64 Mo. 58 | Mo. | 1876
delivered the opinion of the court.
In 1867 the legislature created the Common Pleas court of Cass county. Subsequently, by the act of March 1873, probate jurisdiction was conferred on that court, as well as concurrent, original and appellate jurisdiction with the circuit court in all civil cases. By the second section of the amendatory act, an election for judge of that court was to be held in 1874, and it was held accordingly, and the present incumbent elected for the term of four years.
In March, 1875, an act was passed repealing the former acts, and establishing, in lieu of the Common Pleas court, a Probate and Criminal court, to be possessed of exclusive, original and appellate jurisdiction in all criminal cases, and alike jurisdiction in all probate matters, with certain exceptions not necessary to be enumerated.
This act was not to take effect until January 1, 1876, when the governor rvas to appoint a judge who was to hold office until his successor, to be elected in the fall of that year, was elected and qualified. This appointment and election have taken place, and the prisoner, whose application we are now to consider, was indicted, convicted of grand larceny, and is now in the peniten
This application necessarily involves the consideration of three points : First, whether the new Constitution, which dates from November 30th, 1875, prevented the act last mentioned from becoming operative; second, if such prevention did occur, the effect thereof on the case at bar, touching the validity of the conviction ; third, whether the present is a proper method of procedure whereby such conviction may be called in question.
I.
Relative to the first point; It will be observed that the new Constitution (§ 3, p. 43) divides all common pleas courts existing and organized into three classes ; providing that those in cities and towns having a population exceeding 3,500, and such as are presided over by a judge of the circuit court, shall continue to exist, etc., until otherwise provided by law, and that “all other courts of common pleas shall cease to exist at the expiration of the present terms of ofiice of the several judges thereof.”
The Common Pleas court of Cass county falls within the last named class, if the words just quoted are to be received in their ordinary import. Receiving them in this manner we but adopt the advice of Judge Story, who says (Sto. Const. §451) : “Constitutions are not designed for metaphysical or logical subtleties ; for niceties of expression; for critical propriety ; for elaborate shades of meaning; or for the exercise of philosophical acuteness or judicial research. They are instruments of a practical nature, founded on the common business of life, adapted to common wants, designed for common use, and fitted for common understanding. The people make them; the people adopt them ; the people must be supposed to read them, with the help of common sense, and cannot be presumed to admit in them any recondite meaning or any extraordinary gloss.” Receiving these words, then, of the Constitution in the way thus pointed out, there is no room left except for the conclusion that the Common Pleas court of Cass county was given, together with all others of its class, a constitutional and permissive existence until the expiration of a certain period.
. It will not be denied that the law establishing the Common Pleas court of Cass county was in force when the constitution was adopted, nor that such law was consistent therewith, nor will it be affirmed that the act creating the Probate and Criminal court of Cass county was in force when the constitution took effect. So that it would seem clear beyond question, that the constitution, by continuing the existence of the Common Pleas court of Cass county, until the expiration of the present term of the judge thereof (which will not occur until 1878), and by continuing in full force the law which gave that court its being, necessarily, and by inevitable implication, accomplished the virtual repeal of the act establishing the court whose existence is now being considered. Because the law which professedly abolishes the Common Pleas court, professedly creates tlie Probate and Criminal court. Both cannot, nor were they intended to co-exist.
This view is further strengthened by another section (§ 4, p. 43) of the schedule, which provides that ££ all criminal courts organized and existing under the laws of this State, and not specially provided for in this constitution, shall continue to exist until otherwise provided for by law.” For by thus specifying and singling out such criminal courts only as were £iorganized and existing■,” the framers of the constitution must be presumed to have had in mind the whole subject, and to have intended to continue such criminal courts alone, as had an actual and not a mere potential existence.
This construction accords well with a very familiar rule, that the expression of one thing is the exclusion of another. (D warns on Stat., 605.) ££ Affirmative specification excludes implication.” (Id. 605, and cas. cit.) And this construction is in harmony also with the preamble to the schedule. The evident idea of the framers of the constitution as expressed in that preamble was to pre
This is shown in the clearest and most unequivocal manner by the sections already quoted, and by similar ones scattered all through the constitution, expressive of the same idea, and speaking in effect the same language.
Again, the meaning we have attached to the fifth section of the schedule, as to the continued existence of the third class of common pleas courts, is the same as that attached thereto by the makers of the constitution themselves, as shown by their contemporaneous construction thereof contained in their address to the people of this State. But the language of that section is so plain as to obviate, it would seem, all necessity for construction. This being the case, we have but to reiterate the conclusion before announced, that the law establishing the Probate and Criminal court of Cass county, never became operative nor possessed the force and validity of a legal enactment, in consequence of being repugnant to, and inconsistent with, that provision of the constitution which gave recognition and continued existence to the Common Pleas court of that county.
n.
We are thus led to the discussion of our second point, and respecting this there would, owing to the disposition made of the first point, appear to be but little difficulty. Numerous cases can be instanced from the books,where the a.cts of an incumbent of an office have been held valid, upon the ground that such incumbent was an officer de facto. But an officer of that description necessarily pre-supposes an office which the law recognizes. And a quite extensive research has failed to discover an ihstance where an incumbent has been held an officer de facto, unless there was a legal office to fill; and all the cases cited from our own reports were of that sort.
III.
In relation to the third point, the law is well settled, that if the petitioner has been committed by a court or person having absolutely no jurisdiction, then the validity of the commitment may he determined on habeas corpus. (Hurd on Hab. Corp., 331 et seq, and cas. cit.)
It does thus clearly appear in the present instance, and the result is that the petitioner is entitled to his discharge, and it is so ordered.