(dissenting.) The above entitled case having been originally assigned to me to write, I prepared an opinion affirming the ruling of the trial court. On consultation by the full bench, the majority has ruled otherwise, and orders a reversal. Profoundly convinced that this result is without substantial justification in the law, I cannot concur therein; and as the opinion I had prepared states the grounds of my conclusion and discusses the several propositions of law on which I rely, as fully and as clearly as I could hope to do in rewi'iting the case, I embody it herein in full,-in support of my dissent. *1247In so' doing, I restate the case and its salient points, because, without in the slightest degree impugning the judicial fairness of the majority, I think its discussion of the case tends to minimize or ignore some of its material features and over-emphasize some which are immaterial. The opinion to which I have referred, and which I have adopted as setting forth the grounds of my dissent, is as follows:
In the district court of Ida County, Iowa, the petitioner herein was indicted, tried, and convicted of the crime of rape, and thereafter, on November 26, 1917, judgment was entered by said court upon the verdict of the jury, and the accused was sentenced to imprisonment for life in the state reformatory, at Anamosa, of which the appellant herein is warden. Plaintiff inaugurated an appeal to this court from said judgment, but later dismissed it, without a hearing thereof. About the time of such dismissal of his appeal, acting by his attorney or agent, he made application to Hon. W. L. Harding, then governor of Iowa, for a pardon. On November 16, 1918, the petition for clemency was granted by said governor, who issued and delivered to or for said petitioner a full and unconditional pardon for the said crime of rape, restoring him to all the rights, privileges, and immunities which had been forfeited by reason of said conviction.
At the February term, 1919, of said district court, a petition entitled “Petition in Equity — The State of Iowa, by Charles Macomber, County Attorney of Ida County, Plaintiff, v. Ernest Rathbun, Defendant,” was filed, reciting the conviction of said Rathbun of the crime of rape, as hereinbefore stated, and the judgment entered upon said conviction, sentencing him to life imprisonment, and the dismissal of his appeal therefrom. Said petition further alleges that said pardon was in fact executed, and was delivered to and accepted by said Rathbun. Having set forth these conceded facts, the petition proceeds to allege that said “pardon is a nullity, and of no force or effect,” because the governor had no authority vested in him to grant said pardon: First, because, at the date of said application, the appeal from said judgment had not yet been dismissed; second, because the pardon was obtained by fraud, by suppression of the truth, by suggestion of falsehood, and by misrepresentation of the evidence given upon the trial in the district court, *1248and that these and other means misled, deceived, and imposed upon the governor, and thus induced the granting of the pardon. By an amendment to said petition, it was alleged that said pardon was improperly granted because the governor did not submit the application to- the investigation of the board of parole, as required by law, and granted the same without the aid, assistance, or advice of said board. After said petition was filed, Hon. H. M. Havner, then the attorney-general of the state, was permitted to intervene and join as a plaintiff in the proceeding. For the reasons stated in said petition and amendments, a decree was pi'ayed that said pardon be canceled and held for naught. After hearing the evidence offered the trial court entered a decree that the pardon issued by the governor, as hereinbefore stated, is “null and void and of no effect, and never has been in forcé or effect,” and that the judgment theretofore entered, sentencing said Rathbun to life imprisonment, “is in full force and virtue, and the'sentence for life imposed under and by virtue of said conviction is of full force and virtue. ’ ’
“The court further finds that all of the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition are true, with reference to the fraud and deceit of Ernest Rathbun. It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the said pardon be and the same is hereby canceled and held for naught, and the copy held by the defendant shall be surrendered to the clerk of the district court of Iowa, in and for Ida County, and the same shall be marked ‘canceled’ by said clerk, and the pardon now on file with the clerk of the district court of Ida County shall be marked ‘canceled’ by him.”
No exception was preserved to said decree, and no appeal was taken therefrom. The proceeding resulting in this decree was not begun or prosecuted at the instance or request of the governor, who has not at any time attempted to recall or revoke the pardon issued by him. At the same term of court, Rathbun, being in custody under the mittimus issued for 'his imprisonment, acting, as we assume, on the theory that the decree was void, sued out a writ of habeas corpus, alleging the illegality of his detention by the sheriff, and pleading the benefit of his pardon. Habeas, corpus having been issued and hearing had thereon, Hon. E. 6. Albert, judge of said court, dismissed the *1249proceeding' and remanded the prisoner to the custody of the sheriff by virtue of said mittimus, on the ground that “said pardon is absolutely void, for the reason that the same was granted by the governor of the state of Iowa without application therefor or correspondence in connection therewith having been submitted or passed on by the board of parole, and no recommendation made by the board of parole to the governor in connection therewith.” Thereafter, the mittimus was executed by delivering the prisoner to the reformatory, at Anamosa, and turning him over to the warden thereof, by whom he has since been restrained of his liberty.
On January 18, 1921, Rathbun, by his present counsel, presented to Hon. F, F. Dawley, Judge of the Eighteenth Judicial District of Iowa, a petition for a’ writ of habeas corpus, to test the legality of his restraint by said warden. The petition sets out, in substance, the history of the case as hereinbefore recited, pleads the pardon issued to him, and denies the jurisdiction and authority of the trial court to set aside or cancel such pardon. The warden alleges the validity of the petitioner’s imprisonment and the decree canceling the pardon. To so much of the warden’s answer as pleads the invalidity of the pardon and its eaneellatioil by the decree of the district court, the petitioner demurred, the ground thereof, briefly stated, being that the district court was wholly -without jurisdiction to entertain such a proceeding or to- enter such decree. The trial judge sustained the position of the petitioner that the decree purporting to cancel the pardon is void for want of jurisdiction in' the district court to entertain such a proceeding, and ordered his release from imprisonment under the conviction and sentence passed upon him for the crime of rape. From this ruling and order, the defendant appeals. It should here, perhaps, be said that the petitioner ,was also convicted upon another indictment, charging him with the crime of perjury, and sentenced to imprisonment for ten years on account of such offense, and that, upon his discharge under the writ of habeas corpus from imprisonment for rape, he was remanded to the custody of the warden, to serve the remainder of his term of imprisonment for perjury.
I. The vital inquiry upon this appeal is the question *1250whether the district court of Ida County had authority or jurisdiction to adjudge the pardon void. If that court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, its decree purporting to cancel the - pardon was void, and constitutes no adjudication against the1 petitioner’s right to the benefit of the executive clemency. The question so presented calls for some investigation into the nature and effect of a pardon by constituted authority. By the Constitution of the United States, the president is made the repository of executive- power, and. given unlimited authority to grant pardons for all offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment; and this is held to include all such offenses before as well as after conviction. In practically every state Constitution, a power of pardon is vested in the governor of the state; though in most -states, as in Iowa, the power is limited to the granting of pardons after conviction. Constitution of Iowa, Article 4, Section 16. Authority to pardon after conviction is generally interpreted as meaning at any time after a verdict of guilty has been returned by a trial jury, even though judgment be not entered, or an appeal be pending. State v. Alexander, 76 N. C. 231; Commonwealth v. Lockwood, 109 Mass. 323. Under our republican system, government is vested in three departments: legislative, executive, and judicial. By our own Constitution, Article 3, Section 1, after a recognition of this fundamental feature, it is expressly provided that “no person charged with the exei-cise of powers properly belonging to one of these departments shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others, except in cases hereinafter expressly directed or permitted.” By the same instrument, the “supreme executive power” is vested in the governor, and the judicial power is vested in the courts. By the express terms of the Constitution, as we have seen, the power of pardon is vested in the executive department. It is not derived from or by any act on the part of the legislative department, nor can it be impaired or destroyed by any interference by the judicial department. It comes directly to the executive by gift or endowment from the sovereign people, the expression of which is embodied in the Constitution itself. In the language of the Supreme Court of the United States, in Kendall v. United States, 12 Pet. (U. S.) *1251364, 426, speaking of tbe authority of the executive within his department, it is said that:
“So far as his powers cure derived from the Constitution, he is beyond the reach of any other department, except m the mode provided by the Constitution through the impeaching power.”
An official act by the executive department which involves the exercise of discretion or judgment will not be reviewed or controlled by the courts. Noble v. Union River Log. R. Co., 147 United States 165; Decatur v. Paulding, 14 Pet. (U. S.) *497; New Orleans v. Paine, 147 U. S. 261; Bates v. Taylor, 87 Tenn. 319; Fleming v. Guthrie, 3 L. R. A. 53.
In State v. Forkner, 94 Iowa 1, 18, this court said:
“The power to pardon * * * is undoubtedly a prerogative of the executive.”
A prerogative is “a right to exercise a power or privilege in priority to, or to the exclusion of, others; a right attached to an office or rank to exercise a special privilege or function; an official and hereditary right which may be asserted without question, and for the exercise of which there is no responsibility or accountability, except to the sovereign power, as to the fact and the manner of its exercise.” Webster’s Dictionary.
“It means an exclusive or peculiar privilege; prior and indefeasible right; fundamental and essential possession; used generally of an official or hereditary right which may be asserted without question, and for the exercise of which there is no responsibility or accountability as to the fact and the manner of its exercise.” 22 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law (2d Ed.) 1178.
In the mother country, the prerogative ok pardon was hereditary in the reigning sovereign; but in our form of government, it is usually attached by constitutional provision to the chief executive, in whom it is “hereditary” in the sense that it passes to and vests in the successive occupants of that office. It is of like constitutional quality and exclusiveness with the other prerogative powers committed to the executive hands: as, for example, the right to be commander in chief of the militia, army, and navy of the state (Constitution of Iowa, Article 4, Section 7); the right to transact all executive business with the officers of the government (Section 8) ; the right to fill by ap*1252pointment vacancies occurring in state offices (Section 10); the right to summon the legislature to meet in special session (Section 11); the right to adjourn the general assembly when the two houses fail to agree (Section 13); and the right to approve or to veto bills passed'by the legislature (Article 3, Section 16). All these powers, except the last one enumerated, are in the same section with the grant of the power to pardon. With not one of these prerogatives has either the legislature or the judicial department any right or power to interfere or control. The executive may prove wanting in ability to properly exercise these great powers; he may prove unworthy of the high honor bestowed upon him, may be swayed by evil motive or corrupt consideration in the discharge of these duties: yet the validity of his official acts, within the scope of his constitutional powers, cannot be questioned by legislature or court. True, he may subject himself to impeachment and removal from office; but no action at law or in equity will lie to set aside or avoid or undo anything he may have done in the discharge of the constitutional functions of his official position. For illustration, let us suppose that it were susceptible of proof that a governor had been influenced by a bribe to approve a vicious piece of legislation, or to call an extra session of the legislature, or to appoint a given person to a vacancy in a state office, — no lawyer would say that the state or the attorney-general or a county attorney or a private citizen could maintain action to annul the legislation so corruptly enacted, or to cancel the summons to the general assembly, or to set aside the appointment to the vacancy. And if a grossly corrupt official act cannot be so remedied, it follows, for a still stronger'reason, that such an act cannot be judicially set aside on the plea that the governor was deceived or misled thereto by mistake or by false information.. The governor is, of course, not immune against,criminal prosecution or impeachment, if the facts justify it; but his acts done within the scope of his prerogative powers stand secure against attack or question by the courts; nor can they be avoided by judicial inquiry into the motives which prompted them.. To repeat the language already quoted from the United States Supreme Court in the Kendall case, supra: So far as the powers of the executive are defined in the Constitution, “he is beyond the reach of any other *1253department, except in the mode presented by the Constitution ihro%i*gh the impeaching power.”
In our own Constitution, as we have seen, the three coordinate and independent departments of the government are expressly provided for, and the attempt by either department to exercise powers properly belonging to either of the others is expressly forbidden. The constitutional powers vested in the executive are not left to inference. A specific enumeration of most of them is found in the 22 sections of Article 4 of that instrument, and among them is the power to grant pardons. The immunity of executive acts from judicial review or control extends to each and every one of these constitutional prerogative powers, — to the power of pardon no less than to the power to appoint a judge to fill a vacancy in the membership of this court or of the district court. Speaking of this power, Mr. Justice Field, of the Federal Supreme Court, says:
“The power thus conferred is unlimited, with the exception stated. It extends to every offense known to .the law. * * * This power of the president is not subject to legislative control. Congress can neither limit the effect of his pardon nor exclude from its exercise any class of offenders. * * * It is not within the constitutional power of Congress thus to inflict punishment beyond the reach of executive clemency.” Ex parte Garland, 71 U. S. 333, 380 (18 L. Ed. 366, 370).
The same court has further said that:
“The legislature cannot change the effect of a pardon any more than the executive can change a law.” United States v. Klein, 80 U. S. 128 (20 L. Ed. 519).
Says the Ohio court:.
“Any attempt of the courts to interfere with the governor in the exercise of the pardoning power would be manifest usurpation of authority. The nature of our government forbids it. The long contest as to the rightful authority of government is in some respects ended. In our national and state Constitutions, the powers of the three branches of government, the legislative, the executive, and the judicial, are clearly defined and limited, and the important truth is at length understood, that each can best preserve the jurisdiction and power confided to it by carefully abstaining from all interference with the rightful *1254authority of the others.” Knapp v. Thomas, 39 O. St. 377, at 391.
On the general subject of the independence of the several departments of government, Judge Cooley has said:
“Our government is one whose powers have been carefully apportioned between* three distinct departments, which emanate alike from the people, have their powers alike limited and defined by the Constitution, are of equal dignity, and, within their respective spheres of action, equally independent. * * * This division is accepted as a necessity in all free governments, and the very apportionment of power to one department is understood to be a prohibition of its exercise by either of the others. The executive is forbidden to exercise judicial power by the same implication which forbids the courts to take upon themselves his duties.” Sutherland v. Governor, 29 Mich. 320, 324.
The same distinguished author has further said:
“Where complete power to pardon is conferred upon the executive, it may be doubted if the legislature can impose restrictions, under the name of rules or regulations. * * * The executive, in the proper discharge of his duties, under the Constitution, is as independent of the courts as he is of the legislature.” Cooley on Constitutional Limitations (5th Ed.) 138.
And again, the same court, construing a constitutional provision substantially the same as ours, says:
“The Constitution in express terms lodges the pardoning power with the governor, and with it the co-ordinate branches have nothing to do, except as the legislature may provide by law how applications may be made, and is entitled to a report of such action.” Rich v. Chamberlain, 104 Mich. 436 (62 N. W. 584).
Chief Justice Marshall defines a pardon as “an act of grace proceeding from the power intrusted with the execution of the laws.” United States v. Wilson, 7 Pet. (U. S.) 150.
To these quotations we may further add the following from the Missouri court:
“All the departments of our government are confined in their operations. They have prescribed limits, which they cannot transcend. * * * Although questions have sometimes arisen whether a power properly belonged to one department of *1255government or another, yet there is no contrariety of opinion as to the department of the government to which the power of pardoning offenses appertains. All unite in pronouncing it an executive function. * * * The justice or propriety of the act of pardon has nothing to do with the question of its constitutionality. 1 ’
And speaking of the governor’s authority in such cases, the court there further says:
“He is the sole judge of the propriety of granting a pardon.” State v. Sloss, 25 Mo. 291.
Directly in point is the holding of the Wisconsin court as to the independence of the executive in the exercise of his constitutional powers. It says:
“The policy of oúr Constitution and laws has assigned’ to the different departments of the state government distinct and different duties, in the performance of which it is intended that they shall be entirely independent of each other; so that whatever power or duty is expressly given to or imposed upon the executive department is altogether free from the interference of the other branches of the government. Especially is this the case where the subject is committed to the discretion of the chief executive officer, either by the Constitution or by the laws. So long as the power is vested in him, it is to be by him exercised, and no other branch of the government can control its exercise. But it would be alike unbecoming and unwarranted on our part to inquire into the motives of the governor in the exercise of a discretion given to him alone, in any case. He is responsible for his acts in such case, not to the courts, but to the people.” Attorney General v. Brown, 1 Wis. 442.
There is no pertinent authority or precedent for holding that a full and unconditional pardon, executed in due form by the governor and delivered to and accepted by the convicted prisoner, may be attacked and set aside in a judicial proceeding .on complaint of a private citizen or public prosecutor. It is, of course, well settled that the executive may grant a pardon subject to such • conditions as he may see fit to attach thereto and make a part of the instrument or order which sets the pris-" oner at liberty; and it 'is equally well settled that violation of or neglect to perform such conditions by the beneficiary works a *1256forfeiture of such pardon, and he may be reimpriSoned, to serve out the term of his sentence. Arthur v. Craig, 48 Iowa 264, 267; State v. Hunter, 124 Iowa 569. Nearly all of the many cases in which courts have been called upon to consider the matter of executive pardons have been of this character, where the question has been upon the validity and effect of the conditions.
The English cases in which the authority of courts to annul' a pardon is considered are, as a rule, those arising under an act of Parliament, 27th Edward III, a statute which has never been recognized as a part of the common law of this country. Moreover, the case here presented is in no manner controlled by common-law rules, as might possibly be the case if the authority to pardon were of common-law origin. But such authority exists in the United States and in this state by virtue of our written Constitution, framed and adopted as the expression of the sovereign will of the people. The English government differs fundamentally from our own. It has no trinity of equal coordinate departments, and a practice or precedent may there be recognized which would be wholly foreign to the genius of our own institutions. The power of pardon, as known in this country, is the creature of the Constitution, and to that instrument alone do we look for its limits and for authority for its exercise. This is an important distinction which has sometimes been overlooked, and is manifestly overlooked when courts or text-writers cite English cases as authority for the proposition that the courts may invade the province of the executive and set aside a pardon granted by him. This situation has had comparatively recent attention in a very elaborate opinion by the Texas court, where, conceding the general propriety of consulting English precedents in so far as they are applicable to our conditions and not inconsistent with our theory and form of government, it is said:
“But when inconsistent with our system, they have no application. In England, the king was sovereign, and in him all power was supposed to rest; and the history of that country for many years — yea, centuries — teaches that a constant war was waged to wrench from him certain power, by grant of charters and by acts of parliament guaranteeing to the people certain liberties and certain rights. The power possessed by the courts flowed from the king. * * * There were no three separate *1257and distinct agencies of government, wholly independent of each other, with their powers and duties defined by the written law of the land, as with uá. English liberties were the growth of ages, while ours sprung into full bloom with the close of the Revolution and the adoption of our Constitution.” Snodgrass v. State, 67 Tex. Cr. Rep. 615 (162 S. W. 162).
See, also, Diehl v. Rodgers, 169 Pa. 316 (32 Atl. 424), where it is said that the king’s prerogative of pardon is subject to change or modification by act of parliament; while, under 'the American Constitution, it is independent of legislative control.
The Constitution speaks for itself, and the powers thereby committed to any department of the government are not to be limited or construed away by reference to precedents having their origin under another and fundamentally different system of government. In all the precedents cited to our attention by counsel, there is not one in which any court, Federal or state, has ever entertained an action in equity or at law to set aside or annul an unconditional pardon, duly executed by the pardoning power and delivered to and accepted by the beneficiary. There are a few instances in habeas corpus proceedings where the effect or validity of a pardon has been contested on the ground of fraud in its procurement; but even in®this class of cases, where the pardon has been adjudged void it has been because of some fraud or defect apparent on the face of the pardon itself, or because the instrument was neVer delivered. Such was the case in Commonwealth v. Halloway, 44 Pa. St. 210 (84 Am. Dec. 431); State v. McIntire, 46 N. C. 1 (59 Am. Dec. 566); and State v. Leak, 5 Ind. 359. It is true that, in certain habeas corpus eases where the courts have refused to question the validity of a pardon collaterally, it has been suggested by way of dictum that, if such question v?ere to be raised, it should be by direct attack. Territory v. Richardson, 9 Okla. 579 (60 Pac. 244). It is quite universally held that the governor himself, having issued an unconditional pardon, fair and regular upon its face, and having delivered it, cannot thereafter revoke or recall it because he later becomes convinced that he acted unadvisedly. Knapp v. Thomas, 39 Ohio St. 377; Ex parte Reno, 66 Mo. 266; Ex parte Williams, 149 N. C. 436; Ex parte Powell, 73 Ala. 517; In re Biegle, 7 Ohio N. P. 561; State v. Nichols, 26 *1258Ark. 74. Nor is the validity of a pardon affected because the governor granted it without the advice or consent of a board of parole. People v. Marsh, 125 Mich. 410 (51 L. R. A. 461) ; In re Edymoin, 8 How. Pr. (N. Y.) 478. As is repeatedly held in the cases already cited, the motive or intent which may have moved the governor to grant and deliver an unconditional pardon is not open to judicial inquiry. If wo may except the somewhat intemperate discussion indulged in by the Oklahoma court in Henry v. State, 10 Okla. Cr. 369 (136 Pac. 982), provoked by an existing bitter controversy between that tribunal and the governor of the state, there will not be found in the whole range of the case law of the land a single instance in which the judicial department of the government has assumed to inquire into or denounce the acts of a governor in the exercise of such an executive function. The universally accepted rule is well and forcibly expressed in 20 Ruling Case Law 533, as follows:
“An executive may grant a pardon for good reasons or bad, or for any reason at all, and his act is final and irrevocable. Even for the grossest abuse of this discretionary power the law affords no remedy; with the reasons which actuated the executive, the courts have no concern. The Constitution clothes him with power to grant pardons, and this.power is beyond the control, or even the legitimate criticism, of the judiciary. Whatever may have been the reasons for granting the pardon, the courts cannot, decline t*o give it effect, if -it be valid upon its face.” ■ •
This statement of the law is well supported by the authorities already cited, and is fully justified by many other precedents, among which we may enumerate Ex parte Hunt, 10 Ark. 284, where it is said:
“What the fa'cts were upon- which the executive acted in this case, we have no means of knowing, nor is it our province, in the slightest degree, to scrutinize them or question their correctness. ' ’
In Flavell’s Case, 8 Watts & S. (Pa.) 197, it was said that the court was bound to accept the executive action as controlling and conclusive. In In re Moore, 4 Wyo. 98 (31 Pac. 980), it was held that the sole inquiry by the court was merely as to the jurisdiction of the governor, and that it could not inquire *1259whether the pardoning power had been exercised judiciously. In Ex parte Crump, 10 Okla. Cr. 133 (135 Pac. 428), the court declares that “an abuse, of the pardoning power does not authorize the courts to decline to give effect to a pardon,” and that “no court has the power to review the action of the executive in granting a pardon.” In Martin v. State, 21 Tex. App. 1 (17 S. W. 430), the court said:
“With the reasons which actuated the executive to grant the pardon the courts have no concern.”
In Ex parte Hawkins, 10 Okla. Cr. 396 (136 Pac. 991), the Oklahoma court again states the rule to be that the ‘ ‘ courts have no right to substitute their discretion for the discretion of the governor or the acting governor, or to nullify any of his official acts, ’ ’ except in ease of usurpation of power not granted him. In the Greathouse case, 2 Abb. (U. S.) 382, it is said that, in construixxg a pardon, either public or private, the court must “dismiss all knowledge of the intentions of the pardoning power, except such as is to be derived from the terms of the act-of grace itself.” As bearing in the same direction, see State v. Ward & Briggs, 9 Heisk. (Tenn.) 100; Locklin v. State (Tex. Cr. App.), 75 S. W. 305; Opinion of Justices, 120 Mass. 600; 14 Law Notes 65; 20 Yale L. J. 131. To hold otherwise is to disregard a fundamental principle of our government.
II. If we understand the position of counsel for the appellant, they seek to avail themselves of the “decree” of the district court pux-porting to caxieel axxd axxnul the pardoxx, as a' prior adjudieatioxx of the issue we have beexx discussing. To give it the effect of axx adjudieatioxx, the court proixouxxcixxg the decree must have had jurisdictioxx of the subject-matter, as well as of the persoxi of the prisoner. It is to be admitted that the wardexx had custody of the prisoner axxd, we presume, produced him before the court; but if the court had no jurisdiction of the subject-matter, the decree bixxds xxo oxxe. Jurisdiction, as the-word is used in this eonixectioxx, is the power vested in the court by the Coxxstitutioxx or by statute to take eogxxizanee of the subject-matter of a litigation axxd of the pax-ties brought before it, axxd to hear, try, and determine the issues of law and of fact and render judgmexit thereoxx.
*1260“It is the power to hear and determine the subject-matter in controversy in the suit before the court.” Riggs v. Johnson County, 6 Wall. (U. S.) 166, 187.
“Jurisdiction over the subject-matter is the right of the court to exercise judicial power over that class of cases.” Brown on Jurisdiction, Section 1-a.
Ordinarily, jurisdiction of the person may be given by consent or may be waived, but jurisdiction of the subject-matter cannot be given by consent, nor can objection thereto be waived. A judgment or decree entered without jurisdiction of the subject-matter is void, and works no estoppel or adjudication against anyone, and may be impeached collaterally. Scott v. Babcock, 3 G. Greene 133, 150; Melhop & Kingman v. Doane & Co., 31 Iowa 397, 400; Kline v. Kline, 57 Iowa 386; Porter v. Welsh, 117 Iowa 144, 146; Walters v. Steamboat, 24 Iowa 192, 199; Walker v. Kynett, 32 Iowa 524, 529. Indeed, the rule to this effect may be said to be elementary. Our discussion of the present case in the preceding paragraph of this opinion demonstrates beyond all reasonable question that the courts are without power or jurisdiction to review or control or set aside the action of the executive in the exercise of his prerogative power of pardon, and that the decree by which such power is affirmed or sought to be enforced is a nullity, and does not operate to deprive the petitioner of the benefit of the executive clemency. We are clear that such decree is not available to the appellant as a prior adjudication. The same may be said concerning the former hearing and order of remand upon habeas corpus before Hon. E. G. Albert, judge of the district court: not that said judge exceeded his jurisdiction, or that his order of remand was void for want of authority in the premises to make it, but that it is the well settled rule that the doctrine of res adjudicata is not applicable to orders of remand in habeas corpus proceed-ings. Rogers v. Superior Court, 145 Cal. 88 (78 Pac. 344); People v. Brady, 56 N. Y. 182; Weir v. Marley, 99 Mo. 484; In re Snell, 31 Minn. 110 (16 N. W. 692); In re Blair, 4 Wis. 521, 532; 15 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law (2d Ed.) 211; Ex parte Kaine, 3 Blatch. (U. S.) 1; 9 Encyc. Pl. & Pr. 1070; Brown on Jurisdiction, Section 111; Hawes on Jurisdiction, Section 181.
III. It will be observed that, in the discussion of this ap*1261peal, no question of the possible innocence of the petitioner of the crime of which he was convicted has been raised. For the purposes of this case, he is presumed to have been guilty, and to have been duly and properly convicted. Indeed, his acceptance of the pardon and his pleading thereof in this proceeding are, in legal effect, an admission of guilt. His pardon is a matter of grace, and not of right, and if valid, it operates as a forgiveness of the crime as an offense against the law of the state, and releases him from the penalties and forfeitures which the law attached to his conviction. The judicial power and authority of the state government have been vigorously and faithfully exercised, to secure his conviction and punishment. Its duty has been done; its jurisdiction has been exercised to its limits. Its judgment is beyond the possibility of reversal. Its mission, so far as it relates to that crime, is ended. Whether the punishment shall be literally inflicted as adjudged, and the convict remain within the prison walls the remainder of his days, is not a judicial question. That responsibility is committed to and placed upon another and independent department of the government. 'Excepting only in cases of impeachment, every conviction of crime and every sentence pronounced thereon is subject to the possibility of being removed or alleviated,by the clemency of the governor. This provision, with some variation, has been embodied in the Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of practically every state in our Union. There are many reasons, which we will not stop to discuss, why the power to pardon after conviction should be recognized and lodged in some department of government. It may be said that the power is a dangerous one, and liable to abuse; and this is true, though perhaps no more so than is any other' power of government, all of which must, in ultimate analysis, largely depend on the authority and discretion vested in individual public servants. That the history of our national and state governments discloses very few instances where the power of pardon has been seriously abused, demonstrates that public interests have neither sustained nor are likely to sustain material injury in its practical application. The danger of a governor’s being imposed upon by an artful applicant for pardon is, in these times, more imaginary than real. It is to be presumed that a petitioner for pardon and *1262his friends will marshal all the available mitigating circumstances at their command, and make use of all the arguments and inferences which they think may influence the executive mind to leniency; but it is quite incredible that they can far mislead a person of the presumed capacity and experience of a man holding such a position, by any radical misrepresentation of matters and things which can be verified or disproved by the record of the very case he is asked -to consider. This thought is expressed by the court in State v. Alexander, 76 N. C. 231, where, after contrasting conditions in England with our own, it is said :
“But under our Constitution and statute, the person charged must be brought before the public in a public trial and face his accusers, and all the facts must appear and the jury find him guilty, and the court must sentence him. If then he will ask for pardon, he cannot deceive the pardoning power. The public are in possession of the facts, and can resist his application. ’ ’
To like effect is the case of Whitcomb v. State, 14 Ohio 234, where the sufficiency of a pardon offered in evidence was challenged on the ground that it had been obtained by fraud, and the court says:
“If the governor was imposed upon by artful and fraudulent representations, it is a question between him and his constituents; but with which the plaintiff had no concern, and to which no objection from him would lie.”
The governor in this case was neither a child nor an imbecile. He was himself an experienced and able lawyer, and as such, he knew that in the trial court there was a complete record of all the proceedings, including a -full and complete record of all the testimony; and even if we were authorized to go into that question at all, we would be bound to assume that he did not neglect the opportunity to satisfy himself whether the circumstances were such as to justify his action. Neither Constitution nor statute authorizes the court to force upon him an unasked guardianship, nor to insist upon protecting him against an alleged fraud of which he does not complain. The reasons which influence him to a pardon may not be such as would command the approval of the court or the prosecutor or members *1263of the public at large. It is sufficient that he is satisfied therewith. His is the prerogative and his the responsibility.
The theory or> argument which admits the indeioendence of the executive authority in exercising the power of pardon, and yet asserts judicial authority on any ground whatever to control or nullify such action or inquire into the reasons or motives which actuate tjie governor in exercising it, is self-contradictory. The two propositions are wholly incompatible. This self-evident truth is not to be evaded or minimized by reference to the inherent power of the court to defeat fraud. That inherent power is not without limit. It cannot transcend or disregard the constitutional barriers which separate-the functions and powers conferred upon the several governmental departments, legislative, executive, and judicial. For example, the enactment of a statute by the legislature may be tainted with gross fraud, bribery, or other corrupt influences; yet the judicial department cannot nullify the act on that ground. The same Constitution which clothes the governor with the power of pardon also confers upon him the power to approve an act of legislation; yet no court would assume to inquire into the reasons influencing- him to give his signature to the approval of a bill passed by the lawmaking power. For. example, the legislature frequently assumes to legalize the proceedings of a school district or municipal corporation or drainage project, thereby validating the levy of taxes or the expenditure of public funds. Now assume that persons interested in securing such legislation induce the governor to approve it, by fraud or false statements or by suppression of the truth, and that such approval would not have been given, had he not been deceived or misled; yet no lawyer will advise a client that the validity of the statute can be challenged on that ground. This is so because it is absolutely essential to the preservation of the complete independence of the several constitutional departments of government upon which the whole scheme of our republican institutions is made to rest. The prerogatives and independent functions of the several departments are only those which are enumerated in the written Constitution, in express words or by necessary implication. Among those pertaining to the executive, as already pointed out, is that of pardon. Its rightful exercise involves no retrial of the prisoner’s guilt *1264or innocence. It is not made contingent upon proof of any question' of fact. It is an act of grace, an act of purely executive discretion, and may be granted or denied for any reason, or without the assignment of any reason; and its grant or denial is not subject to the review or control of the'judiciary or legislature, any more than is the executive action of the governor in approving or disapproving an act of the legislature, or in making an appointment to fill a vacancy in a state office. A fraud “upon” the governor in inducing or persuading him to exercise any of his constitutional prerogatives is no more the subject of judicial cognizance than is the fraud “of” the governor himself. Even in the courts of law and equity, where no question of prerogative is involved, there comes a time when a charge or plea of fraud will not be considered. For example, the court having exercised its proper jurisdiction in the hearing and determination of an issue presented, and having pronounced its decree or judgment thereon, which stands unreversed, it cannot be set aside or annulled on the charge that it was rendered upon false or forged testimony. Croghan v. Umplebaugh, 179 Iowa 1187; Bradbury v. Wells, 138 Iowa 673, 677; Kelly v. Cummens, 143 Iowa 148; Guth v. Bell, 153 Iowa 517; Sullivan v. Herrick, 161 Iowa 148, 155; Aschan v. McDermott, 164 Iowa 750, 759; Sudbury v. Sudbury, 179 Iowa 1046. This is so held upon the theory that, the tribunal having jurisdiction of the matter having once heard the evidence and presumably passed upon the sufficiency and veracity of the showing made, in the manner required by law, the judgment entered thereon is a finality, not open to impeachment by proof that the evidence was, in fact, false or mistaken. The principle which forbids such impeachment is even less persuasive than that which makes a pardon, once duly executed, delivered, and accepted, immune against attack by any person or authority representing another and distinct department of government. It being conceded, as indeed it must be, that a pardon is a matter wholly within the uncontrolled discretion of the governor, and that his reasons for exercising the power need not be satisfactory to any other person than himself, it follows of necessity that, when such pardon is produced by the prisoner, the only permissible or possible ground upon which any court or officer can refuse to honor it *1265is to challenge its genuineness, by showing that it was never executed by the governor, or that it was never delivered by his authority or consent, or that it has never been accepted by the prisoner. In this case, neither ground of challenge is shown or claimed by the appellant. On the contrary, it is shown without dispute that the instrument of pardon is in due form and wholly unconditional, and that it was voluntarily executed by the governor and by him duly delivered to the prisoner, who accepted it; and its validity cannot be affected or destroyed by the judgment or decree of any court.
In all this, there is no just occasion for mourning over the spectacle thus presented of “judicial inefficiency.’’ Only those who forget that the courts are no exception to the rule applicable to other departments of government, in that their powers are hedged about by constitutional restrictions which they cannot legitimately disregard, will be disposed to indulge in any regret on that score. Unlimited power in the judiciary is no more to be desired than in the executive or legislative domain; and when'the courts have exercised their powers to the constitutional limits, it becomes them, no less than it becomes every other governmental agency, to yield obedience thereto.
“Whether it would be competent for the legislature to enact a statute by which a pardon obtained by fraud may, with the concurrence of the executive, be avoided, or set aside, we do not undertake to say; for we have no such statute. It may be said, however, that a statute of that character, providing for some proceeding in aid of the executive power, would, perhaps, not be constitutionally objectionable (see Knapp v. Thomas, 39 O. St. 377, 392); but it surely cannot be said that, with or without a statute, the court can entertain a proceeding, either at law or in equity, in hostility to the exercise of the pardoning power of the executive.
To the foregoing, I desire only to add that the majority opinion, when reduced to lowest terms, rests upon the assumptions: (1) That the district court of Ida County had jurisdiction in equity to cancel the pardon; and (2) that the case does not present the question of interference by the judiciary with the official functions of the executive. The two propositions are only variant phases of the idea stated in the second. In taking *1266this for granted, the majority begs the one vital question in the case, and the desired result could as well or better have been announced in an opinion of a single page. If this is to be our position, then why seek to add strength to the conclusions by citing the rule that the decree of a court having jurisdiction of the person and subject-matter may not be questioned collaterally? Who denies it? A citation from the multiplication table would be equally true, and equally without point in this case. The sole question here is whether the court entering the decree did have jurisdiction of the subject-matter, and that depends upon the further question whether the case before us “presents the question of interference by the judiciary with the act of the executive.” The majority says it does not, and thus reaches the end from the beginning by overleaping and ignoring all the barriers which constitutional provisions and the multitudinous decisions of practically every court of this country have furnished for our guidance. Why take an excursion into ancient history to quote Blackstone, who wrote of the law of a-kingdom in which the independence of the several departments of government was unknown? Why go beyond and outside of our Constitution, which has confided the pardoning power to the discretion of the executive, and has in so many words provided that no person charged with the exercise of powers properly belonging to one of the departments of government shall exercise any function appertaining to either of the others? Why point to the word “canceled,” written upon the pardon by a clerk of the trial court, as if that in itself is entitled to weight upon the vital questions raised'by this appeal 2 Why pile up incidental remarks and dicta of courts in cases in which this constitutional question was neither involved nor decided? And above all other things, why does the majority pass in utter silence the scores of adjudications by the courts of every state having occasion to discuss these matters which deny to the judiciary the right to overstep the constitutional boundary of its own department, to inquire into or annul the exercise by another department of its discretionary powers? This question is not to be avoided by any play upon words, or by refining upon the distinction between fraud of or by the governor and fraud upon the governor. Camouflage it as we may, whether the alleged *1267fraud be by the governor or upon the governor, the inescapable result is, when stated in plain terms, that the judiciary assumes the right to transgress the boundary between the departments, and there, uninvited and unsolicited by the executive, annul, set aside, and hold for naught the official act of such executive in a matter which the Constitution has committed solely and exclusively to his discretion. This is sought to be justified by the argument that, if this right be denied, fraud may go unpunished, because of the conceded rule that a pardon once executed by the governor and delivered cannot be recalled or canceled by him. Even if this were so, it affords no reason for an assumption by the court of an authority which the Constitution denies to it. The courts are not and were not intended to be vested with absolute or rmiversal authority and power, at the expense of the authority and power constitutionally vested in the other departments. Again, it does not follow that, because the governor may not play fast and loose with the pardoning power, granting a pardon today and revoking it tomorrow, he is therefore without remedy, if his clemency is imposed upon by fraud or deceit. If he discovers such fraud or deceit, and is disposed to waive the affront and permit the pardon to stand, no other person or authority may rightfully object; but after he has discovered it, there is no constitutional provision or reason which prohibits him from applying to the court, and, on due notice to the holder of the pardon, asking a decree of cancellation of the grant; but, in the absence of any such complaint on his part, neither the court nor any public officer or citizen is entitled to assume or exercise powers of guardianship over the executive, or to interfere in any manner, upon any pretense, in the exercise of the executive discretion.
The order- appealed from should be affirmed.
Arthur, J., concurs in the foregoing dissent.