Opinion of the court b?
JUDGE PAYNTER.Reversing.
In March, 1903, a vacancy occurred in the office of police-judge of Nicholasville, a city of the fourth class, by tbej death of the incumbent, T. B. Crutcher. On the 20tli of that month the board of council appointed the appellant,, John Traynor, to fill the vacancy, and issued to him a certificate of appointment. On the 23d of the same month if was presented to the Honorable J. C. W. Beckham, with the request that he, as Governor of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, issue to him a commission authorizing him to enter upon the discharge of the duties of the office to which he had been appointed. Tbe Governor declined to issue the commission. This action was instituted by the appellant against the appellee, asking that a mandamus be issued to compel the Governor to issue a commission to him.
Three questions are presented on this appeal: (1) Did. the board of council have the right to make the appointment? (2) Was it the duty of the Governor under the law to issue the commission? (3) Have the courts authority to issue a mandamus against the Governor to compel him to issue the commission?
Among other provisions, section 152 of the Constitution contains the following: /‘'Vacancies in all offices for the State at large, or for districts larger than a county, shall be filled by appointment of the Governor; all other appointments shall be made as may be prescribed by law.” *19It will be observed that by this provision of the Constitution the exclusive authority is conferred upon the Governor to fill vacancies in all offices for the State at large, or for ■districts larger than a county. Vacancies in other offices shall be filled as prescribed by law, which means in such manner as the General Assembly may provide. Section 3551, Kentucky Statues, reads as follows: “If a vacancy shall occur in any office which the board of council has the right to fill by appointment, such vacancy may be filled by the board for the remainder of the term of such vacant ■office.” Section 3552 reads as follows: “If a vacancy shall occur in any elective office,, including the office of councilman, •such vacancy shall be filled by the board of council, sub-' jeet to the provisions of the Constitution applicable thereto. If the election of any elective officer in cities of this1 .«-•lasa be contested, such contest shall be conducted and determined as provided by law in cases of the election of county officers.” The office of police judge may be filled by election or by appointment of the board of council, as the board may determine by ordinance. Section 3510, Kentucky Statutes. Where the board of council shall have provided by ordinance, as required by section 3510, for the appointment of police judge, then, under section 3551, if a vacancy occurs, the board of council may, by appointment, fill it for .the rest of the term. If ¡it is made elective, then the board of council is authorized to fill It subject to the provisions of -the Constitution applicable thereto. Whether the office of police judge is filled by election or by appointment, if a vacancy occurs therein, it is to be filled by the board of council. Sections 3551 and 3552 were enacted subsequent to -section 375S, which reads as follows: “The following officers shall have commissions Issued to them by the Governor, that is to say, secretary of *20state, register of the land office, auditor of public accounts,, treasurer, commissioner of agriculture, labor and statistics, superintendent of public instruction, judges of the-court of appeals, clerk of the court of appeals, judges of the circuit courts, county judges, police judges, railroad commissioners, Commonwealth’s attorney, justices of the peace,, notaries public, and all officers of the militia of rank and grade higher than and including the rank and grade off' captain. Should a vacancy occur in any of said offices, by-reason of the death, resignation or removal of the officer,, or from any other cause, or should a like vacancy occur in any other office where there is no provision of law for filling same, such vacancy shall be filled by the appointment, of the Governor, subject to the provisions of the Constitution applicable thereto.” As sections 3551 and 3552 provide-for the filling of a vacancy in the office of police judge,, they control, because -section 3758 only authorizes the Governor to fill a vacancy in the office of police judge “where-there is no provision of law for filling the same.” It follows, therefore, the board of council had the -right to fill the vacancy.
When a police judge has been duly appointed -or elected,, it is made the duty of the Governor, by section 3758, to-issue such one a commission authorizing him to enter upon the discharge of the duties of the office; for it is written in that section that -certain officers (including police judges) “shall have commissions issued to them by the Governor.”'
The third and last question involved is more delicate and difficult of solution. It -is one upon which the supreme courts of the States of the Union hold widely divergent opinions, which have been expressed in a plausible, scholarly and forceful manner. These differences of -opinion result from the fact that our national and State govern-*21meats are divided into judicial, legislative and executive branches. To maintain the independence and efficiency of each, one must not usurp or encroach upon the rights of the others. Each must steadfastly pursue its constitutional and other duties with due regard and consideration of the other branches of government. In the matter of enacting laws, the legislative department is supreme, and the other branches must obey them. It is the business of the executive department to enforce the laws thus enacted. To determine whether legislative, enactments are violative of the organic law, to interpret the laws, and decide controversies is the peculiar province of the judiciary. It is no encroachment upon the rights of the Congress for the Federal courts to determine whether or not its 'enactments are constitutional. Those courts time and again have done so. Neither is it an encroachment upon the rights of the legislative branch of State governments for their courts to declare legislative acts to be in violation of State constitutions. State courts frequently do so-. The assertion of individual rights often calls in question the validity of legislative enactments, and the courts never allow an unconstitutional enactment to stand in the way of the enforcement of such rights. This court has likewise had 'in review executive acts in determining the rights of individuals, and has not failed to determine whether they were valid or invalid. In Bruce v. Fox, 1 Dana, 447, the court decided the act of the Governor in appointing Horatio Bruce Commonwealth’s attorney to be void. In Justices of Jefferson County v. Clark, 1 T. B. Mon., 86, it held the appointment by 'the Governor of a justice of the peace to be void. In Page v. Hardin, 8 B. Mon., 648, the court held invalid the act of the Governor declaring a vacancy in the office of the Secretary of State, and appointing another to fill it. The courts regard *22that they are acting within their appropriate sphere under our system of government when they pass upon the constitutionality of an act, or declare upon the validity of an act of the executive department. In those cases the court did not pretend to have direct control over the action of the legislative or of the executive departments. They passed upon the validity of the act affecting private rights. Attention has been called to instances of the exercise of judicial power over legislative and executive acts to show that the judiciary has in certain cases reviewed and held void such .acts.
We pass from the general observations to the question more directly before us. Tha supreme courts of some of the States have held that a mandamus will not lie to compel a Governor to perform a ministerial .act imposed by law, refusing to discriminate between those duties which are governmental and political in their character, involving discretion and judgment, and those which are ministerial, in the performance of which no judgment or discretion need be exercised. The supreme courts of other States discriminate between those duties which an© governmental or political in their character, involving discretion and judgment, and those which are ministerial, in the performance of which no judgment or discretion need be, exercised. In the latter view we concur. All courts agree that a mandamus will not lie against u Governor to compel the exercise of governmental, political, or discretionary powers. In Page, Second Auditor, v. Hardin, 47 Ky., 648, the court said: “Where, by the Constitution or by the law, the Governor has a discretionary power, or where on any ground his act is made conclusive as to .all rights involved, it is, of course, not within the province of a court to inquire into the propriety or impropriety of the act. Such a power *23controls all rights which it may affect, and a properly authenticated act done in pursuance of it can not be questioned, for the reason that there can be no legal right coming in conflict with it. Rights dependent upon a discretionary power can not exist in opposition to it,.but terminate at its will. The question, however, whether there is such a power in a given case, or whether any particular power or act is of the character referred to, is a judicial question, whenever the right in litigation before a judicial tribunal depends upon it and requires its decision.” When the law imposes a duty on the chief executive of a State, which is ministerial in character, involving neither discretion nor judgment, a mandamus will lie to compel him to perform it. Section 477, Civil Code, reads as follows: “The writ of mandamus, as treated of in this chapter, is an order of a court of competent and original jurisdiction, commanding an executive or ministerial officer to perform an act, or omit to do an act, the performance or omission of which is enjoined by law; and is granted on the motion of the party aggrieved, or of the Commonwealth when the public interest is affected.” The language of the Code embraces all ministerial and executive officers. The Governor is not excepted from its operation. No man is or should be above the law. That he should not be is in accord with the spirit of a republican form of government. There is no royal prerogative or official position in this country which exempts one from yielding obeisance to the law. There is nothing in the Constitution which forbids the suing of the Governor. While courts can not control executive acts of the Governor, or executive powers conferred upon him, yet they can control ministerial powers. Ministerial power is certainly inferior to judicial power. If one officer can be controlled in its exercise, why not another ? It may be conferred up*24on one person as well as another. Whether it he conferred upon a Governor of a State, or some minor official is the recipient of it, the exercise of it does not require the exercise of judgment or discretion any more by the one than the other. The question as to whether a mandamus will lie is not determined by the office of the person against whom it is sought, but the nature of the thing to be done. In Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch, 170, 2 L. Ed., 60, the count said: “It is not by the office of the person to whom the writ is directed, but the nature of the thing to be done, that the propriety or impropriety of issuing 'a mandamus is to be determined.” It is no more an invasion of the executive department whether the writ be issued against the chief executive than it is when issued against a subordinate executive officer. The difference is only in degree, not in principle. In Great Britain the king is sued, and it is said he always complies with the judgment of the court. The State and Federal Governments are governments of laws, not of men. The citizen only gets the shadow of civil liberty, not in its essence, when he has a legal right and is denied the right to enforce it. The greatest duty of government is to afford such redress. In Kendall v. United States, 12 Pet, 610, 9 L. Ed., 1181, the court recognized the doctrine stated by Chief Justice Marshall in Marbury v. Madison, and said: “The mandamus does not seek to control the Postmaster General in the discharge of any official duty paiffaking in any respect of an executive character, but to enforce the performance of a mere ministerial act, which neither he nor the President had any authority to deny or control. . . . There are certain political duties imposed upon many officers in the executive department, the discharge of which are under the direction of the President. But it would be an alarming doctrine that Con*25gress could not impose upon an executive officer any duty they may think proper, which is not repugnant to any rights secured and protected by tha Constitution; and in such cases the duty and responsibility grows out of and is subject to the control of the law, and not to the direction of the President. And. this is emphatically the case where the duty enjoined is of a mere ministerial character. The law relating to mandamus against a public officer is well settled in the abstract, the only doubt which arises being whether the facts regarding a particular case bring it within the law which permits the writ to be issued, where a mere ministerial duty is imposed upon the executive officer, which duty he is bound to perform without any further question. If he refuse under such circumstances, mandamus will lie to compel him to perform his duty.” In Page v. Hardin, the court .said: “There can be no reasonable ground for denying it the power and duty of declaring upon the legal validity of any act of the executive department, whether done by an inferior or by the supreme executive officer. The executive department and all its officers are as ■ much bound by the constitutional laws as the legislative, and have no more power to violate the rights of individuals secured by the laws. The power, obviously judicial, of .ascertaining and enforcing the legal rights of individuals, is, in effect, the power of protecting those rights from violation by the act or authority either of individuals or of the legislative or executive departments; and it necessarily involves the function of deciding, in every case properly before it, what are the legal rights of the parties, and how far in point of law — that is, under this constitution and laws — those rights have been affected by any and every act relied on for their .support or destruction.” In United States v. Blaine, 139 U. S., 306-319, 11 Sup. Ct., *26607, 35 L. Ed., 183, the court said: “The writ of mandamus can not lie in a case where its effect is to direct or control the head of an executive department in the discharge of an executive duty involving the exercise of judgment or discretion. When, by special statute or otherwise, a mere ministerial duty is imposed upon the executive officers of the government — that is, a service which they ai’e bound to perform without further question — then, if they refuse, the mandamus may be issued to compel them.”
By some of the courts which hold that a mandamus will not lie it is urged that, if the Governor opposes the judgment of the court, it can not be 'enforced, because he has entire control of the militia. A court should not anticipate that the Governor will not obey its judgment. If there was a well-grounded fear that a Governor would resist the enforcement of the judgment, that should not excuse the court for a failure to perform its duty by adjudging to an individual the rights' which the law of the land vouchsafed to him. By some court® it is urged that the only relief that can be obtained is by impeachment or an appeal to the electors. These courses may result in the removal of the Governor from office, or in supplanting him by another, but it absolutely gives no relief to the individual whose rights have been invaded or denied. He can only appeal to the judiciary for the protection of his individual rights. The public may have recourse to other remedies. On the general question of the rights' of the judiciary to compel executive officers by writ of mandamus to perform ministerial duties, we quote with approval from the dissenting opinion of Chief Justice Agnew in Hartranft’s Appeal, 85 Pa., 433, 27 Am. Rep., 667. He said: “It is said the Governor is the representative of the people, and therefore not responsible. This is true of executive duties, for therein *27the Constitution, the adopted will of the: people, is his warrant of authority; but it is untrue of judicial powers, for therein the judiciary represents the people by the same warrant of authority; and, if he violate the law, which it is the province of the judiciary to enforce, by their authority, he is liable to the law. In a government of law instituted by a free people for their own benefit, there is no> royal prerogative to do anything wrong, and therefore 'there can be no representation of their dignity, such as can strike down their law, and prevent its administration by its appropriate functionary.” The court is of the opinion that the act of issuing the commission which is enjoined by the law is purely ministerial, and the, writ of mandamus will lie to compel the Governor to perform it.
■This opinion is no it predicated upon the idea that the Governor does not desire to comply with the statute, but to announce the rule which the judiciary will follow. The Governor only desires to be advised as to the proper interpretation of the statute, and, when interpreted, will cheerfully discharge his duty under it.
The judgment is .reversed for proceedings' consistent with this opinion.
Judges O’Rear and Barker dissent from so much as awards a mandamus.
The court delivered the following response to the appellee’s petition for rehearing:
From the conclusion of the court in Daugherty v. Arnold, 110 Ky., 1, 22 R., 1504, the Governor has authority to fill vacancies in the office of justice of the peace by appointment.