Dowling v. White

116 Ala. 306 | Ala. | 1896

McCLELLAN, J.

It is conceded in this case that the term óf office of Sims, who was elected sheriff of Dale county, in August, 1892, and went into office on November 3d, following, extended to November 3d, 1896; and we shall consider the case here upon- that concession, without deciding that question. Sims resigned in March, 1896, and White was appointed to succeed him. Section 248 of the Code provides : “Vacancies in all county offices are filled by appointment of the Governor, except as otherwise provided; the appointees must be commissioned, and they shall hold their offices for the unexpired term, and until their successors are elected and qualified.” Upon the concession that Sims’ term extended to November, 1896, this statute, if it were a valid enactment as to sheriffs, and there were no later law on the subject, would have entitled White to hold until November. But the constitution contains the following provision : ‘ ‘A sheriff shall be elected in each county by the qualified electors *309thereof, who shall hold his office for the term of four years, unless sooner removed, and shall be ineligible to such office as his own successor ; provided, that sheriffs elected on the first Monday in August, 1877, or at such other time as may be prescribed by law for the election in that year, shall hold their offices for the term of three years, and until their successors shall be elected and qualified. In the year 1880, at the general election for members to the General Assembly, sheriffs shall be elect-' ed for four years, as herein provided. Vacancies in the office of sheriff shall be filled by the Governor, as in other cases ; and the person appointed shall continue in office until the next general election in the county for-sheriff, as provided bylaw.”

The convention in the ordination of this section had prominently in mind, as appears from its own terms, the fact that elections for the office of sheriff were then held in August, the time therefor having been previously changed by statute from November. And “the next general election in the county for sheriff, ’ ’ to which. appointees to that office shall continue in office under the last clause of the section, is, of course, an election held in August, and, with reference to the present case, the August election 1896. If this organic provision had contained no reference to the fact that .elections for sheriff were held in August, there might be some plausibility in the idea that the convention really intended that the appointee should hold until November, at which time elections had theretofore been held and to which time, on the concession before adverted to, the terms of sheriffs extended, notwithstanding their successors should be elected several months before. But as the organic provision stands, we see no escape from its plain words, and no ground to give it a construction other than that imported by the terms the convention employed. Nor is it as thus read at all inconsistent with section 3 of the schedule to the constitution. That section provided that all officers elected in 1874 and all officers in office at the time of the ratification of the constitution, except such as hold under statutes, should continue in office until their terms as fixed by the con- , stitution as then of force should expire ; but it has no bearing upon appointees to fill vacancies occurring subsequent to the ratification of the constitution of 1875. *310Nor is this provision inconsistent with the idea that sheriffs elected shall hold for four years. The convention, while maintaining the integrity of terms then filled, and securing the full tenure as to time of officers thereafter elected, might well provide a shorter term for, or an earlier period for the expiration of the term of, an officer appointed to fill a vacancy. This, in our opinion, was done by the last clause of section 26, any statute to the contrary notwithstanding ; and it follows that the term of office of the appointee White expired so soon after the August election of 1896 as Dowling, who was then elected, qualified to enter upon his duties as sheriff of Dale county. The circuit court erred in adopting the contrary view, and its judgment must be reversed. The cause is remanded.

Eeversed and remanded.