4 Ga. App. 197 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
(After stating the foregoing facts).
We think the judge erred in overruling the affidavit of illegality. It was admitted that the judge of the county court was disqualified, and that Mr. Kinman was not the judge of any county court in this -State. It became necessary, then, to have a judge pro. hac vice. This judge pro hac vice is only to be appointed in the manner provided by law, and any one selected to preside in the trial of a case, in the emergency created by the disqualification of the judge, must be appointed and selected in one of the modes
The suggestion that as the county court of Jefferson county had no clerk, and as the judge was ex officio the clerk of that court, he might, as clerk, select an attorney at law as judge pro hac vice, is not only disputed by the inference to be drawn from the language of §4178 of the Civil Code, but is also expressly contradictory of the terms of §4179 of the Civil Code:- “Should the parties litigant fail or refuse to agree upon counsel to preside in such case, it shall be the duty of the clerk of said court, where there is one, and the duty of the cleric of the superior court, where there is no clerk of the county court, to select any attorney practicing in the court, to preside in such case and try the same.”
It is conceded bj learned counsel for the plaintiff in error that
Without going to the pains of citing the numerous authorities we have examined, we hold unhesitatingly that Mr. Kinman, as judge pro hac vice, can not be considered as a de facto officer. If he had been properly appointed he would not have been judge of the county court, but merely a person procured under the provisions of the statute for a special purpose to meet the emergency arising from the disqualification of the judge, and in order to preserve the court for the trial of a special case. There can be no de facto juflge pro hac vice. One chosen for that purpose must be
The irreconcilable conflict of authority referred to by Judge Lewis in Herrington v. State, 103 Ga. 319 (29 S. E. 931, 68 Am. St. R. 95), is upon the proposition as to whether or not the doctrine of an -officer de facto can be applied without presupposing the existence of an office de jure. As said by Justice Lewis in that case, “much respectable authority can be produced to the effect that where an office is provided for by an unconstitutional act of the legislature, the incumbent of such an office, for the sake of public policy and protection of private rights, will be recognized as an officer de facto until the unconstitutionality of the act has been judicially determined. On the other hand, there is . . perhaps a greater weight of authority, directly the reverse.” In the Herrington case the court was dealing with a purported office, alleged to have been created without even the color of legislative authority, by the commissioners of roads and revenues of Eulton County.
In the case of Norton v. Shelby County, 118 U. S. 425 (6 Sup. Ct. 1121, 30 L. ed. 178), in which Justice Field delivered the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, that court was dealing with an attempt to create an office by an unconstitutional act. In that case, before ruling that .“an unconstitutional act is not a law; it confers no rights; it imposes no duties; it affords no protection; it creates no office; it is, in legal contemplation, as inoperative as though it had never been passed,” the court held, that “while acts of a de facto incumbent of an office lawfully created bylaw and existing are often held to be
In the present case we are not dealing with a de facto officer created under an unconstitutional act. The law making provision for judges pro hac vice has been held to be constitutional, but it does not create an office;-it merely provides against a hiatus in the office. As we have before remarked, there is no such office as judge pro hac vice, and, therefore, under the ruling in the first headnote of Herrington v. State, supra, “the law recognizes no one even as an officer de facto, who fills an alleged public office that has no existence under any constitutional provision, or by virtue of any color of legislative enactment.” If the legislature, instead of the provision made (for the selection, from time to time as the emergency may require, of a suitable person to preside in a case in which the judge is disqualified), were to designate some particular person for that purpose, or provide for the selection of one individual who, for a fixed term, should preside in all cases in which the judge might be disqualified, it would be possible, perhaps, to create the office of judge pro hac vice. And in such event it would be possible for there to be a de facto incumbent of this office. So far as we are aware, our courts have gone no further in deciding what is a good de facto officer than to hold, in Poole v. Perdue, 44 Ga. 457, 458, that one who holds the commission of the Governor to an office which the Governor, by the constitution, is authorized to fill, is at least a de facto officer; and, in Gunn v. Tackett, 67 Ga. 725, that a constable was a good de facto officer although he had not qualified by giving bond; because he had been appointed by the justice of the peace, who had authority to appoint.
In the present ease it follows, from what we have already said, that there was no court which had jurisdiction to deal with either the subject-matter or the person; and it has always been held that a judgment can be attacked by affidavit of illegality where the-court had no jurisdiction, either of the person or of the subject-matter.
The decision in Rodgers v. Evans, 8 Ga. 143 (52 Am. D. 390), cited above, while holding that upon an' affidavit of illegality to the execution the validity of the judgment can not be attacked, also holds that the judgment of a court which has no jurisdiction' of the case is entirely void. In the opinion, the latter principle was considered to be so axiomatic that no amplification of the first headnote was deemed necessary; and the court proceeds to-say, in the second division of the opinion, “but where the court has jurisdiction both of the cause and the parties, and proceeds-erroneously, the judgment, notwithstanding the error, is binding until it is vacated or reversed.”
Through all of the Georgia cases that we have examined, the cases where affidavit of illegality will lie as a remedy and those ■ where this remedy is unavailable are distinguished by the fact that
In Brantley v. Greer, 71 Ga. 11, it was held: “ Unless a judgment is void, an affidavit of illegality is not the proper mode of setting it aside. If the defects alleged to exist in a judgment amount only to irregularities, they should he corrected by a motion,etc. It may safely be asserted that the presumption as to the legality of the judgment which the law will not suffer to be attacked by illegality arises only where it is apparent that the judgment was rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction, in relation to subject-matter within such jurisdiction. Where it is apparent that the court had no jurisdiction, and especially where it appears that there was no court competent to deal with the subject-matter, the affiant may allege and prove that the execution has issued illegally against his property. With reference to a court of competent jurisdiction, the presumption is that it had before it sufficient evidence to authorize the 'award of the judgment upon which the execution was based. And this is the reason of the rule that the illegality can not go behind the judgment. Both the reason and the rule cease when it appears' that the judgment was rendered by one who had no authority to award judgment.
Judgment reversed.