BROWN v. MOSELEY
16638
Supreme Court of South Carolina
June 12, 1952
(71 S. E. (2d) 591)
Messrs. John K. deLoach and J. Claytor Arrants, of Camden, and Robinson, Robinson and Dreher, of Columbia, for Respondent,
June 12, 1952.
STUKES, Justice.
This action is in the original jurisdiction by permission of the court because of the public nature of it and the desirability of early decision. Plaintiff is an elector and taxpayer of Kershaw County. No question has been made of his capacity to prosecute the action, or that a justiciable controversy exists between the parties. He challenges the defendant‘s right to hold office as sheriff of the county beyond the year 1952 and asserts that an election for the office should be held in this election year.
G. B. DeBruhl was elected as sheriff in 1946 and re-elected for a second term in 1950. He died in 1951 and the defendant was appointed by the Governor to fill out the unexpired term, which he contends runs through the year 1954.
“There shall be a general election for the following County officers, to wit: County Supervisors and County Superintendents of Education, held in each County at every general election for members of the House of Representatives; and for the election of Sheriff, Coroner and Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, at every alternate general election, reckoning from the year one thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight, except as to the Counties of Berkeley and Cherokee, and except for Sheriff and Coroner in Hampton County.
“The Probate Judge in every County, and the Clerk of Court in Berkeley and Cherokee Counties, and the Sheriff and Coroner in Berkeley, Cherokee and Hampton Counties shall be elected at every alternate general election, reckoning from the [year] one thousand eight hundred and ninety.”
And as Sec. 820, the following:
“There shall be an election for Sheriff held in each County, except in the Counties of Berkeley, Cherokee and Hampton, at the general election in 1904, and on the same day in every fourth year thereafter. In the Counties excepted the election shall be in 1902.”
This was merely carrying forward the statutes which were in effect prior to the adoption of the
Sec. 211. “There shall be a general election for * * * Sheriff * * * at every alternate general election, reck-
Sec. 703. “There shall be an election for Sheriff held in each County, except the Counties of Berkeley and Hampton, at the general election in 1892, and on the same day in every fourth year thereafter. In the Counties excepted the election shall be in 1894.”
Subsequent codifiers have faithfully followed this seeming statutory duplication in the subsequent decennial codes and that now current (of 1942) contains as part of sec. 2350 the following:
“There shall be a general election for * * * sheriff * * * at every alternate general election, reckoning from the year one thousand eight hundred and eighty-eight, except as to the counties of Berkeley and Cherokee, * * * and Hampton“. In the excepted counties the reckoning shall be from 1890.
Sec. 3473 of the Code of 1942 follows:
“There shall be an election for sheriff held in each county, except in the counties of Berkeley, Cherokee and Hampton, at the general election in 1904, and on the same day in every fourth year thereafter. In the counties excepted the election shall be in 1902. Provided, that in Beaufort County the sheriff shall be elected in the general election in 1934, and in the general election every four years thereafter.”
Beaufort County became an exception to the schedule provided by those statutes for the most of the counties by amendment of the last quoted section, 3473, by Act No. 92 of 1933, 38 Stat. 97. There are doubtless sound, historical reasons for the exception of the named counties from the majority schedule but they have not come to light in the argument or consideration of this case. They may well be similar to that which came to exist with respect to Kershaw County.
The records in the office of the Secretary of State show that Kershaw County first departed from the general sched-
It also appears from the records in the office of the Secretary of State that Allendale and Chesterfield Counties have been electing their respective sheriffs in the same years as Kershaw County and the other counties which are excepted from the general schedule of the statutes, although no amendatory act has been found which is applicable to Allendale and Chesterfield.
The defendant‘s term of office depends upon the term of his predecessor, DeBruhl, who was last elected in 1950, and in contemplation of the constitution was entitled to a four year term. To this effect is Limehouse v. Blackwell, 190 S. C. 122, 2 S. E. (2d) 483 (and earlier authorities there cited), which involved the office of Clerk of Court but it is the subject of a similar constitutional provision to that applicable to sheriff, to wit,
The discrepancy between the existing statutes and the generally accepted terms of office of the sheriff of Kershaw
“Section 3473. There shall be an election for sheriff held in each county, except in the counties of Berkeley, Cherokee, Kershaw and Hampton, at the general election in 1904, and on the same day in every fourth year thereafter. In the counties excepted the election shall be in 1902. Provided, that in Beaufort County the sheriff shall be elected in the general election in 1934, and in the general election every four years thereafter. Provided, that in Kershaw County the sheriff shall be elected in the general election to be held in 1954 and in the general election every four years thereafter.”
Plaintiff‘s contention is for a literal application of the old statutes as they were before the amendment of 1952, whereby it is claimed that the sheriff‘s election in 1918 in Kershaw County and at every four-year interval since should be declared null and void. However, such drastic adjudication, if otherwise necessary, which is not conceded, is obviated by the terms of the Act of 1952. In apparent recognition of that, plaintiff has attacked the constitutionality of the act, principally upon the ground that it violates
They have long contained special provisions similar to that added by the amendment of 1952, as seen at length above, in the form of exceptions of certain named counties, which was evidently necessary to fit the schedule of constitutional quadrennial elections of sheriffs in those counties. Likewise, when it came to the attention of the General Assembly that Kershaw County had been off the general schedule since the year 1918, a special provision in the general law was the logical remedy, and it cannot be said that the exception of Kershaw County from the general schedule of the statutes, to fit the facts of many years, was any more objectionable as special legislation than the exception of several counties from the general schedule in the beginning. The statutes upon which reliance is had, already old, were re-codified as part of the Code of 1902, soon after adoption of the
Another point of constitutional attack upon the Act of 1952 is that its title was inadequate and misleading and, therefore, violative of
If the General Assembly had not taken timely and effective action, as we have shown that it has, there is a rarely applicable but established doctrine of the law that might be available to the defendant, which we do not decide. It is summed up in the maxim, communis error facit jus. It was applied in the landmark decision of Herndon v. Moore, 18 S. C. 339. Before the adoption of the
The judgment is for the defendant and the petition-complaint is dismissed.
BAKER, C. J., dissents.
BAKER, Chief Justice (dissenting).
I respectfully (and as always, reluctantly) dissent from at least the result of the prevailing opinion. If the defendant had been appointed subsequent to the amendment of 1952 of
The result above stated is in accord with the holdings of this Court since the case of Reister v. Hemphill, 2 S. C. 325. Whenever the occasion has arisen this Court has pointed out that the term of office runs for the period specified in the Constitution, regardless of any vacancy occurring during the term. A person filling a vacancy in a constitutional office “is simply placed in that position to perform the duties of the” office. The term is unaffected. Privette v. Grinnell, 191 S. C. 376, 4 S. E. (2d) 305; Limehouse v. Blackwell, 190 S. C. 122, 2 S. E. (2d) 483; Cannon v. Sligh, 170 S. C. 45, 169 S. E. 712; State ex rel. Huckabee v. Hough, 103 S. C. 87, 87 S. E. 436; Wright v. Charles, 4 S. C. 178.
The constitutional term of office of the sheriff of Kershaw County under the law prevailing prior to the enactment of the 1952 statute was at all times a four year term. There was no authority for an election in 1918. The term which
If vested property rights were involved in the irregularities in the elections for sheriff in Kershaw County, a different situation might be presented. Here we are afforded an opportunity to conform the term of office of the sheriff of Kershaw County to the constitutional and statutory provisions prescribing the term. What is being done by the majority opinion, on the other hand, is to extend the term of office of defendant‘s predecessor for a period of two years, thereby enlarging the term to six years.
Stated another way, the Court is in effect preventing the holding of an election at the time when the Constitution and statutes expressly require it, and thereby extending the term of office for a period of two years.
Nothing could be clearer under our decisions than that the term of office of a constitutional officer cannot be enlarged or reduced by legislation. Yet, here the Court is adding two years to the term of defendant‘s predecessor, and giving the appointed incumbent two years of office beyond the period for which he was appointed.
There are no morals involved in this case such as would have been if the plaintiff were attacking or questioning the right of one who had been elected to hold this office for four full years from the date of his election. For instance, if the late Sheriff DeBruhl had not died, and was the incumbent sheriff, and his right to hold the office until 1954 under his election in 1950 was being attacked, the morals and justice of the case would weigh very heavily with the writer. Here, however, the defendant holds the office of Sheriff of Kershaw County by grace of his appointment by his Excellency, Governor Byrnes “until the next general election for county sheriffs” which at the time of his appointment was fixed by law for Kershaw County as the general election in 1952.
