3 Or. 533 | Or. | 1869
In June 1866 Burr Morris having received a majority of all the votes cast, was duly elected county judge of the county of Linn in this state. He was qualified, and in July 1866 entered into said office and began to exercise the functions thereof. In September, 1866, Morris died and the Governor of the state of Oregon appointed E. B. Geary to fill the vacancy occasioned by the decease of tlie said Morris. In June, 1868, S. A. Johns, respondent herein, was elected county judge of said county and being duly qualified entered upon the discharge of the duties of said office in July of said year. On June 6,1870, J. J. Whitney the relator and appellant having received a
The first question that arises for our consideration is as 'to the legality of the election of Johns in 1868. Section 14 of article 2' of the constitution of this state, declares, that “ general elections shall be held on the first Monday in June, biennially.” A general elec’:ion is one at which the people may fill by election every elective office in the state not otherwise distinctly provided for by the constitution or the laws. Those offices are enumerated and set forth in section 3, p. 697, general laws. Section 11, article 7, of the constitution, fixes the time when such election shall be held. Section 16, article 5, of said instrument provides, that “when, during a recess of the legislative assembly, a vacancy shall happen in any office the appointment of which is vested in the legislative assembly; or when at any time a vacancy shall have occurred in any other state office, or in the office of judge of any court, the governor shall fill such vacancy by appointment which shall expire when a successor shall have been elected and qualified.” After the decease of Morris, the then governor, acting within the scope of his constitutional authority, appointed Geary to fill the vacancy. It is contended that by virtue of this appointment, Geary had aright to continue in said office until July, 1870, the
I am, therefore, of the opinion that the appointment of Geary continued only until the next general election after his appointment, and until his successor was elected and qualified. In the arguments and conclusions reached by the court below upon this branch of the case as set forth above, we fully concur. It follows, therefore, that the election of Johns in June, 1868, was legal.*
This conclusion being reached, the next question which is presented is: For what length of time was he chosen ? The state constitution, section 11, article 7, provides, that “There shall be elected in each county, for the term of four years, a county judge who shall hold the county court at times to be regulated by law.” We have already seen that in case of a vacancy in the office of county judge, caused either by the death or the resignation of the incumbent, the office may be filled by election at the first general election following the death or the resignation, and that the term of the appointed incumbent, the locum tenens, then expires. It is also clear that in newly organized counties the office of county judge, as well as each and every other county office, is filled by election at the first general election occurring after the act of the legislature erecting and organizing a new county. The appointees in no instance holding over. It