Cole v. Manning
Decision Date | 03 May 1962 |
Docket Number | No. 17909,17909 |
Citation | 125 S.E.2d 621,240 S.C. 260 |
Parties | Truman Vincent COLE, Jimmy Don Rustin and Louis P. Cooper, Appellants, v. Colonel W. M. MANNING, Superintendent of South Carolina State Penitentiary, Respondent. |
Court | South Carolina Supreme Court |
Law, Kirkland & Aaron, Edens & Hammer, Columbia, for appellants.
Daniel R. McLeod, Atty. Gen., Victor S. Evans, Asst. Atty. Gen., Columbia, for respondent.
At the September, 1961, term of the Court of General Sessions for Richland County, a true bill was returned upon an indictment charging Truman Vincent Cole, Jimmy Don Rustin and Louis P. Cooper: (1) with conspiracy to violate Section 55-14 of the 1952 Code (Supplement) by furnishing to prisoners in the State Penitentiary ten thousand (10,000) tablets of amphetamine, a drug that had been declared contraband by the Director of Prisons; (2) with having furnished and delivered the said drug tablets to said prisoners, in violation of Section 55-14; and (3) with unlawful possession, sale and distribution of said drug tablets. The case was thereafter transferred to the Richland County Court; and on September 18, 1961, Cole, Rustin and Cooper, who were represented by counsel, entered pleas of guilty to the conspiracy charge and were sentenced to imprisonment,--Cole and Cooper for two years, Rustin for one year. Thereafter upon their petition the Honorable John Grimball, Judge of the Fifth Judicial Circuit, issued a writ of habeas corpus to determine the legality of their confinement; and the matter was heard by him on September 30, 1961, the petitioners being again represented by counsel. On October 7, 1961, Judge Grimball issued his order holding the petitioners' confinement legal and denying their prayer for release. From that order they appeal, charging that their sentences were illegal and void because Section 55-14: (1) is an unlawful delegation of legislative authority to an administrative officer; and (2) did not have the effect of law because the rule or regulation of the Director of Prisons purporting to forbid the furnishing of amphetamine to prisoners, and declaring it contraband, had not been certified and filed in the office of the Secretary of State as required by Section 1-11 of the Code.
The Act of May 24, 1960 (51 Stat. at L.1917) established, as an administrative agency of the state government, a Department of Corrections, to implement and carry out the policy of the state with respect to its prison system. It declared, in Section 1, the legislative policy to operate, through the Department, a modern prison system, to the end, among others, 'that those convicted of violating the law and sentenced to a term in the State Penitentiary shall have humane treatment, and be given opportunity, encouragement and training in the matter of reformation'. It created, as the governing body of the Department, a State Board of Corrections composed of the Governor of South Carolina ex officio, and one member to be appointed by him from each of the state's six congressional districts. It provided for the employment by the Board of a Director of the prison system, with authority to manage the affairs of the system in accordance with the Board's policies and subject to its control and supervision. Section 17 of the Act, now appearing in the current cumulative supplement to the 1952 Code of Laws as Section 55-14, reads as follows:
Section 1-11 of the 1952 Code provides that 'rules and regulations adopted under authority of a general and permanent law of the State shall become effective only after they have been properly certified and filed in the office of the Secretary of State.'
At the hearing before Judge Grimball counsel for the petitioners and for the respondent stipulated:
19 That the notice required by Section 55-14 was at the time of the commission of the offense, and had been for at least six months prior thereto, published by the Director in a conspicuous place available to visitors at the penitentiary;
29 That the said notice so published declared amphetamine tablets contraband; and
3. That the said notice was not filed with the Secretary of State at the time of the commission of the offense.
In support of their contention that Section 55-14 unlawfully delegates legislative power to the Director of Prisons, appellants urge that it provides no standard by which the Director is to be guided in determining what things he may declare contraband and forbid to be furnished to the prisoners, and that the matter is thus left to his absolute, unregulated and undefined discretion.
It is elementary that the legislature may not delegate to an administrative agency its power to make laws. But no violence is done to the principle of separation of governmental powers when a law, complete in itself, declaring a legislative policy and establishing primary standards for carrying it out, or, with proper regard for the protection of the public interest and with such degree of certainty as the case permits, laying down an intelligible principle to which the administrative agency must conform, delegates to the agency the power to prescribe regulations for the administration and enforcement of that law within its expressed general purpose. Davis v. Query, 209 S.C. 41, 39 S.E.2d 117; State ex rel. Roddey v. Byrnes, 219 S.C. 485, 66 S.E.2d 33; State v. Taylor, 223 S.C. 526, 77 S.E.2d 195; South Carolina State Highway Department v. Harbin, 226 S.C. 585, 86 S.E.2d 466; City of Darlington v. Stanley, 239 S.C. 139, 122 S.E.2d 207.
As pointed out in the Davis and Harbin cases, supra, the difficulty that confronts the court when a delegated power is challenged lies not in the formulation of principles that should govern the decision, but in their application to the facts and circumstances of the particular case at hand. For it is apparent, from consideration of the numerous cases on the subject, that the degree of authority that may lawfully be delegated to an administrative agency must in large measure depend upon such circumstances, including the legislative policy as declared in the statute, the objective to be accomplished, and the nature of the agency's field of operation.
11 Am.Jur., Constitutional Law, Section 234, at page 948.
A question substantially similar to that with which we are here concerned arose in State v. Morgan (La.1959), 238 La. 829, 116 So.2d 682. There the Louisiana statute, challenged as an unlawful delegation of legislative power, made it a crime to introduce into or upon the grounds of any correctional or penal institution certain articles declared by the statute to be contraband, 'except through regular channels as authorized by the officer in charge' of such institution. (Italics added.) The court, citing the 'modern tendency to be more liberal in permitting grants of discretion to administrative boards or officers in order to facilitate the administration of laws as the complexity of economic and governmental conditions increases', 11 Am.Jur., Constitutional Law, Section 234, at page 949, upheld that statute as a proper delegation of discretionary administrative authority in furtherance of the legislative purpose.
In United sTates v. Ruckman (D.C.W.Va.1959), 169 F.Supp. 160, similar attack was made upon the Federal statute, 18 U.S.C.A. § 1791, which provided that 'whoever, contrary to any rule or regulation promulgated by the Attorney General, introduces or attempts to introduce into or upon the grounds of any Federal penal or correctional institution or takes or attempts to take or send therefrom anything whatsoever, shall be imprisoned not more than ten years', under which statute the Attorney General had promulgated a regulation reading:
'The introduction or attempt to introduce into or upon the grounds of any Federal penal or correctional institution or the taking or attempt to take or send therefrom anything whatsoever without the knowledge and consent of the Warden or Superintendent of such Federal penal or correctional institution is prohibited.'
Holding the statute constitutional and the regulation issued pursuant thereto a reasonable one to enable the men in charge of the penal institutions to know what was coming into or going out of their prisons, the court quoted from United States v. Grimaud (1910), 220 U.S. 506, 31 S.Ct. 480, 55 L.Ed. 563, as follows:
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