is hereby made subject to the subrogation of this claimant to said companies. Less and subject to any sum or sums of money hereafter recovered or received from insurance companies on account of property destroyed by or incidental to said sanitary fires.” Upon tbe award in tbe case of the insurance company tbe following was noted: No award made under Act 15 of Session Laws of 1901. Award made to claim 4346 (Sing Chan Company) subject to subrogation; or words substantially to tbat effect. Tbe other two insurance companies likewise presented tbeir claims to tbe Commission — with presumably similar results, though it is not expressly so stated.
Tbe Circuit Judge, after a bearing on demurrer in each case, *484granted peremptory writs of mandamus directing tbe Commission to amend its awards so as to allow the insurance company the amount of its assignment, $1,500, and the Sing Chan Company, $4,590.85 without lien or subrogation. The respondents appealed.
The insurance company does not rely upon an independent cause of action of its own or a claim for damages caused to it by the orders of the Board of Health. It could not, for such damages would be too remote under the general law (see Conn. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. N. Y. & N. H. R. R. Co., 25 Conn. 265, 274) even if the Territory were suable in tort in the regular courts, which is not the case (Coffield v. Territory, 13 Haw. 478), and the statute in question (Section 7) expressly prohibits awards for “consequential damage” and limits allowable damages to loss “for the destruction of or direct damage to property.”
Nor does the insurance company rely on a right of subroga.tion independent of the express assignment, although (fire insurance being, like marine insurance; a contract of indemnity, and not, like life insurance, a contract to- pay a definite sum upon the happening of a particular event) the. company upon paying the insurance would, in the absence of an express assignment, be subrogated, in a corresponding amount, to the insured’s light, if any, against the wrongdoer responsible for the loss. St. Louis &c. R’y. v. Commercial Ins. Co., 139 U. S. 223, 235; Darrell v. Tibbetts, L. R. 5 Q. B. D. 560.
The company relies entirely on the express assignment, that is, upon its rights as an assignee of a portion of the claim of the insured.
The claim on behalf of the insurer was disallowed in both cases, and, therefore, in view of our conclusion that we cannot in proceedings of this kind review and correct the decision of the Commission upon this point, assuming it to be erroneous, it will be sufficient for the disposition of both cases if we state our reason's in the case of the owners alone.
lYe take it that the petitioners would be satisfied with either *485an award to the insured of the total loss less the amounts paid by the insurers, provided the latter amounts were awarded to tire insurers; or an award of the total loss to the insured subject to the assignments to the'insurers, provided no awards were made directly to the latter, in other words, that the petitioners do not expect several awards exceeding in the aggregate the total loss, although they so prayed both before the Commission and before the Circuit Judge. Accordingly there can be no serious objection to the note' made on the award to the owners, Sing Chan Company, to the effect that that award was subject to the assignments to the insurance companies. The serious objection to that award, from the standpoint of the petitioners, is that it was not for the full amount of the loss, not that it was subject to the assignments. No doubt it was unnecessary for the Commission to note that the award was subject to the assignments and it might have been better not to have done so, for the insured and insurers could settle their claims as against each other between themselves; and the Commission was authorized under the statute to make awards for “direct damage to property” and not to Adjudicate conflicting claims to the amounts awarded.
As already stated the real question of importance to the petitioners, is whether the award to Sing Chan Company should have been for the full loss, $7,877.95, or was properly made for that amount less the amounts paid by the insurers. But we need not undertake to decide this question, inasmuch as, in our opinion, set forth below, this court could not properly in a proceeding of this kind review and correct the action of the Commission even if it erred in its decision of this question. And yet we may be justified in stating some of the considerations that bear upon the question, partly for .the purpose of throwing light upon it, especially in view of the arguments pro and con presented by counsel, and partly for the purpose of showing to some extent that the question is one of such a nature that it should not be decided in a proceeding of this kind.
Of course, if the statute clearly showed that the legislature *486intended that the amounts paid by insurance companies should be deducted, that would end the matter; for, since the government cannot be sued at all without its consent, it may consent to be sued or to allow claims to* be presented or awarded against it to only such extent as it pleases. The only reference to insurance in the statute is found in the provision in Section 9 that the claimant should state, among other things, “the amount for which the property was insured, the name of the insurer, and how much was paid thereon.” The insertion of this pro- ' vision can be accounted for on several theories. If the legislature intended by it that amounts paid by insurers should be deducted from owners’ claims, it did not clearly express its intention.
Assuming that the question is not settled by the statute, its solution might depend upon whether the owners would be obliged as1 matter of law to reimburse the insurance companies out of the amounts received under the award of the Commission. If they would, then justice would seem to require that the full amount of the loss without deducting the insurance should be awarded; for otherwise the amounts of insurance would be in effect deducted twice and the owners would not be fully compensated for their loss. They would be discriminated against as compared with others and would better not have had insurance. And the general rule is that in actions by the owner* against those who caused the loss, the measure of damages is the entire loss without deduction of amounts previously received from insurers. Weber v. Morris &c. R. R. Co., 35 N. J. L. 402; see also Pentz v. Receivers, 3 Edw. Ch. 341; 9 Paige 568. But if the owners would not as matter of law be bound to reimburse the insurers, it could be argued with a good deal of force that they could not justly complain if the amounts already i eceived by them from the insurers were deducted, for they would be fully compensated — in part by the insurers and as to the rest by the government.
It would be under the express assignments or because of the nature of the contract of insurance as one of indemnity that the *487owners would have to reimburse the insurers, if at all. As to the assignments, if the owners made those voluntarily, whether for a consideration or not, that was their own affair and the government could not be expected tó take such assignments into consideration any more than if they had been made to- any others than the insurers. The owners could not enlarge the government’s liability by their own voluntary acts. And there is no showing in this case that they were obliged by the terms of their policies to make- such assignments. As to- the obligation, if any, of the owners to reimburse the insurers because of the nature of the contract as one of indemnity, — if there was no legal liability on the part of the government, as, for instance-, if the orders of the Board of Health in consequence of which the fires occurred were legal under the circumstances- or if the loss of property in question was not the proximate result of those orders, the owners would have no legal right as against the government (apart from the question of the right to- sue- the government) and therefore the insurers could have no rights by way of subrogation. But, of course, we could not properly in • this proceeding go into the questions of proximate cause or of the legality of the orders of. the Board of Health, even if the facts were before us. And the government has never so- far as we are aware acknowledged a legal liability. It has apparently proceeded on the theory that the claims provided for were morally, if not legally, good and that it was only right that the public, for whose benefit the losses were incurred, should share them with the immediate- sufferers. But, even if the insurers had no rights of subrogation based on the- liability of the government, still, if the government should in fact compensate the owners, even though gratuitously on the theory of a moral obligation or by way of compromise or otherwise, might not the contract of insurance as one of indemnity give the insurers a right to reimbursement by the owners? And yet, -if that would be- so in case the owners were paid in full, would it be so- in case the government-, acting gratuitously, compensated the owners in part-only, expressly disallowing the amounts paid by the insurers, so *488that the owners would be no more than fully compensated by the government and the insurers together? Enough has been said to show that nice questions of law are involved and perhaps of fact and that we should have to decide some of these and practically entertain an appeal from the Commission in order to correct their award in the manner desired.
Assuming that the Commissioners erred in their views on these questions and that the award should have been for the full amount without deducting the insurance, can we at all, or at least by mandamus, review and correct their award, or must not the petitioners be left to pursue some other remedy, if any, in the courts or their remedies of persuading, if possible, the Commission or the legislature to grant the desired relief?
It is- conceded that ordinarily 'certiorari would be the proper remedy to correct a judgment or award in a case of this kind, but it is contended that our statute (Civ. L., Sec. 1614) limits the scope of that remedy to such an extent as to1 make it inapplicable to this case and {Id., Sec. 1600 et seq.) enlarges the scope of the remedy by mandamus so as to make it applicable. We need not express an opinion upon the scope of the statute in these re^ spects. But it may not be out of place to remark that this court has in a number of cases followed the rule that prevails in most jurisdictions, that, although an inferior court may be compelled to hear and decide a matter, it cannot be compelled by mandamus to decide it in a particular way. And the mere fact that there is no other remedy is not sufficient to justify the court in proceeding by mandamus. Ex parte Newman, 14 Wall 152; In re Rice, 155 U. S. 396. It is contended, however, that it is sought here, not to control the Commission in. the exercise of its judicial functions, but merely to compel it to> enter'an award in accordance with its own findings of fact. That was the contention in Ex parte Morgan, 114 U. S. 174 ,but the court held it not a proper case for mandamus. The Commission has already acted in these cases. We are asked, not to compel it to act- or even to correct mere clerical mistakes or oversights, but to- come *489to a different conclusion or to make an award different from what they deliberately decided upon.
In our opinion the statute under which the Commission acted made its decisions final and not subject to review by the courts. The courts might interfere if the Commission declined to> hear and decide a claim that was properly presented to it or if it attempted to act beyond its jurisdiction, but they cannot review and correct its awards made within the scope of its jurisdiction. The statute (Section 6) provides that, “its judgments shall be final and no appeal lie therefrom.” The Circuit Judge held that if this provision were to be so construed it would be unconstitutional or rather contrary to the provisions of the Organic Act creating the judicial system of the Territory, — on the theory that the legislature could not create an inferior court of final jurisdiction. It is evident that, if that were the rule as to ordinary courts and cases, it would have no application to a special Commission in the nature of an auditing board, created to adjudicate claims against the government. Peacock v. Republic, 11 Haw. 404, 409. “The government cannot be sued except by its own consent, and if it consents to be sued at all, it may do so upon, such terms and conditions as it pleases.” Counsel for the petitioners did not in the lower court and do not now rely much, if they do at all, on this ground upon which the Circuit Judge based his opinion. Their contention is that by the established principles of the common law the courts have jurisdiction to review the judgments of inferior tribunals by certiorari or mandamus where no> appeal or writ of error lies.
Words similar, at least in part, to. those in question have been construed differently by different courts. For instance; in People v. Betts, 55 N. Y. 600, the court held that the statute, in declaring that a certain appraisal should be “final and conclusive” meant, not merely that there should be no appeal technically speaking but that there should be no remedy at all 'by way of review and that therefore certiorari did not lie. See also Commonwealth v. Justice, 34 Pa. St. 156; Auditorial Board v. Arles, 15 Tex. 12; Wertheimer v. Boonville, 29 Mo. *490254; State v. Asylum St. Bridge Co., 63 Conn. 91. But it must be conceded that there are decisions or at least dicta tending to support the view that ordinarily such wordsj alone are not sufficient to show an intention on the part of the legislature to preclude resort to the extraordinary writs, the presumption being strongly against such a construction. See, for example, Rex v. Moreley, 2 Burr. 1040; People v. Canal Board, 7 Lans. 220; State v. Quaife, 23 N. J. L. 89; State v. Thayer, 74 Wis. 48.
The circumstances here are different from what they were in most of the last above cited cases. Here, besides; the provision that the judgments of the Commission shall be “final,” there is also the provision that “no appeal (shall) lie therefrom.” The word “appeal” here is not used in its technical sense. It is used in its broader sense as meaning a proceeding for reviewing and correcting the judgment of an inferior tribunal. The subject matter and language of the statute as a whole indicate an •intention to avoid the formalities and delays of ordinary judicial proceedings and to have the claims adjusted by the application of horse^sense rather than of strict rules of law. Only one member of the Commission was required to- be an attorney at law (Section 1), the judgments were to be final (Section 6),' claims might be compromised (Section 12), issue need not be joined {Id), “the Commission shall not be bound to follow the rules of the common law in relation to pleadings, practice, and the admission and rejection of evidence but shall exercise its discretion therein with the view of doing justice?’ (Section 15), apparently claims were expected to be presented and heard at the rate of about a thousand a month as there were nearly 7,000 claims and appropriations for the expenses of the Commission were made for only six months (Section 16). It could hardly have been contemplated that this large number of claims might possibly be brought into the regular courts by mandamus or other proceedings to correct alleged errors. Then, again, the statute was not intended to provide for the adjudication of rights as between individuals or even for the adjudication of strictly legal rights *491as between tbe government and individuals. Under snob circumstances tbe statute making the awards final and not subject to appeal should not be construed as strictly as might otherwise be required. In Commonwealth v. Justice, supra, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said: “¥e are of opinion that this court has no authority to review the order or decree of the Common Pleas, for it is expressly declared to be final and conclusive, and because the case is not such a judicial one as falls necessarily within the general jurisdiction or judicial power of this court. And we do not think that this court ought to have any power over such cases; for, properly speaking, they involve no judicial question. They have no relation to the preservation or enforcement of private rights; but only to the distribution of money belonging to the state, and which it bestows upon counties and persons according to such rules, and by means of such instrumentality as it pleases. It malíes the judges of the Common Pleas the functionaries for its distribution, and their decree final, and therefore we must not interfere.” In Auditorial Board v. Arles, supra, a case in which a board created to pass upon claims against the late Republic of Texas, refused to allow a claim for interest, the court said: “Again the board having acted on the claim, and the law not providing any remedy, a mandamus ought not to have issued. The most that could be claimed on a mandamus was, that the board should act on the claim; and the fact-shown in the petition, that the claim had been acted upon by the board, was sufficient ground on which the application should have been refused by the court below. It is an admitted rule that the state can be sued only by its own permission, and then in the way it 'has consented to be so sued. To- sustain the judgment in this case would be, in effect, to sustain a suit against the state without its consent.
“If injustice has been done by the board, in rejecting the claim of interest, the claimant must rely for remedy upon the sense of the justice of the claim that the legislature may entertain on it.”Hatch & S’illimcm and F. W. Milverton for petitioners. Attorney-General E. P. Dole and Deputy Attorney-General J. W. Oathcart for respondents.
The order of the Circuit Judge directing the Commission to amend its award is reversed in each case.