Advisory Opin. to Governor Re Jud. Vacancy

940 So. 2d 1090, 2006 WL 2641579
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedSeptember 15, 2006
DocketSC06-1184
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 940 So. 2d 1090 (Advisory Opin. to Governor Re Jud. Vacancy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Advisory Opin. to Governor Re Jud. Vacancy, 940 So. 2d 1090, 2006 WL 2641579 (Fla. 2006).

Opinion

940 So.2d 1090 (2006)

ADVISORY OPINION TO The GOVERNOR re JUDICIAL VACANCY DUE TO MANDATORY RETIREMENT.

No. SC06-1184.

Supreme Court of Florida.

September 15, 2006.

Raquel A. Rodriguez, General Counsel, Nathan A. Adams, IV, Deputy General Counsel, and Gladys Perez, Assistant General Counsel, Office of the Governor, Tallahassee, for Petitioner, The Honorable Jeb Bush.

Jason Brent Gonzalez, Chairman, Judicial Nominating Commission for the First District Court of Appeal, Tallahassee, responding with comments.

The Honorable Jeb Bush Governor, State of Florida The Capitol Tallahassee, Florida 32399

Dear Governor Bush:

By letter dated June 20, 2006, you requested our opinion on a question of constitutional interpretation involving your executive powers and duties with regard to a mandatory judicial vacancy in the First District Court of Appeal. This request and our response is pursuant to article IV, section (1)(c) of the Florida Constitution.[1]

Your letter provided the relevant facts as follows:

Judge Richard Ervin, III, a judge of the First District Court of Appeal, was born on October 16, 1934. On that day in 2004, Judge Ervin turned seventy ears old. Article V, section 8 of the Florida Constitution provides that "[n]o judge or justice shall serve after attaining the age of seventy years except upon temporary assignment or to complete a term, one-half of which has been served." Judge Ervin's term ends on January 1, 2007. Because of mandatory retirement, he was ineligible for retention and did not seek to qualify for retention during the qualifying period, May 8-12, 2006.
Article V, section 10 provides that "[i]f a justice or judge is ineligible or fails to qualify for retention, a vacancy shall exist *1091 in that office upon the expiration of the term being served by the justice or judge." Article V, section 11(a) provides for the Governor to fill a vacancy in a judicial office to which election for retention applies.
Although I understand that a physical vacancy occurs upon the termination of the term, a question has arisen as to when a constitutional vacancy occurs, effectuating the process to fill it. If a constitutional vacancy occurs upon the failure of a judge to qualify for retention, the judicial nominations commission must submit nominations to me within 30 days from the occurrence of the vacancy, unless extended by me for another 30 days. Art. V, sec. 11(c), Fla. Const. In such instance, I will be able to appoint a successor who can take office immediately after the conclusion of Judge Ervin's term, and there will be no prolonged vacancy on the First District Court of Appeal. If a constitutional vacancy occurs only at the expiration of his term, the nominations may not be made until thirty to sixty days thereafter, and it may be as late as May 2007 before a successor is appointed, leaving a four month vacancy on the court.
Therefore, I respectfully request an opinion of the Justices of the Supreme Court as to the question of when a vacancy occurs resulting from the mandatory retirement of the judge who is not eligible for retention.

Letter from Governor Jeb Bush to former Chief Justice Barbara Pariente (June 20, 2006) (on file with Clerk, Supreme Court of Fla.), at 1-2. Judge Ervin two days later wrote a letter to you announcing that he would complete his term on the First District Court of Appeal, but was constitutionally prohibited from serving an additional term.

ANALYSIS

Article V, section 8, of the Florida Constitution provides, in pertinent part, "No justice or judge shall serve after attaining the age of seventy years except upon temporary assignment or to complete a term, one-half of which has been served." Art. V, § 8, Fla. Const. Article V, section 11 of the Florida Constitution, titled Vacancies, delineates the Governor's duties when a vacancy occurs in a judicial office:

(a) Whenever a vacancy occurs in a judicial office to which election for retention applies, the governor shall fill the vacancy by appointing for a term ending on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in January of the year following the next general election occurring at least one year after the date of appointment, one of not fewer than three persons nor more than six persons nominated by the appropriate judicial nominating commission.
. . . .
(c) The nominations shall be made within thirty days from the occurrence of a vacancy unless the period is extended by the governor for a time not to exceed thirty days. The governor shall make the appointment within sixty days after the nominations have been certified to the governor.

Art. V, § 11(a),(c), Fla. Const.

Our response to your question is compelled by the fact that there is a specific constitutional provision that expressly provides that a vacancy in a merit retention judicial office does not occur until the end of the judge or justice's term. Article V, section 10(a), of the Florida Constitution states: "If a justice or judge is ineligible or fails to qualify for retention, a vacancy shall exist in that office upon the expiration of the term being served by the justice or judge." (Emphasis added.) The letter of a merit retention judge or justice announcing *1092 his or her mandatory retirement at the end of the term does not create a vacancy in that judicial office until the actual date that the judge or justice's term expires pursuant to the specific constitutional provision which addresses when a "vacancy" occurs.

To understand the distinction between elected and retained judges, it is instructive to review the constitutional history regarding judicial vacancies. Prior to a 1976 amendment implementing the merit retention of Florida Supreme Court justices and district court of appeal judges, the Florida Constitution did not contain a specific explanation of when judicial positions become "vacant." This Court in Spector v. Glisson, 305 So.2d 777 (Fla. 1974), a case involving a non-merit retention judicial resignation prior to the amendment, noted:

A thorough search of the Florida Constitution reveals that ONLY in general Art. X, § 3, new in the 1968 Constitution, is there a definition of when a vacancy occurs, that section providing that a vacancy in office "shall occur" upon inter alia "resignation." Nowhere else therein is a vacancy in office defined; the other related provisions, including the specific one as to judges, state how and when it is to be filled, but not when it OCCURS.

Id. at 779. In the absence of a specific provision governing judicial vacancies, the Court in Spector referred to article X, section 3, the provision of the Florida Constitution that governed vacancies in office in general, to determine when a judicial vacancy occurred:[2]

The 1885 Constitution in Art. IV, § 7, authorized the Governor to fill a vacancy "(W)hen any office, from any cause, shall become vacant. . . ." Now, however, the current 1968 constitutional provision controls and also takes precedence over statutes such as Fla. Stat. § 114.01 providing that an office shall be "deemed vacant" in cases there enumerated, one being "resignation." . . . Thus, absent a specific provision in the 1968 Constitution as to judges (as there is in Art. V, §§ 10 and 11 regarding the manner

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