52 Ky. 150 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1852
delivered the opinion of the court.
In this case the circuit court for the county of Franklin awarded a peremptory mandamus against the auditor of public accounts, requiring him to issue' his warrant in favor of Green Adams, a circuit judge' of this commonwealth, for the sum of $14 58, which the auditor had deducted from his salary, and withheld from him under the following circumstances :
Adams having been elected judge of the twelfth judicial circuit, at the May election in the year 1851, received his commission at his residence in Barbour-ville, (within the twelfth circuit,) on the 14th day of’ June, 1851, by due course of mail from the seat of government, and on the same day took the oath of office. From that day therefore, according to usage and by the express provision of the act of 24th March, 1851, (Sess. Acts, 393,) his salary commenced, which, by the act referred to, was $1400 a year, payable quarterly. An act of March 22, 1851, had fixed the terms of the circuit court for the county of Johnson,(which was within the twelfth district,) to commence on the third Monday in June and November. In 1851 the third Monday in June was the sixteenth day of the month, and it is agreed as a fact, that the seat of justice of Johnson county was one hundred and fifty miles from Barbourville, and that in consequence of the distance it was impossible for the judge to havereached the place of holding the court, during thefirst or second day of the June term.
An act of March 3, 1851, provides that if the circuit judge be absent, &c., or, if being present, he can-not properly hold the court, a judge, pro tern,, shall
The mandamus was awarded on the ground that the act providing for compensating the judge, pro tem., at the expense of the circuit judge, is unconstitutional, so far as it applies to cases in which the necessity of electing a judge, pro tém., to supply the placé of the regular judge arises from any other cause than a neglect of official duty by the regular judge; and that as the absence of judge Adams from the Johnson circuit court during the two first days of its June term, arose not from any act or fault or peculiar infirmity of his, but from the late period at which he received his commission, and the impossibility of aftervVards reaching the court in time, it cannot be regarded iú any ‘just sense as a neglect of official duty on liis part, and therefore furnished no ground forma king á deduction from his salary. If, as assumed in this view, the constitution allows ho deduction from the Salary of a circuit judge, except for negléct of His official duty, we think the conclusion that the deduction is not authorized in the case before us is éntirely obvious. For not only may the judge have been using the greatest possible diligence in getting to the court, which was the first act of duty to be performed; but it may be inferred that, he did, in fact,' géf
The twenty-fifth section of the fourth article prescribes, that “the judges of the circuit court shall, at stated times, receive an adequate compensation to be fixed by law, which shall be equal and uniform throughout the state, and which shall not be diminished during the time for which they were elected.” The other section above referred to, declares that “it
This latter section makes no reference to the supplying of a temporary officer, nor to his compensation. And although it authorizes a deduction from the salary of a judge to such extent as the legislature may prescribe, it is only for neglect of duty in his official capacity. Beyond this no authority is derived from the thirteenth section of the fourth article, unless it be to define for what neglect of official duty and to what extent, in each case, the deduction shall be made. But this power of defining the cases of neglect of official duty in which a deduction of salary shall be made, does not include the power to direct the deduction when there is no neglect of official duty and no pretext for charging such neglect. And although the statute authorizes the election of a judge pro tem., whenever the circuit judge fails to attend, and directs the deduction whenever the temporary judge is elected and serves, and requires pay, yet it does not attempt to define what shall be deemed a neglect of official duty, nor to make the deduction on the ground of such neglect. Nor can it be supposed that the legislature considered or intended to decide that every absence of a judge from his court, without regard to the cause or circumstances, or that the absence of a judge, under the circumstances of this case, should be deemed a neglect of duty in his official capacity. We do not, therefore, regard this statute as proving that in the judgment of the legislature every absence of a judge from his court is a neglect of official duty. And even if this statute had so expressly declared, there might have been ground for supposing that an absence necessarily arising from the difficulties- and delays attending the universal change of officers in carrying the new constitution into effect, might not have been contemplated or intended by the legislature.
Conceding then that the legislature being authorized to provide for the election of a temporary judge, whenever the regular judge should, from any cause, be absent, might, unless restricted by the constitution, provide for the payment of the temporary judge by abating, at such rate as it might deem proper, the salary of the regular judge, the question arises, whether such power is restricted by the twenty-fifth section of the fourth article, or whether the statute before us, as an exercise of the power, is inconsistent with that section.
By that section the circuit judges shall, at stated times, receive an adequate compensation to be fixed by law. But whatever power the legislature might otherwise have, is restricted by the provision that this compensation shall be equal and uniform through the state, and shall not be diminished during the time for which they (the judges) are elected. Whether
The deduction authorized by the thirteenth section of the eighth article is obviously a penalty for neglect of official duty. The deduction directed by the act of 1851, is as certainly a penalty imposed for every absence of a judge followed by an election of a tern
Wherefore, the judgment awarding a peremptory mandamus is affirmed.