Attorney-General v. Taggart

29 A. 1027, 66 N.H. 362
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedApril 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 29 A. 1027 (Attorney-General v. Taggart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney-General v. Taggart, 29 A. 1027, 66 N.H. 362 (N.H. 1890).

Opinion

Doe, C. J.

“Whenever the chair of the governor shall become vacant, by reason of his death, absence from the state, or otherwise, the president of the senate shall, during such vacancy, have and exercise all the powers and authorities which, by this constitution, the governor is vested with when personally present; but *364 when the president of the senate shall exercise the office of governor, he shall not hold his office in the senate.” Const., art. 49. From 1784 to 1792, the governor (then styled “ the president of the state of New Hampshire”) was president of the senate. Instead of his present power of vetoing or approving bills passed by the senate and house, he had “a vote equal with any other member” of the senate, and “also” “a casting vote in case of a tie;” and when his office was vacant, all his powers were exercised by “ the senior senator.” In fact, though not in name, the senior senator was lieutenant-governor, as the president of the senate is now. When the constitution took effect, and the legislature met for the inauguration of the new government, June 2, 1784, Meshech Weare, the governor-elect, was unable to be present. In brief periods of his illness and absence, in June, 1784, and February, 1785, his duties were performed by Woodbury Langdon, senior senator, acting as governor pro tem. On both occasions Langdon presided in the senate by virtue of his position as acting governor; and on the 8th of June, 1784, as acting governoi’, he sat with the council, and exercised the governor’s power (with the required advice and consent of the council) of signing warrants for the payment of money out of the state treasury. The authority of this precedent has not been shaken, and it does not appear that the soundness of the contemporaneous construction has ever been doubted.

“ ‘ Where a word having a technical as well as a popular meaning is used in the constitution, the courts will accord to it its popular signification, unless the very nature of the subject indicates, or the text suggests, that it is used in its technical sense.’ Weill v. Kenfield, 54 Cal. 111; Sprague v. Norway, 31 Cal. 173. Words used in a constitution should be construed in the sense in which they were employed. They ‘ must be taken in the ordinary and common acceptation, because they are presumed to have been so understood by the framers, and by the people who adopted it. . . . It . . . owes its whole force and authority to its ratification by the people; and they judged of it by the meaning apparent on its face according to the general Use of the words employed, where they do not appear to have been used in a legal or technical sense.’ Manly v. State, 7 Md. 135.” Miller v. Dunn, 72 Cal. 462, 465. Usage has not attached' a narrow meaning to the phrase “vacant by reason of his death, absence from the state, or otherwise; ” and the law does not throw the public service into confusion by applying rules of construction that were not applied by the people when the constitution was adopted. Effect is to be given to the understanding and intent of the voters who enacted art. 49 for cases of necessity, and used “ otherwise ” in its comprehensive and' usual sense. In the connection in which the word here occurs, “ otherwise” includes the governor’s physical disability as equivalent, for the provisional purpose of this article, to his death, or to his absence from the state.

*365 “ The object of construction, as applied to a written constitution, is to give effect to the intent of the people in adopting it. We must presume that words have been employed in their natural and ordinary meaning. As Marshall, Ch. J., says,— The framers of the constitution, and the people who adopted it, ‘ must be understood to have employed words in their natural sense, and to have intended what they have said.’ Gibbons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat. 1, 188. This is but saying that no forced or unnatural construction is to be put upon their language ; and it seems so obvious a truism that one expects to see it universally accepted without question ; but the attempt is made so often by interested subtlety and ingenious refinement to induce the courts to force from these instruments a meaning their framers never held, that it frequently becomes necessary to redeclare this fundamental maxim. Narrow and technical reasoning is misplaced when it is brought to bear upon an instrument framed by the people themselves, for themselves, and designed as a chart upon which every man, learned or unlearned, may be able to trace the leading principles of government. . . . The real question is, what the people meant, and not how meaningless their words can be made by the application of arbitrary rules.” When there is doubt, evidence may be found in the primary and leading “ object to be accomplished or the mischief designed to be remedied or guarded against by the clause in which the ambiguity is met with. ‘ When we once kno^V the reason which alone determined the will of the lawmakers, we ought to interpret and apply the words used in a manner suitable and consonant to that reason, and as will be best calculated to effectuate the intent.’ Smith Stat. and Const. Construction 634. . . . We have not thought it important to quote and to dwell upon those arbitrary rules to which so much attention is sometimes given, and which savor rather of the closet than of practical life. . . . They are more often resorted to as aids in ingenious attempts to make the constitution seem to say what it does not, than with a view to make that instrument express its real intent. All external aids, and especially all arbitrary rules, applied to instruments of this popular character, are of very uncertain value; and we do not regard it as out of place to repeat . . . that they are to be made use of with hesitation, and only with much circumspection.” Cool. Con. Lim. 69, 73, 75, 80, 101.

The primary and leading object of art. 49 is evidence tending to show that the construction adopted in the first year of the constitution is correct. The mischief designed to be prevented was the suspension of executive government by the governor’s death, absence from the state, or disability. 9 Cong. Record, Part 1, 46th Cong., 1st Session, pp. 184-189, 273-285, 287-298, 312-325, 341-355; 60 N. H. 585. The prescribed remedy is the duty of a substitute to act in cases of necessity. -The services of *366 a substitute may be necessary when the governor’s absence or disability is temporary, as well as when it is permanent. When there is an office to which no one has a title, and which is in fact held by no one, there is a vacancy. Johnston v. Wilson, 2 N. H. 202, 203; Mechem Pub. Officers, s. 127. In art. 49, “ vacant, by reason of his death, absence from the state, or otherwise,” has a' broader signification if due weight is given to the evidential force of the primary and leading purpose that the executive work shall go on without interruption. An intermittent vacancy, such as occurred in the time of Governor Weare, may occur again ; and the evils of an interregnum which art. 49 was intended to prevent are not to bfe introduced by technical reasoning or arbitrary rules.

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Bluebook (online)
29 A. 1027, 66 N.H. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-taggart-nh-1890.