Beck v. Puckett

2 Shan. Cas. 490
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Shan. Cas. 490 (Beck v. Puckett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beck v. Puckett, 2 Shan. Cas. 490 (Tenn. 1877).

Opinion

Sneed, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

In the view we have taken of this case, it is unnecessary to consider some of the grave questions which have, been pressed in argument. 'A single one must he decisive of the rights of the parties. The controversy grows out of a calamity which befell the county of Hamilton, on the 30th [492]*492of September, 18Y6, -when the register’s office of that county was partially destroyed by lire, and the books of said offi.ce so charred and injured by the fire and also by the water used in its extinguishment, as to make it necessary to have some of them rebound, and others transcribed, as indispensable to their use by the public.

In this extraordinary exigency the county court, on the Monday following, proceeded to take immediate action for the preservation of said records, by the appointment of a commission, consisting of the county judge and two justices of said county, charged with the duty of having said books rebound and transcribed wherever the same was necessary to be done. This committee was authorized to let the work to the lowest bidder, and, in the work of transcription, to prefer the bid of the county register, if no higher than any other.

Under this authority, the committee proceeded to advertise for bids, and the lowest bid received was that of Spencer 0. Stone, one of the relators in this case. In the meantime, a bookbinder had been' employed by the committee to bind such of the injured volumes as required rebinding. The work had been done and the account audited and paid under the orders of the court. The action of the committee in closing the contract for transcribing the records was, from divers causes, delayed until the 12th of March, 18YY, when the contract was formally awarded to the said Spencer C. Stone, and a formal, written contract entered into and signed by him and the committee, with all proper specifications as to the mode and manner in which the work should be executed.

The plaintiff in error, the relator, II. 0. Beck, entered the lists as-one of the competing bidders for the: contract, but the compensation demanded by him being much more than the amount for which the said Stone proposed to do the work, the bid of the said Beck was rejected and the contract awarded to Stone. The action of the counity court-in appointing the committee and investing it with plenary [493]*493power to act in the premises, was duly entered upon the minutes of the court. On the said 12th of March, 1877, after the execution of said contract between Stone and the committee, and after the said Stone had taken and subscribed the oath required by the statute under which the proceeding was had, Code, sec. 2092 [Shannon’s Code, sec. 3772], the said Stone and the committee called upon the said Beck and demanded the book with a view at once to proceed with the work. This demand was refused, and the result duly reported to the next term of the1 county court. In the meantime, the legislature of the state being then in session, the record shows that the said register procured the enactment of a bill prepared by himself, entitled “An act to provide for transcribing record books when the same have been damaged or mutilated by fire, or otherwise.” This act prescribes that such work shall be done by the register of the county, and fixes his compensation at ten cents per hundred words, to be paid by the county. This act was passed March 24, 1877, and was approved by the governor on the 26th of the same month. [Acts 1877, c-h. 83; Shannon’s Code, secs. 37S7--3791.]

At the April term of said county court next thereafter, pending the consideration of the report of the committee as to the demand upon the register and his refusal to surrender the books, the said register appeared in court with a certified copy of said act, and demanded that under its •authority, he be allowed to proceed in the work of transcribing said records.

No formal action was taken upon this demand, except in the postponement of the whole matter until the following July term of the court.

This litigation soon afterwards commenced by a petition filed in the circuit court for a writ of mandamus- by the committee and Stone, as relators, against Beck, to compel him to surrender the books to Stone1 under bis contract of the 12th of March, 1877, and by a counter petition by Beck to compel the county court to allow -him to proceed [494]*494with, tbe work under tire provisions of the act of 24th of March, 1877, ch. S3.

These two causes were consolidated and heard together, and hot!1 were determined in favor of the relators in the first proceeding and against the relator Beck, against whom a peremptory writ of mandamus was awarded by the final judgment of the court, .from which he has prosecuted an appeal in error.

Without special attention to chronological order, this condensed resume of the leading facts is sufficient for our purpose, as the case must turn upon a single proposition independent of other questions of grave debate raised in the very able arguments of counsel.

Among other questions is that- of the constitutionality of the act of 1877, ch. 83, under which the relator, Beck,'as register of the county of Hamilton, asserts his right to do this work as paramount to that of all other persons. It is the settled policy of the law, illustrated in many adjudged cases, as well as by the immemorial traditions of the court, never to impeach the validity of a. statute which is taken to embody the will of the legislative department, unless it becomes absolutely indispensable to- the administration of justice.

The most delicate duty we are ever called upon to perform is that of sitting in judgment upon the transactions of a co-ordinate branch of the government, and while comity in a clear case would be crime, it is never ignored in a case where the judgment of the court may satisfactorily i epose upon any other question than one that impugns tiro, declared will of the legislature, upon the ground that it is repugnant to the organic law. Thus it is said: “While the courts cannot shun the discussion of constitutional questions when fairly presented,' they will not go out of their way to find such topics. They will not seek to draw in such weighty matters collaterally, nor on trivial occasions. It is both more proper and more respectful to a. co-ordinate department to discuss constitutional questions only when [495]*495iliat is the Tory lis mota. Thus presented and determined, the decision carries a weight with it to which no extra disquisition is entitled.” Hoover v. Wood, 9 Ind., 287.

Though, such a question may be legitimately presented by the record, yet if any other question be involved upon which the case may be determined, the constitutional ques-lion will be waived, and will only be adjudged when it is presented in a case which cannot otherwise bei disposed of, anu in which a decision upon it becomes absolutely necessary. Such is the rule of this court, and such the tenor of the standard authorities' upon the subject. Townsend v. Shipp, Cooke, 294; ex parte Randolph, 2 Brock, 447; Frees v. Ford, 6 N. Y., 177; White v. Scott, 4 Barb., 56; M. & O. R. R. Co. v. State, 29 Ala., 573; Cooley Const. Lim., 162, 163 [6th ed., pp. 196, 197].

Whether, therefore, the act of 1877, ch.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Shan. Cas. 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beck-v-puckett-tenn-1877.