Dissenting Opinion by
Judge Mookman.I concur in the statements of the opinion that a legislative act should not be declared invalid until every doubt has- been resolved in its favor, and that the propriety, wisdom or expe'dieney of legislation is not a matter to be considered in measuring it by constitutional limitations and requirements. Nevertheless I am convinced that the act in question violates sections 27, -28 and 29 of the state Constitution, and I deem it appropriate that I state the reasons that impel that conviction.
It is undoubtedly true, and indeed seems to be conceded in the opinion, that the right to establish normal schools is a legislative function within which is embraced the power of selecting the sites, prescribing the character of buildings to be erected, and determining those questions that have to do with the founding, maintenance and operation of the schools. Starting therefore with that premise, let us see whether this, act does in fact surrender the discretion and power of the legislature, or merely appoints an administrative agent to effectuate the expressions of the legislative will.
The title to the act does not read, “An act to establish two normal schools,” but “To provide for the establishment of two normal schools,” and the act itself does not establish the schools, unless it be by implication, but creates a State Normal School Commission which is “authorized and empowered to establish two new normal schools.” It does, not even appoint the commission or provide for its appointment by any executive officer of the state, but delegates to and vests in the speaker of the House of Representatives and the president of the Senate the legislative prerogative of selecting a commission to administer a legislative function. It further provides that one of the schools shall be located in the eastern and one in the western part of the state, and that the appropriation carried in the act shall become available *568.for either of the schools when the commission shall have received for that school gifts of buildings or money, or both, equivalent in value to $100,000.00. It does not re- • quire the presiding officers, of the respective houses to make known to the legislature the names of their appointees, nor are the members of the commission required to make any report of their proceedings. They are not required to take any oath or to be guided by any consideration in their activities except to locate one of the schools in the eastern and one in the.western part of the state, and not to select a site until gifts of buildings or money, or both, equivalent in value to $100,000.00 shall have been received. No other restrictions are placed on the' commission’s powers, no injunction'given to select those sites offering the most attractive inducements, affording the most advantageous facilities, or serving best the purposes of the schools and the educational interests of the state. But the power of locating and establishing the schools — assuredly a legislative function — is surrendered to an unnamed commission, responsible to no one, and controlled in the act itself by no limitations or requirements safeguarding the interests of the schools. This is the act that is said not to be a delegation of legislative discretion, but merely the appointment of an administrative agent to effectuate the declared will of the legislature.
It is a settled maxim of law that the power conferred upon a legislature to make laws cannot Be delegated by it to any other body or authority. Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 7th Ed., p. 163. This principle has been recognized by this court in many eases, among them Hydes, etc. v. Joyes, 4 Bush 464; Zable v. Louisville Baptist Orphans’ Home, 92 Ky. 89; Town of Hardinsburg v. Mercer, 172 Ky. 661. So recently as May 4th of this- year this court decided, in City of Harlan v. Coombs Land Co., 199 Ky. 87, that the legislative branch of a city government could not delegate to the executive of the city the power to employ a city engineer for a particular purpose. It must be admitted, however, that the legislature may, within constitutional limits, establish agencies to carry into effect its will according to prescribed standards-. This it may do by establishing perma-nent boards, bureaus- and commissions, which may administer laws complete within themselves. Such agencies arq administrative branches of the government, acting *569within prescribed limits and subject to judicial control in respect to the reasonableness of their acts, their findings of fact, and the powers that they may exercise under. the legislative grant. It may also appoint a temporary commission to administer a purely legislative function according to' express conditions, vesting in the commission the power to ascertain facts and regulate the details incident thereto upon which the law itself operates-to the end of effectuating the legislative will. 'In either case the agency is limited to the.doing of acts or the ascertainment of facts according to definite standards' upon which the law operates to effectuate its declared purposes.
I do not therefore deny that the legislature had the power to create a commission for determining facts and regulating the details in reference thereto upon which the legislative will would operate to the end of establishing these schools. This act, however, does not confer upon the presiding officers of the respective houses, and their appointees, that administrative power, but vests in them the power-dto -exercis-e legislative discretion and authority according to their own will and purposes.
Let us examine the act in the light of the powers that it confers and of the inability of the legislature to delegate its legislative functions. First it delegates to the presiding officers of the two houses the power to select the commission, the personnel of which was unknown to the legislature. That the right to select agents to act for the legislature is purely and exclusively a legislative function is indisputable. What then has the legislature done? It has conferred on-its presiding officers the power that it alone possessed to select its administrative agent, which is precisely what the city of Harlan did and which this court held, in City of Harlan v. Coombs Land Company, supra, was a delegation of legislative authority. This alone is an insuperable objection to the legality of the act.
It is said, however, that the case just cited is not applicable, and that if the Constitution conferred “upon the legislature the power to appoint all inferior officers and agents, there might be some analogy between the two oases; ’ ’ that the Constitution contains no such provision, but, on the contrary, gives to the legislature “full, power to determine by whom the appointments of all inferior officers or agents may be made (section 93, Con*570stitution) subject to tbe qualifications laid down in tbe Sibert ease that it may. not itself make appointments to office.” 'It will thus be seen that the distinction drawn in the opinion is that the power to appoint inferior officers and agents is given to the city council, but not to the legislature, whereas the legislature is given the power to determine by whom appointments of inferior officers or agents -may be made. The Constitution says nothing about inferior or any agents. So in fact the distinction is drawn on the ground that the commissioners are officers, when in truth counsel for appellees, apparently anticipating the force and effect of the Sibert case, argue, and the opinion elsewhere recognizes the fact, that they are not officers but agents of the legislature for the performance of an administrative service. That part of section 93 of the Constitution relating to the selection of inferior officers provides: “Inferior state officers not specifically provided for in the Constitution may be appointed or elected in such manmer as may be prescribed by law, for a term not exceeding four years, and until their successors are appointed or elected and qualified.” The term “officer” as used in this section clearly contemplates a permanent .position under a general law for a term of years, and not an agent of the legislature for the performance of a temporary service.
But assuming that the members of the commission are officers within the meaning of this provision, we have the anomalous situation, under the Sibert case, that the legislature cannot make the appointment, but it can delegate to two of its members, possessing no executive prerogatives in that respect, the power to make the appointment. In State, ex rel. v. St. Louis, 216 Mo. 94, cited with approval in the opinion in the Sibert case, it was said that “to provide by law the manner in which an appointment shall be made is one thing, to make the appointment is another; the one is in its nature legislative, ithe other is essentially executive.” And in the same opiniozi, after quoting from Mr. Cooley on Cozistitutional Limitations, this court said, “that the authority of the legislature is limited to making such provisions by exercising its authority to pass- an act containing them, and direetizig upozi whom or with whom the power to appoint or elect was lodged, which electing and appointing agency should, perhaps, be selected from the department to which the duties of the office necessarily appertain.” *571The opinion then goes on to show that to .sustain an act upholding the power of the legislature to select inferior state officers, such as the State Highway Commission, would empower the legislature to appoint or elect the private secretary of the governor, the attaches of this court, county school superintendents in all the counties, as well as tax commissioners, and practically all of the inferior officers of the state, and thus destroy the purpose of the makers of the Constitution in separating the powers of the government into its three distinct branches. Adopting that reasoning, this court held that the legislature could not select the members of the State Highway Commission, but it now holds, in distinguishing the case at bar from the Coombs Land Company case, that the members of the Normal School Commission are officers, that the legislature may delegate to two of its members who have no executive functions whatever, except to preside over its deliberations, the power of appointing those officers, thus enabling the legislature to do precisely in respect to inferior officers of the state, through two of its members, what, as was held in the Sibert ease, it cannot do by its own vote. In my opinion the distinction sought to be drawn between the two cases not only indulges an unjustifiable interpretation of section 93 of the Constitution, but, in permitting the legislature to do through two of its members what it cannot do itself, exceeds the license of judicial logic.
Nor is the Coombs Land Company case distinguishable from the one at bar on the idea that the city council could not delegate its power to select an officer. The city in that case did not undertake to delegate the power to elect or appoint an officer of the city, but to select a competent engineer to supervise and direct a particular work. It was held, on the authority of Brick & Co. v. Barker, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 1069, that the city council, in the exercise of the plenary duties imposed upon it, might employ an engineer for a particular purpose; and furthermore, that the discretion could not be delegated, citing on the latter point Jameison v. City of Paducah, 195 Ky. 71, where it was held that the commissioners of a city of the second class could not delegate their authority to select an architect to draw plans and specifications for a particular work, even to a member of the board, as the authority involved the exercise of legislative discretion. *572The discretion of selecting a legislative agent to perform an administrative act is exclusively legislative, and the legislature no more than a city council can delegate its authority to perform a legislative act. Hence the' Coombs Land Company case and the authorities therein cited are, in my judgment, conclusive of this question.
Another equally potent reason for holding this act invalid is that it is a delegation of legislative authority to the commission, and not a. grant of administrative power to be exercised according to definitely fixed stand- - ards. The difference between the exercise of legislative . power- and the performance of an administrative duty is defined in L. H. & St. L. Ry. Co. v. Lyons, etc., 155 Ky. 396, where the court said: “But these agents do not exercise any of the powers delegated to the legislature. They do not make any laws. They merely find the existence of certain facts, and to these findings of fact the law enacted by the legislature is applied and enforced.” That opinion cites the Kentucky cases referred to in the opinion in this case, all of which hold that the authority of an administrative agent, whether the agent be a permanent arm of the government or merely acts in a ' temporary capacity for a particular purpose, is limited ;to the doing of acts or the ascertaining of facts according to prescribed standards upon which the legislative will operates to a definitely expressed end.
The authorities cited in the court’s opinion clearly recognize these restrictions. In Kentucky Live Stock Breeders’ Assn. v. Hager, Auditor, 120 Ky. 125, the only question was whether the appropriation of $15,000.00 for the State Fair was for a public purpose, and it was held, on the authority of Norman v. Board of Managers, 93 Ky. 537, in which an appropriation for the World’s Fair was sustained, that it was a public purpose for which the state might appropriate and authorize an existing corporation to disburse money. Admitting that the act by which this appropriation was made attempted to establish a State Fair, in respect to which it was quite as indefinite as the one under consideration, it is nevertheless true that the decision-in the Hager case has no application whatever to the question presented here, for this question was neither considered nor decided by the court in that case.
The later act of 1906, establishing and permanently locating the State Fair, section 4618b-l, et seq., of Ken*573tucky Statutes, cited, as analogous' to this act, is, however, applicable to the extent that it recognizes .the necessity of establishing definite standards. It placed the fair under the control of the Board of Agriculture, Forestry and Immigration, and directed that board to locate the fair permanently “at the city or place offering and affording, in the judgment of said board, 'the best inducements for its permanent location, taking into consideration financial inducements, the geographical location of the place, its railroad facilities, and all other matters pertaining to, or which would affect, the permanent welfare and interests of said fair.” (Italics mine.) The board in that case ascertained the facts with reference to certain well-defined requirements, of the statute, and the law operated on the facts as found to the end of fixing the permanent location.
Douglas Park Jockey Club v. Talbott, 173 Ky. 685, cited in the opinion, construed the act establishing the Pacing Commission, section 3990-a, et seq., of Kentucky Statutes. It held that the power conferred on that commission was that of ascertaining the facts upon which the law would operate and permit racing. The decision was based on State Racing Commission v. Latonia Agricultural Assn., 136 Ky. 173, in which it was held that the statute was purely a police regulation. As to the powers of the commission the court in that case said: “The legislature declares what is the law, the commission ascertains the facts — -that is, "the situation — upon which the law is applied.”'
St. Louis & Iron Mountain Ry. Co. v. Taylor, 210 U. S. 281, rests upon Buttfield v. Stranahan, 192 U. S. 470, in which a statute preventing the importation' of impure and unwholesome teas was involved. It'was contended that the statute committed arbitrary discretion to the secretary of the treasury and vested in that official legislative power. In discussing the provisions of the statute the court said: “This, in effect, was the fixing of a primary standard, and devolved upon the secretary of the treasury the.mere executive duty to effectuate the' legislative policy declared in the statute.” :
In Connecticut Company v. Norwalk, 89 Conn. 528, an act creating a utilities, commission and investing it with the. control and supervision of public service corporations was assailed. In upholding it the court said: “Obviously the lawmaking body cannot know these, nor foresee changing conditions, and hence arises in many *574case®, as did' in this case, ¡the. pr-op-reity, if not the actual public necessity, for committing the decision of this issue of fad to an administrative tribunal. Legislation of this character, having established the primary standard, may devolve upon the administrative tribunal the executive duty of carrying out the purpose and policy of the statute.”
In State, etc. v. McGraw, 43 Pac. Rep. 176, a commission was created to erect a state capitol. . The act provided that the capitol should be located on the old capitol grounds at a place “most sightly and suitable therefor.” The commission was directed to secure the submission of plans and designs “appropriate to a capitol building” at a cost of not exceeding one million dollars-, and to select from them “the most desirable plan and design,” and to secure the erection and completion of the capitol building conformable to such plan and design. The act required the commission to ascertain facts upon which the law operated to fix the location mid determine the character of the capitol.
Davenport v. Elrod, etc., 107 N. W. 833, was a proceeding to prohibit the State Capitol Commission of South Dakota from executing certain contracts, and it was held that the act was valid, but in that case the governor, secretary of state, state auditor, and commissioner of -schools constituted the commission for procuring the erection of a building to be used for capitol purposes on a site described in the act. There the legislature “fixed the location of the building,” designated the purpose it was to serve, limited the cost of it, and in effect directed its construction as speedily as the means provided should permit. It was held that the function of the commission was merely administrative, and, although unlimited discretion could not be delegated, the directions given in that case were sufficiently definite to meet the objection of a delegation of legislative power.
In Territory, etc. v. Scott, et al., 20 N. W. 401, the validity of an act designating certain persons therein named as commissioners was assailed on the ground that it was a delegation of legislative authority. The- act was held valid, but it contained detailed specifications and requirements by which the commissioners- were to act. They were to select “a suitable site,” with due regard to its accessibility from all portions of the territory, and its general fitness for a capitol. Many other *575requirements were imposed upon them, and it was rightly held that they were only administrative agents for the determination of facts which, having been done, would result in the application of the declared purposes of the law.
.Merchants’ Exchange of St. Louis v. Knott, 111 S. W. 565, involved an act authorizing the Board of Railroad & Warehouse Commissioners to establish state inspection of grain, with power to fix charges for the inspection. It was held valid, the court saying: “Observe, the legislature did not grant an unregulated power to the commissioners to fix fees. To the contrary, the grant was defined by firm, legislative lines drawn around. it, and the commissioners might not fix fees above a maximum or below a minimum producing revenue — enough to cover the service. Their discretion was squeezed within those lines.”
In State v. Cornvallis, 117 Pac. 980, a railroad commission act was held not to be a delegation of legislative power. But the ruling was based on the ground that the findings of the commission were administrative acts in respect to facts which, when determined, brought into operation the statute regulating such matters. This is precisely the theory on which our railroad Commission proceeds. It is- merely an agency of the state, acting within the scope of its statutory authority for the purpose of ascertaining facts upon which the law operates with a determinative result.
State v. Bryan, 39 So. 929, is- cited in the opinion as authority for vesting “absolute discretion and power” in a temporary commission created by the legislature. There certain institutions fostered and maintained by the state were abolished and a state university established. A designated agency of the state was authorized to select the location of the university after considering the lands, property, buildings and situation of the respective institutions abolished, and having regard to the permanent location of .such an institution at some central point in the state, both geographically and as to population, as well as to the needs and.requirements of the institution. Construing that act as a whole it seems clear that it does not vest absolute discretion in the commission, but only such discretion within prescribed rules and directions contained in the law, the effect of which was to confer on the commission the right to ascertain facts and do certain acts according to those rules upon which the law *576was made effective. But if it be construed as giving’ to the commission “absolute discretion and power,” as the majority opinion indicates, it is the only act of that character, so far as^ I have been able to find, that has ever been sustained.
The words, “gifts of iand suitable for the purposes of each school,” are referred to in the opinion as establishing an analogy between this and the Florida act. But the language quoted does not refer to the duties of the commission. It refers exclusively to the time when and the condition on which the appropriation shall become available. The act itself does, not .say, as in the Bryan case, that the schools shall be located at the most suitable- place, nor even a suitable' place, with regard to some central point, both geographically and as to population, or as to the needs and requirements of (the institution. Tlie two cases are clearly distinguishable.
The Supreme Court has said: “The legislature cannot delegate its power to make a law; but it can make a law to delegate a power to determine some fact or state of things, upon which the law makes, or intends to make, its own action depend.” Field v. Clark, 143 U. S. 649. The authorities almost unanimously recognize this distinction, and all the cases cited in the opinion of the court, many of which I have referred to, carry the same recognition.
I.concede,, therefore, that if the legislature had selected a commission for the doing of certain acts or the determination of certain facts according to ‘ prescribed rules, upon which the law would operate to establish the schools, the act would be valid. But this the act fails to do. The commission is not required to locate the schools at the- most suitable places, nor to consider the accessibility of the sites, the purposes of the law, or the educational interests of the state, but in utter disregard of all these matters it is left to its own purposes and will and given.the arbitrary power of establishing the schools without any guide or chart by which the educational interests .of the state .might be served. None of the authorities cited in the opinion sustain the validity of such an arbitrary grant of power — a power that is undeniably legislative in its character. On the other hand, there are many decisions denying the validity of acts that delegate arbitrary discretion to an administrative or legislative agent.
*577In State v. Hocker, 63 Amn. St. Rep. 174, an act creating a state board of legal examiners, and providing for a uniform system of examination, was held unconstitutional because it clothed the board with power not only to apply the test of fitness to all applicants, but also to prescribe, by rules of its own adoption, the scope and character of the test, which was a matter of legislative discretion.
In State, etc. v. Carlisle, 138 S. W. 513, it was held that an act giving to the board of supervisors power to determine at what points grain or hay would be inspected was illegal because it was a delegation of legislative power.
In State v. Budge, 105 N. W. 724, the legislature sought to delegate to a board of capitol commissioners to be appointed by the governor the power to remodel and reconstruct the capitol building on its then site at Bismarck, North Dakota, and to erect a suitable residence for the governor on the lots owned by the state. It was recognized in that case, as indeed it is by all authorities, that the legislature cannot attend to the details of constructing a building, but nevertheless it was held that the act was a delegation of legislative authority in that the commission was not limited in its discretion as to what the residence and capitol should cost, except as to the aggregate amount of $600,000.00, and that the separate sums to be used for each building were matters to be determined by the legislature and not subject to delegation. The analogy between that case and the one at bar is apparent. The Normal School Commissioners are not limited in their selections to the most suitable sites, nor .to those offering the largest gifts, although the two might concur. They are given the discretion to reject a million dollar gift in favor of a hundred thousand dollar gift, even though the former would secure a more suitable location for one of the schools.
In Merchants’ Exchange v. Knott, 212 Mo. 616, it was held that a grain inspection act was invalid as a grant of legislative power because it gave to the commissioners the power capriciously to provide for the inspection and weighing of grain. The court said: “It is obvious that the foregoing grant of power is given without statutory landmark, compass, map, guide-post or cornerstone in one whit controlling its exercise, or pre*578scribing its channel, or indicative of any certain intendment of the legislative mind, beyond the mere grant.” And further, “ If it had been certain in its intendment in these particulars, leaving to the commissioners to find the fact as within the statutory description, then another question might be here.” There is in this case an express recognition of the rule that runs through all of the cases, that the legislature must declare the law which operates upon the facts found according to prescribed standards stated in the law. Other authorities sustaining this view are State of Maine v. Butler, 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 744; Gilhooly v. City of Elizabeth, 66 N. J. L. 484; State of Wisconsin v. Thompson, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 339; O’Neil v. American Fire Insurance Co., 26 L. R. A. 715; Dowling v. Lancashire Insurance Co., 31 L. R. A. 112.
But it may be said that the commission could find two facts, viz.: That there is a location for one of the schools, in western Kentucky and the other in eastern Kentucky, and that gifts of buildings or money, or both, equivalent in value to at least $100,000.00 had been' offered, and upon the finding of those facts the-law would operate to establish the schools. A complete answer to-that suggestion, it seems to me, is that there could be no finding of fact according to definite standards with which the commission was bound to comply. The determination of a fact implies competition or controversy about which there must be a decision, as. well as standards or descriptions with which it is to comply. This act establishes no rules by which the commission’s deliberations shall be guided, it contemplates no competition or controversy as to the ascertainment of any fact or the determination of any question pertaining to the welfare of the schools, but surrenders to the presiding officers of the respective houses the power to appoint a legislative agent, and to that agent the right to establish schools, without regard to the interests of the state. The power granted is arbitrary. Thereunder the commission has the right to select sites wholly inadaptable to schools, though suitable sites are available, to accept gifts equivalent to $100,000.00 in value, rejecting offers of a million dollars for better locations, and to accept gifts of buildings, or land that could not be utilized for school purposes. Who could restrain it from doing any of these things? -No one. Then how can it be said that its powers -are not arbitrary and unrestrained.
*579Reference is made to the location of one . of the schools in eastern Kentucky and the other in western Kentucky, and to the gifts amounting to $100,000.00 each, as an evidence of the validity of the act. Those facts, as I view them, are wholly beside the question, for the constitutional validity of a law is not to be decided by what has been done under it, but by what may be done. Montana Co. v. St. Louis M. & M. Co., 152 U. S. 160. (granting, therefore, that the appointment of the commission and the selection of the sites had the. qualities of disinterestedness, it is nevertheless true that the validity of the act must be measured by what could be done under its terms and not by what was done. Measured by this potentiality, it does not require an imaginative mind to perceive that the legislature surrendered its prerogatives to the arbitrary discretion of the commission, which is authorized to exercise an unrestrained judgment, or, if it cares to do so, to subordinate the educational interests of the state to any selfish or even vicious influence to which it might be subjected. And all this the commission can do with the cause of education to which the state is committed in the interest of those who some day must control her policies.
It is however said that if this act is stricken down many useful acts must fail for the same reason. A sort of contemporaneous construction is invoked as a reason for upholding the act. The rule of contemporaneous construction, as I understand it, means uniformity of construction. That rule not only does not apply to this act, but, with the possible exception of the first State Fair act,' in respect to which this question was never raised, there is not a single precedent for it. Reference is made to three acts as authority for this view. None of them in my opinion sustains it.
The act establishing the branch penitentiary is first cited as a precedent. Acts 1883-84, p. 82. There the governor was authorized to appoint a board of building commissioners for the erection of a branch penitentiary “at or near Eddyville.” The commissioners were required to purchase sufficient ground for gardening purposes, and the raising of live stock and other food supplies needed at the prison, not to exceed in value $4,000.00. They were enjoined to have due regard for the health of prisoners, for accessibility by rail and river, and for proximity to such materials as might be needed for man*580■ufacturirig purposes. Trie building plans could not be adopted until approved by trie governor and trie auditor of public accounts. Trie capacity of trie buildings could not be less trian 4001 cells. Trie commissioners were required to take an oath, faithfully to discharge their duties and to execute a bond to the Commonwealth in the sum of $10,000.00 each. Many other requirements and restrictions were placed on the commissioners. Their powers were confined to a narrow .scope, and their discretion was circumscribed by standards that limited it to the ascertainment of facts upon which the law itself would operate.
Nor is the act to establish'a normal school for colored persons, approved May 18, 1886, cited as similar to the act under consideration, applicable. That act provided that “there shall be established and maintained . . . a state normal school for colored persons,” not for the appointment of a commission that was authorized to establish the school. The governor was authorized to appoint the commission subject to the approval of the senate. .The commissioners were directed to receive bids from different parts of the state for donation of grounds and buildings or funds, and to locate the school at such place “as shall obligate itself for the largest donation,” provided “such place shall possess reasonable facilities for the success of said school.” There the commission was restricted to the determination of facts or the doing of acts according to prescribed standards upon which the law became effective, and it was not given, as is done in this case, the right to exercise a discretion that might or might not represent the legislative purpose.
The act to establish houses of reform, approved March 21, 1896, is also wholly different. That act established two institutions known as houses of reform, placed the supervision of the institutions under a board of trustees to be appointed by the governor, empowered the board to receive “by gift or purchase, suitable building sites for said institutions,” consisting of tracts of land of not less than 100 acres, “in healthy locations,” not less than three miles from the corporate limits of a town, and “to erect suitable buildings” thereon, and properly “equip, appoint and furnish the same.” The act particularly described the plan of buildings to be constructed. So in that instance, also, the powers granted were administrative in the sense that the trustees were *581permitted to determine facts upon which the law complete within itself became effective.
No other law has ever been passed by the legislature of this state vesting in the presiding officers of that body the legislative power of selecting legislative agents, nor has any other law ever been passed by which such an agency has been invested with arbitrary powers so vitally affecting the interests of the state. This court has frequently said that a lawmaking body cannot delegate its functions. If the legislative power of a city to prescribe the character of sidewalks to be constructed cannot be delegated to the city engineer, as was held in Hydes, etc. v. Joyes, supra, how can the legislature of the state confer upon a commission appointed by two of its members the power to locate normal schools and prescribe the character of buildings to be constructed? If it is beyond the power of a city council to delegate to the mayor its authority to select an engineer for a particular purpose, as decided in City of Harlan v. Coombs Land Co., how can the legislature delegate to its presiding officers the legislative power of selecting legislative agents to perform a particular administrative service? No refinement of argument can distinguish those cases from the one at bar, no process of reasoning can strike down the legislative act in one case and uphold it in the other.
For these reasons I believe that the opinion is a radical departure from former decisions of this court, from established principles of law and from constitutional tenets. I therefore dissent from its rulings.