The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The petitioner, W. W. Huckabee, was elected sheriff of Kershaw county at the general election, on November 5, 1912, and was commissioned on January 1, 1913, for a term of four years. On April 20, 1915, after notice and a hearing, his Excellency, the Governor, found, from the evidence adduced at the hearing, that said sheriff had neglected and refused to enforce the law regulating the sale of intoxicating liquors in his county, and suspended him from office, until the end of his present term.
On June 25, 1915, the Governor appointed and commissioned the defendant, Hough, as sheriff of said county, in place of petitioner. This action was brought to test the legality of Huckabee’s suspension, as well as the right of Hough to perform the duties of the office.
The action of the Governor was based on section 841 of the Criminal Code, which reads: “Any constable, deputy constable, sheriff or magistrate, who shall neglect or refuse to perform the duties required by this chapter, shall be subject to suspension by the Governor.” Petitioner contends that, in so far as this section confers upon the Governor power to suspend a sheriff, it is unconstitutional. If that be so, the suspension was without authority of law and cannot be sustained, unless it can be referred to some other power vested in the chief executive.
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The minds of the framers of the Constitution evidently adverted to the principle above stated, and the consequent importance of providing therein for the removal and suspension of unfaithful officers. It is equally certain that they had in mind the material difference between the removal and suspension of officers, because they provided for both, and safeguarded both by express limitations and restrictions.
We next inquire whether the suspension can be sustained by referring it to any other power vested in the Governor. In
State
v.
Bowden, supra,
it was settled that the power of appointing to office is not a prerogative of the Governor’s office. As corollary to that decision, it was held in
State
v.
Rhame, 92
S. C. 455,
What is here said must be taken as especially applicable to constitutional officers. Those holding offices created by the
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legislature hold them subject to the legislative will. The power that creates an office can impose such limitations and conditions upon the manner of filling it, and the tenure, and the exercise of the duties of the office, and may modify or abolish any of these or the office itself, as its wisdom may dictate, when no provision of the Constitution is contravened in doing so.
State
v.
Rhame, supra; Lillard
v.
Melton,
103 S. C. 10,
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The result is that the Governor had no power to suspend or remove the petitioner, or to appoint the defendant in his place.
The judgment of this Court is that the attempted suspension of the petitioner .and the. appointment of the defendant, Hough, in his place were without authority of law and of no effect, and that the petitioner is entitled to exercise the duties of his office as sheriff of Kershaw county. •
