3 F. 112 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia | 1880
It is claimed by counsel for Farrow that the appointment by the president of .Bigby was, under the facts of the case, beyond his constitutional power, and he cites the third paragraph of section 2, article 2, of the constitution of the United States, which declares : “The president shall have power to fill up all vacancies that may happen during the recess of the senate, by granting commissions, which shall expire at the end of their next session.” He also relies upon section 1769, U. 8. Revised Statutes, which declares: “The president is authorized to fill all vacancies which may happen during the recess of the senate, by reason of death or resignation or expiration of term of office, granting commissions which shall expire at the end of tiioir next session thereafter.” The contention is that the vacancy in the office of district attorney, which the president has undertaken to fill ¡by the appointment of Bigby, did not happen during the recess of the senate, and therefore the power to fill it does not reside in the president.
On the other hand it is claimed that the phrase “vacancies
The first opinion given upon this point is that of Mr. William Wirt, attorney general under President Monroe, (1 Op. 631,) in which he argues for the construction claimed in support of the president’s action in this case. He says: “In reason, it seems to me perfectly immaterial when the vacancy first arose, for, whether it arose during the session of the senate or during their recess, it equally requires to he filled. The constitution does not look to the moment of the origin of the vacancy, but to the state of things at the point of time at which the president is called on to act. Is the senate in session ? Then he must make a nomination to that body. Is it in recess ? Then the president must fill the vacancy by a temporary commission. This seems to me the only construction of the constitution which is compatible with its spirit, reason, and purpose, while at the same time it offers no violence to its language, and these are, I think, the governing points to which all sound construction looks.”
This opinion of Attorney General Wirt was concurred in by Mr. Roger B. Taney, attorney general under President Jackson. See his opinion dated July 19, 1832, (2 Op. 525.) Mr. Taney says, in construing that clause of the constitution under consideration: “It was intended to provide for those vacancies which might arise from accident, and the contingencies to which human affairs must always be liable; and if it falls out that from death, inadvertence, or mistake, an office required by law to be filled is, in recess, found to be vacant, then a vacancy has happened during the recess and the president may fill it. This appears to be the common sense and the natural import of the words used. They mean the same thing as if the constitution had said ‘if there happen to be any vacancies during the recess.’ ”
These opinions exhaust all that can be said on the subject. They were rendered upon the call of the executive department, and under the obligation of the oath of office, and are entitled to the highest consideration. In his opinion Mr. Bates says the power to fill vacancies which occur during the recess has been sanctioned, so far as he knows and believes, by the unbroken acquiescence of the senate. It is true, individual members of the senate have disputed the power, but not the senate itself. Congress lias recognized the power by section 2 of the act of February 9, 1863, (Rev. St. § 1761,) which declares: “No money shall he paid from the treasury as salary to any person appointed, during the recess of the senate, to fill a vacancy in any existing office, if the vacancy existed while the senate was in session, and was by law required to be filled by and with the advice and consent of the senate,until such appointee has been confirmed by the senate.”
The only authority relied on to support the other view is the case decided by tho late Judge Cadwallader, the learned and able United States district judge for the eastern district of Pennsylvania. It is no disparagement to Judge Cadwallader to say that Ms opinion, unsupported by any other, ought not to be held to outweigh the authority of the great number which are cited in support of the opposite view, and of the practice of the executive department for nearly 60 years, the acquiescence of the senate therein, and the recognition of the power claimed by both houses of congress. I therefore shall
The point, however, most strenuously urged in behalf of Farrow is that, the circuit justice having appointed him to fill the vacancy occasioned by the expiration of his own term of office,-there was no vacancy to fill, and the president could not, therefore, appoint Bigby to fill a vacancy which did not exist. This claim brings up for consideration the proper construction of section 793, U. S. Revised Statutes. That section provides: “In case of a vacancy in the office of district attorney, or marshal, within any circuit, the circuit justice of such circuit may fill the same, and the person appointed by him shall serve unjjil an appointment is made by the president, and the appointee is duly qualified, and no longer.”
The result of this claim is that an appointment made by the circuit justice takes away the power of the president to appoint. In other words, that the power conferred by this section is precisely the same, in all respects, as that conferred on the president by the third clause of. section 2, art. 2, of the constitution, and section 1769, U. S. Revised Statutes, supra. That is to say that congress has given the president and the circuit justice the power to fill the same office at the same time, and that the appointee holds for the same length of time under the appointment of either; that whether the appointment is to be made by the president or the circuit justice depends on which is swifter to act; that the power to appoint depends on the result of a scramble between the president of the United States and a justice of the supreme court. Such, it seems to me, could not have been the purpose of congress in enacting section 793. A glance at the section shows its object. It was not to enable the circuit justice to oust the power of the president to appoint, but to authorize him to fill the vacancy until the president should act, and no longer. The section expressly declares the term for which the appointee of the circuit justice shall serve, namely, until an appointment is made by the president. As
My conclusion is, therefore, that, upon the agreed facts, the term of Farrow, under the appointment of the circuit justice, ended as soon as the president appointed Bigby and lie was duly qualified, and that Bigby is entitled to the possession of the office.