4 Whart. 186 | Pa. | 1839
The opinion of the Court was delivered on the fourth of February by
Did the question depend on whether all the provisions of the eleventh section of the schedule, are applicable to the officers named in the third section of the sixth article, the respondent might have a plausible case ; for some of them, by the letter, are not; but it is impossible to say, with that degree of certainty which is requisite to judicial decision, what was meant. “ The appointing
The business of theconventionwasnot to change the constitution but to alter it; and its individuality being retained, those parts of it which are yet to be supplanted at appointed periods, are still in force. This is a principle not of convenience, but necessity, even in the adoption of an entire constitution whose parts are not all to-go into operation at once. A convention can do no more than mark out the principles of organic structure: the apparatus necessary to animate the mass, must be produced by acts of ordinary legislation. Such was the predicament of the convention of 1790, which, for that purpose had
The importance of the principles involved in the present case, has induced me to state the reasons why I concurdn the opinion that the respondent is not entitled to hold the office of Recorder of Deeds, for the city and county of Philadelphia.
Under the constitution of 1790, recorders of deeds, together with a great number of other officers in the commonwealth, were appointee! by the governor, and were removable at his will and pleasure. This power of removal was not founded, as it was at one time supposed to be, on the maxim that the power of removal was incident to the power of appointment; for there are many instances :under our constitution and others, in which the power of appointment is vested in one functionary, and the power, of removal in another. It is derived" from those clauses of the constitution by
When, however, the present amended constitution of Pennsylvania was formed, in the year 1838, the convention thought fit to make a change in various officers, both as to their mode of appointment and tenure. New provisions were -introduced, respecting especially that class of which the officer now in question is one, namely, pr'othonotaries and clerks of Courts, recorders of deeds, and registers of wills. By article six, section third, they were all, (except prothonotari.es of the Supreme Court,) made eligible by the people at the general elections, and were to- hold- their offices for three years, if they behaved well. But inasmuch as the counties in the state differ very widely in their population and business, and in some of scanty population, it has been deemed expedient by the governor to give all these offices to one person, in other counties to divide them among two or three, and in others each office has a separate incumbent, in order to arrange the future incumbents according to the same principles, the legislature is directed by the same section, to provide by law, how many, persons shall hold said' offices, and how many and which of said offices shall be held by- one person.
By virtue of these provisions, and the 10th clause of the schedule, the first election of these officers will take place in October 1839. All that the legislature has to do in relation to them is, to provide by law amongst iiow many incumbents in each county these offices shall be distributed, and to prescribe the manner of their election. This is enjoined upon them as a duty by the will of the people, authorita
But after arriving at this point, another question necessarily presented itself to the framers of the amendment. The officer is to be chosen and commissioned for three years. But suppose,he should die, or resign, within that period, a vacancy will be thereby created, and how is that to be filled! Some officer, legally qualified, is indispensable to transact the- public business. He has no deputy recognised by law as capable of taking his place ; there is no officer, like the coroner in the sheriff’s’ case, to step in and act. It would scarcely be worth while to be constantly holding special elections to fill up these vacancies.' To meet this emergency then, and, as it appears to me, for that purpose only, the following provision is made in the same section. “ Vacancies in any of the •said offices shall be filled by'appointments to be made by the governor, to continue until the next general election, and until successors shall be elected and qualified as aforesaid.”
It has been earnestly Contended, that this clause provides for the present case : that a vacancy had occurred in this office under the new constitution, that the governor had appointed the respondent to fill it, and that therefore he is to continue-until the next general election. But it appears to me, on the best consideration I have been able to give to this and other clauses, that it applies solely to cases of vacancies occurring after the system shall have gone into operation, and thd officer shall have been elected. The words of it extend no further. “ Vacancies in said offices.” What offices 1 Those which" had been mentioned before — those which were to endure for three years — those- towhich the'incumbents were elected by the people. I do not see how a vacancy can exist in an elective office till it has been once filled by. an election. It whs absolutely necessary to provide for such vacancies, because otherwise the office could not have been filled, and the public interest would seriously suffer. Whereas vacancies occurring in the short interval till next fall, in offices of executive appointment, were of but minor and temporary importance, and no inconvenience could result from leaving them for a time as they already stood.
Besides the officers above referred to, namely, prothonotaries and
It seems to me, that the intermediate time between the 1st January, 1839, when the new constitution commenced its operation, and the time of the general election of 1839, when the officer in question is to be elected by the people, does not fall within this 8th section, because the 10th section of the schedule declares that recorders &c., shall be elected in 1839, and therefore these officers are not left to the will of the legislature, and because these dffices are in one sense of the word provided for by the. 3d section of article 6, though they are not fully provided for by that section, because the intermediate time is left to stand as it was; nothing, as has been before stated, being said about it. And it is from this equivocal sense in which the words provided for have been used in the constitution, that the difficulty in this section seems to have originated.
I therefore think that the eleventh clause of the schedule providing that all officers in the appointment of the executive shall continue until the legislature-shall pass the laws required by the 8th section of article 6, does not apply to the present case, but respects Only those cases where incumbents of executive appointment not mentioned in the constitution, hold under existing laws. This system is to continue ; -but the legislature may repeal and alter those laws, or pass new ones, and give their appointment to the governor, or to any person or persons they deem proper, and prescribe their tenure and mode of removal. ,
Being then a case so far not acted upon in the text of the consti
Considerable discussion has arisen on the words in the commencement of the 11th clause of the schedule. “ The appointing power shall remain as heretofore.” This phraseology is not strictly correct if taken in its broadest sense, for the appointing power of the executive is in many respects abridged ór modified by. the new constitution. But I think the most reasonable construction of it is, that the remainder of the appointing power shall continue as heretofore. That is to say, such portion of -the appointing power, whether vested in the governor of in others, as is not taken away by this constitution, or shall not be taken away by laws passed in pursuance of the 8th section of article six, shall remain as heretofore. In this sense it applies the same enactment to the present office, and others similarly -situated, which is more generally contained in thé third clause of the schedule above-mentioned: namely, that as the power of the executive to appoint and remove prior to next fall is not altered by this constitution nor rendered liable to be altered by the legislature, it shall remain as heretofore.
Judgment of ouster.