Depends on what level you imply:
On the digital side: "Yes". Digital place-and-route tools could be said to do what you ask for. A spice netlist could be used to describe a digital design. Cadence has commercially available tools. There is freeware available too.
On analog level: "No". That's a research field which with quite limited success has resulted in a few attempts which are rarely used. Most attempts end up with macro-generators for small, regular designs, in which distinct building blocks can be identified and from that build a fairly regular structure. Even though one would think it would be easy to do given e.g. all graphics engines for computer games or neural networks or AI or massive trial and error with genetic algorithms or what have you, I guess the market is too small. The analog designer is a conservative creature which tends to patch the design with small changes here and there. Put it this way: if I buy a very expensive analog design tool, it does not have any options to do the layout for me. It can be helpful in terms of assistance during the layout process, but it's not a Uber self-driving car.