54 Miss. 396 | Miss. | 1877
The judges delivered opinions seriatim.
The proposition that the legislature cannot, directly or indirectly, remove the incumbent of an office created by the Constitution during a term fixed by that instrument, needs no argument nor elucidation. If not originally self-evident, it has, by a long and unbroken series of decisions, become firmly settled. No one will contend, for instance, that any act of legislation could abridge the term of an incumbent of the gubernatorial office, or of that of the Attorney-General, or Auditor of Public Accounts. No matter what disguise might be adopted, or how plausible the means devised, it would be the duty of this court to scan rigidly any act that seemed to contemplate such an end, and to pronounce void any provision the practical effect of which was to accomplish such a result. This doctrine does not proceed upon the idea that the State has entered into a contract with the incumbent, by which it has irrevocably bound itself to accept his services for a specified period, though it is undoubtedly true that in some sense, and for many purposes, an office is the result of contract, and the incumbency of it a right of property, which courts will protect. But the fundamental principle which prohibits the removal by legislation of a constitutional officer during a constitutional term, is that the framers of the organic law, by creating the office and specifying the term, have unmistakably
The correctness of these views will not be questioned where only one officer of a class is prescribed by the Constitution, as in the case of the Governor or Attorney-General; nor where a fixed number is established, as is the ease with the judges of this court and the supervisors of the several counties. But it is suggested that where the Constitution merely directs that a suitable or competent number of a designated class of officers shall be elected or appointed, and leaves that number to be determined by the legislature, the power to establish carries with it the power to change; that, therefore, even though a fixed term is prescribed, each legislature must judge of the number needed by the State, and that the judgment of one legislature on this question cannot bind a succeeding one. It is said, for instance, that the Constitution of this State gives terms of fixed duration to the circuit judges, chancellors, district attorneys, justices of the peace and constables, but leaves the number of these officials to be wholly regulated by legislative will; and hence that each legislature must determine for itself how many are necessary. It is therefore insisted, that whether all the incumbents shall remain in office during the full constitutional terms for which they were chosen must depend on whether the legislature deems that
Evidently two antagonistic evils which lurked on either side of the public weal were intended to be equally guarded against by giving to these officers fixed terms, but leaving their number to legislative will. One of these was the imposition on the State of a horde of superfluous officers, who, holding their places for life, or through long terms prescribed by the body that brought them into existence, should prove useless and costly burdens on the State. The other was the evil, to some extent inseparable from republican institutions, which springs from frequent and violent changes in the officers of the State with every variation in popular caprice. Both of these evils were guarded against by affixing definite and short terms •to these offices, and leaving their number to be determined by the legislature. Thus, at frequently recurring intervals, the legislature could ascertain how many judges, district attorneys and justices were necessary, and could order their election or appointment; but, when so chosen, they must be permitted to serve out the full terms prescribed by the Constitution, unless sooner removed in the modes pointed out in that instrument. If the Constitution had undertaken to determine the exact number of these officers, it might have inflicted on us a number greatly in excess of our needs, or it might have crippled the entire judiciary system by a supply totally inadequate to. the requirements of the public service. On the other hand, if it had left their terms wholly at.the legislative mercy, there would have been a wholesale change in the judiciary of the State with every change of party in that body. It is impossible to imagine any thing more disastrous than this to the welfare of the Commonwealth, and we are unable to perceive any method of avoiding it wiser and better than the one adopted. We would not abridge the power of the legislature to decide as to the number needed, but that power must
If this construction sometimes inflicts on the State, for a few years, one or more supernumerary officers, this is infinitely better than that this whole class of important officials, comprising almost the entire bodjr of the judiciary of the State, should be at the mercy of the dominant party in each successive legislature. It is said that no system of government is perfect, and that power must be lodged somewhere. This is undoubted, and its application may be found in the consideration that the legislature will not ordinarily provide for a horde of unnecessary officers; but, if they should do so, the evil need only be endured until the expiration of the terms of those first chosen. Then, and not till then, the corrective can be applied. These remarks, of course, have no application to offices created by the legislature, as to which its power is unlimited.
If this precise question has not heretofore been decided in this State, in a case where the number of officers to be chosen was left to legislative discretion, the views here announced have been so often and for so long a period foreshadowed in our decisions, that we cannot think them novel, either to the profession'or to the people at large. They are intimated with more or less distinctness in Runnels v. State, Walker, 146; Hughes v. Buckingham, 5 S. & M. 647; State v. Smedes, 26 Miss. 47; McAffee v. Russell, 29 Miss. 84, 96; Newsom v. Cocke, 44 Miss. 352, 363; Brady v. West, 50 Miss. 68; French v. State, 52 Miss. 759; Hyde v. State, 52 Miss. 665. In other States the exact question has been uniformly settled in consonance with these views, though not always upon grounds which meet our entire concurrence. We agree with these cases, however, in the result reached; namely, that a con
Having arrived at the conclusion that no incumbent of a constitutional office can be displaced during the continuance of a constitutional term, and that this principle is in no manner affected by the delegation to the legislature of the power to determine the number of officers required by the necessities of the State, let us apply this principle to the case at bar, keeping in view the further proposition, that a constitutional inhibition of a certain result includes every possible method by which that result can be accomplished.
The relator, in November, 1875, was elected to the office of district attorney of the tenth judicial district for the constitutional term of four years. There were then thirteen judicial districts in the State, and there was one district attorney elected for each. They were each entitled by the law then and still in force to an annual salary of $1,200, besides fees of office. During the spring of 1876 the terms of office of all the circuit judges in the State expired, and the legislature, perceiving that there was no necessity for so many as thirteen, passed, on April 4, 1876, an act by which the number of districts was reduced from thirteen to ten (to which an eleventh was afterwards added) ; but it was careful to provide, by a supplemental act, that this act should not take effect until the expiration of the terms of the judges then in office. In the appointment of their successors, eleven judges only were commissioned ; but no provision having been made with reference to the district attorneys,’there were left in office two more of these officers than there were districts. To remedy this supposed evil, the legislature, at its next session, passed an act, entitled “An Act to assign district attorneys to duty in the judicial districts of this State,” approved Feb. 1, 1877. In the changes in the boundaries of the districts, produced by the act of April, 1876, two or more district attorneys had been, in some instances, thrown into one district, while in other dis
It is at once evident that we are not called on to pass upon the constitutionality of so much of the act as directs the assignment of district attorneys, except in so far as its effect is to displace some incumbent; and it is unnecessary, therefore, to decide whether such assignments are valid in districts where no collisions are created. We would remark, however, that we are not inclined to adopt the views announced by some of the courts to the effect that an officer can have a vested territorial right in the particular counties composing the district in which he was elected. We entertain no doubt of the legislative power to change the boundaries of districts. Let us inquire into the validity of the act with reference to those officers left unassigned. It is evident that its constitutionality in this respect must depend on whether it amounts to a practical displacement of such officers.
Sect. 25 of art. 6 of the Constitution is in these words : “ There shall be an attorney-general elected by the qualified electors of the State, and a competent number of district
It is evident that the law in question violates, with reference to the relator, two of these requirements. It has left him neither district nor duties. There is not a court in the State in which he has the right to prosecute a criminal or enter a nolle prosequi. There is not a grand-jury room in which his presence would not be an unauthorized and unlawful intrusion. He may, indeed, in the absence of the district attorney, who has been assigned to his district, appear in the county of his residence; but this is wholly independent of his own volition, or that of the presiding judge, and rests wholly on the caprice or convenience of the assigned officer. Certainly this is neither giving him a district, nor permitting him to exercise any of the functions of the office. If he can be said to be an officer at all, he certainly occupies a most anomalous position. Can a man be said to be an officer of the State when there is not within its limits a spot where he is allowed, by law, to perform any function of the office which he is supposed to fill ? Has not the relator been as effectually removed from office as if the legislature had declared, in explicit terms, that from and after a certain date James T. Fant should
But it is said that the legislature has the right to diminish his compensation at pleasure; that a salary of $100 per annum has been left him; and that as this writ is only prosecuted to assert a right to an undiminished salary, we can consider no other question than this. The point is not free from difficulty, and has been carefully considered. It is true that the legislature has full control over the salary, as well as over the duties and the districts. We are not prepared to say that it may not graduate the compensation according to the labor imposed; and if it had seen fit to reduce the tenth district to a single county, and to have fixed the salary of the incumbent at $100, we are not prepared to say that the act would have been invalid, though upon this point we express no opinion, because it may be that the framers of the Constitution, in speaking of the districts of district attorneys, must, in view of the past history of the State, be held to have contemplated districts coextensive with the territory presided over by a single circuit judge. But we are not presented with such a case, and we must look at the whole law in its practical effects on the relator alone. He has neither duties nor district, and the salary left him must therefore be regarded either as a pension or as a compensation for possible duties, which he may never be called upon to perform. In either aspect, it is wholly at war with the genius of our institutions. The legislature has exclusive control over the salary of the Attorney-General. Suppose, then, it should enact that all the duties of that officer should be performed by the district attorney residing in the Jackson district; but that, in the absence of that officer, the Attorney-General might continue to act, and that his salary should be $100. Could this court hesitate to declare such an act unconstitutional ? And yet that is, mutatis mutandis, the case at bar. By § 7 of art. 12 it is made the duty of the legislature to “ provide suitable compensation for all officers.” It would be an exceedingly delicate matter for this court to declare that the compensation
We rest our objections, however, to the law under review, upon the ground that it is clearly unconstitutional in depriving the relator of both duties and a district; and, inasmuch as the compensation left is manifestly based upon this absence of duties, it must be condemned also. We cannot imagine for a moment that the legislature would have prescribed such a salary, except upon the idea that the remaining portions of the act were valid ; and, inasmuch as the one is dependent upon the other, they must stand or fall together. While it is true that one portion of a law may be upheld while the rest is overthrown this is only true where they are so far independent provisions that it may be presumed that the legislature intended one to subsist, even though the balance perished. But where the entire scheme must fail because of want of power to enact it, there can be no possible good in upholding an isolated provision, which it was, perhaps, competent for the law-giver to enact, but which is unreasonable and unjust if left to stand alone. Some years ago this court pronounced unconstitutional a statute which undertook to create the office of tax-collector in the several counties, and to deprive the sheriffs of the duty of collecting the public revenue. Suppose that there had been a salary attached to the collection of taxes, and that this act had contained a provision that thereafter the sheriffs should receive no such salary. Such a clause by itself would have been constitutional. But can there be any doubt that it would have fallen with the balance of the act, and that the sheriff who, in defiance of the act, had collected the taxes would have been entitled to the salary ? The principle is, that where a particular clause of a statute is manifestly based upon cer
The judgment should be reversed and the rule made absolute.
It may be accepted as well settled in American constitutional law that where an office is created by the Constitution, or referred to and dealt with as a known existing office, it is incompetent for the legislature to abolish the office; that if the organic law prescribes a term, it is beyond the power of the legislature to enlarge or abridge its duration; and that if the Constitution has defined a mode of amov-ing an incumbent, that is the exclusive method. These principles were clearly recognized in Newsom v. Cocke, 44 Miss. 352, and Brady v. Howe, 50 Miss. 607.
The question is, whether the act “ to assign district attorneys to duty in the judicial districts of this State,” approved Feb. 1, 1877, in so far as Fant has been affected by it, is an unwarrantable interference with his rights. This act was intended to adapt the services of the district attorneys then in office, and whose terms had not expired, to a reduction of the judicial districts, which left two supernumerary attorneys. The act reducing the judicial districts had greatly disarranged the territory for which the several attorneys had been elected. The scope of the act is to assign these attorneys for the State to suit the new Circuit Court districts. The plan of the assignment is given in the second section. But there being two district attorneys more than Circuit Court districts, the fourth section
Recurring to the provisions of the Constitution relating to the subject, we find that § 25 of art. 6, which organizes the judiciary, provides that “ a competent number of district attorneys shall be elected by the qualified electors of the respective districts, whose term of service shall be four years, and whose duties and compensation shall be prescribed by law.” The Constitution names the district attorney as an officer well known in the judicial history of the State ; and the language of the article at once brings to mind the officers of the same name and class of duties that existed before the adoption of the Constitution. Three things are left to the discretion of the legislature: first, the definement of the districts; second, the duties to be performed; and third, the number of district attorneys. Primarily, doubtless, the convention had in view a number of district attorneys equal to the number of circuit judges, and that their respective districts would be the same as the judicial. That is so, because existing statutes had so provided, and such had been the arrangement under the Constitutions of 1817 and of 1832. The convention also had in view the class of duties which had always been assigned to that officer. Yet it is plain that the arrangement of the districts territorially is intrusted to the legislative wisdom. If the legislature should at any time choose to increase the number of the districts to fifteen, twenty, forty or any other number, or to reduce the number, its power over the subject is plenary. So, too, it may add to or take from the duties to be performed. But it is too plain for argument that the General Assembly must define the districts, and that there must be attorneys for the “ respective districts ” (I do not say there may not be two or more), and that when the incumbent is elected, his full term is four years. To repeat: the Constitution is imperative, that there shall be districts, within which
There can be, in the constitutional sense, no such officer as district attorney without territory, without a term, and the right to perform the official duty. If the legislature takes away from that officer, chosen by the “ qualified electors ” fpr the term of four years, all territory, so that there is no place where he can perform the duties annexed by law to the office, or if it withdraws compensation or designates some other person to discharge the duties incident by law to the office, such legislation would conflict with the twenty-fifth section of the sixth article and the seventh section of the twelfth article of the Constitution. If he were deprived of a district, that is, a defined territory within which to perform duty, he is effectually deprived of the right which his election conferred for four years. If another is designated to perform all the functions, for the discharge of which he was elected, a constitutional officer has been deprived in substance and effect of his place. If his compensation is cut off, the legislature has staiwed him out, and done by indirection what it would not be pretended could be done directly.
Let us turn to the fourth section of the act in questipn, and see how Fant is affected by it. He is one of the district attorneys not assigned by the governor under the preceding sections of the law. Every inch of territory where he could do any and all duty incident by law to the office to which he was elected is taken from him, and another person, under this statute, has been designated by the governor to fill the office in that territory and do all things incident to it. That person, by the assignment of the governor, is as fully and completely district attorney in Marshall County, the place of Fant’s residence, as in any other county of the district. It is as thoroughly and completely his right and duty under the statute to do any and all things pertaining to the office in Marshall County as anywhere else in the district. Unless the right, in the absence of the assigned district attorney, to perform all the duties of-district attorney during the terms of the Circuit Court of
It seems to me impossible to put any other construction on the act of the legislature, in the particulars referred to, than that it is an indirect ouster of Fant from his office as district attorney. While the legislature carefully refrains from declaring outright that he shall no longer be district attorney, it accomplishes the same result by indirection, — it takes from him a district and deprives him of a right to perform functions, except in an improbable and remote contingency. " For, since another person is by the assignment of the governor district attorney for all the counties and territory embraced in the district, it is as much his duty to attend the terms of the Circuit Court of Marshall County, as those of any other county. Certainly that reading of the Constitution is wholly inadmissible which subjects the right of a constitutional officer to the enjoyment of his office and the discharge of its functions to the whim,
The reduction of the salary to flOO was part and parcel of the plan to evade the Constitution. If Fant could be retired from duty in the manner proposed, the sum named would be wholly unobjectionable ; for then the single question would be whether that sum would not be enough to compensate him for being in readiness to act for the State in Marshall County, and, if his services were actually needed, then to render them. The judiciary could not so far invade the province of the legislature as to review its conclusions respecting the amount of compensation to the State officers. Its interference in that direction could only be vindicated where the reduction of compensation was a mere device to degrade the officer, or deprive him of the enjoyment of the office, which things would be repugnant to the Constitution.
I am of opinion that the plaintiff in error is entitled to the redress sought, and that the judgment should be
Reversed.
My view of this case is that the term of service of Fant as district attorney is inviolable, not upon any notion of contract or vested or property rights as against the State, but because of the provision of the Constitution that “ a competent number of district attorneys shall be elected by the qualified electors of the respective districts, whose term of service shall he four years, and whose duties and compensation shall be prescribed by law.” Having been elected in pursuance of a law providing for a competent number of district attorneys, he has the right to serve four years. The legislature may, by law, prescribe the duties and compensation of district attorneys, but may not deny them the right to serve for the term of four years. What the legislature cannot do directly, it cannot do by indirection and evasion. In the exercise of its right to prescribe duties and compensation, it cannot prohibit a district attorney from his term of service for four years. Therefore, in so far as the act of the legislature ousts Fant of his office, and denies him the compensation of other district.attorneys as