6 N.W.2d 101 | Minn. | 1942
Mr. Justice Andrew Holt and Mr. Justice Stone were elected associate justices of this court at the general election in 1936 for the six-year term from the first Monday in January 1937 to the first Monday in January 1943. After long and distinguished service on the court, Mr. Justice Holt resigned on October 6, 1942, and did not seek reëlection. Mr. Justice Stone, after many years of similar service, became a candidate for reëlection at the election to be held on November 3, 1942. At the primary held on September 8, 1942, there were ten candidates for nominations. Honorable Luther W. Youngdahl, Honorable Thomas F. Gallagher, Mr. Justice Stone, and Honorable J. Norman Peterson received the highest number of votes in the order named. Honorable O.J. Anderson *156 received the fifth and relator the seventh highest number of votes cast.
On September 13, 1942, five days subsequent to the primary, Mr. Justice Stone died.
The state canvassing board, which met on September 18, 1942, declared Youngdahl, Gallagher, Peterson, and Anderson to be the nominees for the office. The secretary of state intends to place their names as the nominees on the official ballot.
The governor filled the vacancies caused by Mr. Justice Holt's resignation and Mr. Justice Stone's death by appointing Mr. Thomas O. Streissguth to fill the one caused by Mr. Justice Holt's resignation and Mr. Maynard E. Pirsig to fill the one caused by Mr. Justice Stone's death.
MANDAMUS TO FILL BY ELECTION NOT IN REGULAR COURSE, BUT UNDER CONST. ART. 6, § 10, THE VACANCY IN THE OFFICE OF ASSOCIATE JUSTICE CREATED BY THE DEATH OF MR. JUSTICE STONE.
Relator's contention is that the vacancy in the office of associate justice of the supreme court created by Mr. Justice Stone's death is required to be filled not in the ordinary course of electing judges but by election to fill the particular vacancy under Minn. Const. art.
"In case the office of any judge shall become vacant before the expiration of the regular term for which he was elected, the vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the governor, until a successor is elected and qualified. And such successor shall be elected at the first annual election that occurs more than thirty days after the vacancy shall have happened."
This, he contends, is mandatory.
A successor to Mr. Justice Stone would be elected at the forthcoming election in the regular course of things. If he had lived and would have been elected, he would have been his own successor. If the relator's contention that the election of a successor *157 can be held only under the provisions relating to filling vacancies is correct, the election of a successor in the regular course of things is not only prevented, but the election machinery which has been set in motion for that purpose is arrested.
The constitution provides for a judiciary selected as therein provided. Subsidiary thereto is the purpose of keeping judicial offices filled at all times. Accomplishment of the principal purpose — that of providing a judiciary — is provided for by the election of judges in the regular course for the terms fixed by the constitution. Accomplishment of the subsidiary purpose of keeping such offices filled, lest such purpose be defeated and inconvenience result from vacancies, is provided for by the provisions for filling vacancies.
Art. 6, § 3, of the constitution provides for the election of members of this court for a term of six years. Prior to the amendment of 1883 the term was seven years. State ex rel. Lull v. Frizzell,
In State ex rel. Babcock v. Black,
"Section 10 was put in the constitution to provide for the ex. ceptional case of a vacancy — for a case where the regular order of terms, and of elections for such terms, is broken in upon by a vacancy before the end of a regular term for which the judge was elected, and by the necessity to elect before the election would come on under the general rule. The election mentioned by the section is not one which comes in the regular course of such elections, as provided for by § 7 [this section relates to the office of probate judge and his term of office], but an election which becomes necessary by the happening of the vacancy; and in order that such an election, thus coming on at a time different from that at which a judge would, in the regular and natural course of things, be elected, shall not be had without adequate notice to the people, it is provided that a successor shall be elected at the first annual election that occurs more than thirty days after the vacancy shall have happened. This means the successor whose election is made necessary by the vacancy." (Parenthetical matter supplied.)
Here, a successor to fill the vacancy in question will be elected at the November election for the full constitutional term of six years. Whether a successor be elected in regular course or to fill a vacancy under § 10, the election is for the constitutional term. In Crowell v. Lambert,
In 1883 the constitution was amended. Art. 6, § 3, was amended so as to make the terms of members of this court six instead of seven years. Art. 7 was amended, among other things, by adding § 9, which provides, among other things, for biennial instead of annual elections on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in *159
November and that the official year of the state shall begin on and all terms of office shall terminate on the first Monday in January. The necessary effect of such provision is that the elections in November are for terms beginning on the first Monday in the following January. See State ex rel. Lull v. Frizzell,
We said in Flakne v. Erickson,
"So, we think it is clear that if and when the governor makes an interim appointment to fill the mentioned vacancy the appointee would hold the office until a successor is elected and has qualified, and that the one elected at the next general election cannot qualify except for the regular term beginning in January 1943."
It follows as a matter of course that the successor to Mr. Justice Stone is to be elected at the forthcoming election in November in the regular course. Under art. 7, § 9, the successor cannot qualify and take office until the first Monday in January 1943. The vacancy is filled by the appointment of Mr. Justice Maynard E. Pirsig, who is entitled to occupy the office until the first Monday in January 1943, the date on which the terms of the judges elected in November shall begin. Likewise, Mr. Justice Streissguth is entitled to fill the vacancy caused by Mr. Justice Holt's resignation until the same time.
*160MANDAMUS TO COMPEL RESPONDENT TO ACCEPT RELATOR'S FILING BY PETITION NOT TO FILL THE VACANCY IN THE OFFICE OF ASSOCIATE JUSTICE UNDER CONST. ART. 6, § 10, BUT UNDER STATUTES TO FILL A VACANCY IN THE NOMINATION FOR THAT OFFICE IN THE ELECTION TO BE HELD IN DUE COURSE, AND NOT TO PLACE THE NAME OF O.J. ANDERSON ON THE BALLOT AS A NOMINEE.
Relator contends that he is entitled to have his name go on the ballot to fill the vacancy in the nomination of Mr. Justice Stone upon the ground that such vacancy should be filled only by nomination by petition, as he has attempted, and to prevent the name of O.J. Anderson from being placed thereon upon the ground that there is no authority in law for holding that Anderson is a nominee.
Relator bases his right to file on that part of Minn. St. 1941, §
"provided that no persons shall be nominated by petition pursuant to this section for any office now or hereafter declared to be a nonpartisan office, except in case of vacancy or death or withdrawal of a nominated candidate. A person who has been a candidate for an office at the primary election in any year shall not be eligible for nomination for the same office in that year by petition or certificate under the provisions of this section."
The office of associate justice of this court is nonpartisan under Id. §
The state canvassing board declared O.J. Anderson to be nominated, and respondent intends to place his name on the ballot as a nominee under authority of §
"If there is no proper committee to fill such vacancy, as above provided, then in that event the person receiving the next highest number of votes for such office at such primary election shall be *161
the candidate for such office and if there is no other candidate for such office and a vacancy exists by reason of this fact the vacancy may be filled by the proper officer, placing upon the ballot the name or names of such candidates as are nominated by petition in the manner provided in sections
It appears without dispute that relator was a defeated candidate at the primary; that there was a death of a nominated candidate, creating a vacancy in a nomination, and that there is no committee, much less a "proper" one, to fill the vacancy in the nomination.
While the proviso of §
It is not clear just what interest relator claims or has, if he is not entitled to the nomination on other grounds, in the question of the legality of Anderson's nomination and placing his name as a nominee on the ballot. Apparently he raises this question as a citizen and elector as well as a candidate. For that reason (see 29 C.J.S., Elections, § 140), we shall decide the question. *162
There is much to be said in support of relator's position that §
It is therefore clear from the arguments pro and con, which have just been stated, and from the litigation that has come before this court pending the forthcoming election, that the statutes relating to nomination by petition and filling vacancies in nominations are full of ambiguities and that their meaning can be ascertained only by construction. Furthermore, there is no certainty that any particular construction is the only one of which these statutes are susceptible, much less that it is the correct one.
The problem of the construction of §
It is not necessary to decide whether the executive and administrative construction is correct. It is enough to say that such construction finds reasonable support and justification in the language of the statute and the processes by which the construction was made.
In 1937 an interim legislative committee was appointed to study our election laws and their application for the purpose, among others, of determining what changes should be made therein. A subcommittee was appointed "to obtain information from the various election officials of the state * * * as to necessary changes in the existing election laws for the purpose of clarification and revision * * *." Report of the Interim Committee on Election Laws to the Legislature of the State of Minnesota, 1939, p. iv. The committee and the subcommittee held numerous hearings. As a result of its labors the committee reported a bill which embodied the substance of L. 1939, c. 345, which with some exceptions codified and arranged all prior election laws. It is a reasonable inference that the legislature, when it enacted c. 345, not only because of the report of the interim committee, but also because of its presumed knowledge of such matters, was thoroughly conversant with the prior executive and administrative construction and practical operation of the statutes in question.
The prior law, Mason St. 1927, c. 6, § 344, was repealed by c. 345, Part Twelve, § 1, and then was reënacted without change as c. 345, *164
Part Three, c. 3, § 5. C. 345, Part Twelve, § 2, provides that such a reënactment should be construed as a continuation of the old law and not as a new enactment. Johnson v. DuBois,
Absent legislative manifestation of contrary intention, the reftactment of a statute without change after it has received a practical construction by the executive or administrative departments of the government for a long period of time adopts the prior construction. Christgau v. Woodlawn Cemetery Assn.
In each case the petition for a peremptory writ ofmandamus is denied.
MR. JUSTICE PIRSIG and MR. JUSTICE STREISSGUTH took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.