64 Minn. 207 | Minn. | 1896
O’Leary, respondent in this proceeding, having theretofore been elected, was duly inducted into office as clerk of the district court for Wright county on the first Monday of January, 1892. The term of such officer is fixed at four years by section 13, art. 6, of the state constitution, and there is no provision for further retention of the office under any circumstances.
The terms of judges of the district court
But O’Leary’s claim to possession of the office is also based upon the provisions of G-. S. 1894, §§ 866, 867. These two sections were Laws 1891, c. 39, §§ 1, 2. By section 1 (section 866) it was provided that in all counties in which the term of the office of clerk of the district court should expire on the first Monday of January, 1896, their successors should be elected at the November general election of that year. .By section 2 (section 867) it was provided “that when vacancies shall occur in said offices -under the provisions of section one of this act” (chapter 39) the office shall be filled as now provided by law.
It is claimed by respondent’s counsel that, by providing for the election of successors to those who held these positions in 1895, it was intended to continue them in office for another year, — in other words, that immediate followers in office were meant by the use of the expression “successors thereto,” in section 866. To so construe this expression would be to give as much force to it as if the legislature had expressly provided in apt and chosen language that the present occupants should continue to exercise the powers and discharge the duties of their respective offices for another year. If such had been the intent, it would not have been left in doubt or uncertainty; for, under any of the definitions of the word “successor,” any future occupant of this office is the successor of the respondent, just as he is the successor of any of the incumbents who preceded him, no matter when.
But the legislative intention does not wholly depend upon a con
The only question remaining for consideration under the facts now before us, is whether the appointment of the relator Vorse was regular and valid. All of the judges of the Fourth judicial district, in which is situated Wright county, united in a written appointment, of date December 27, 1895, and Vorse was thereby appointed to succeed O’Leary, and to hold the office of clerk of said court from and after the first Monday of January, 1896. It is urged that this appointment was premature, and should not have been made until after O’Leary’s term expired, — not until there was a real vacancy. We do not concede the right of the latter to raise this question, but it is the general rule that a prospective appointment to fill a vacancy sure to occur in a public office, made by an officer who, or a body which, as then constituted, is empowered to fill the vacancy when it arises, is, in the absence of a law forbidding it, a valid appointment, and vests title to the office in the appointee. Haight v. Love, 39 N. J. Law, 14; Whitney v. Van Buskirk, 40 N. J. Law, 463; Smith v. Dyer, 1 Call, 562. See, also, State v. Irwin, 5 Nev. 111. Cases to the contrary have been decided wholly
Let a writ issue ousting the respondent O’Leary from the office of clerk of the district court for Wright county.
Const, art. 6, § 4.
Id. § 1.
Id. § 3.
Id. § 2.