Begich v. Jefferson

441 P.2d 27, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 165
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1968
Docket894
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 441 P.2d 27 (Begich v. Jefferson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Begich v. Jefferson, 441 P.2d 27, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 165 (Ala. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

The broad question raised by this appeal is whether appellants are prohibited by article II, section 5 of the Alaska constitution from holding positions as school teachers while they serve as members of the Legislature of the State of Alaska. This section of the legislative article of Alaska’s constitution provides:

No legislator may hold any other office or position of profit under the United States or the State. During the term for which elected and for one year thereafter, no legislator may be nominated, elected, or appointed to any other office or position of profit which has been created, or the salary or emoluments of which have been increased, while he was a member. This section shall not prevent any person from seeking or holding the office of governor, secretary of state, or member of Congress. This section shall not apply to employment by or election to a constitutional convention.

In the superior court appellee State of Alaska instituted a declaratory judgment action seeking a ruling that article II, section 5 of the Alaska constitution prohibits a legislator from holding any other position of profit under the State of Alaska “including, but not limited to the positions of teacher, principal or superintendent of a state-operated school.” 1 The State of Alaska also sought a determination that AS 24.05.040, a portion of our statutory law relating to the qualifications of legislators, was unconstitutional. This statute, substantially reiterates the text of article II, section 5 of our constitution. An amendment to this section, enacted in 1965, 2 provides :

An office of profit as used in this section means an elective office on the state or federal levels of government, the holder *29 of which is entitled to a salary; a position of profit means an appointive position on the state or federal levels of government, the holder of which has the authority to make policy and is entitled to a salary for his services. Employment as a ‘teacher’ as defined in AS 14.17.250 (12) shall not be considered as holding an office or position of profit.

In addition to the declaratory relief requested as to article II, section 5 of the Alaska constitution, and AS 24.05.040 as amended, the state also sought to enjoin appellants from holding positions of profit while they were members of the Legislature of the State of Alaska. 3

In granting summary judgment in the separate action instituted by appellee Jefferson against appellant Begich, the superior court decreed that article II, section 5 of the Alaska constitution was unambiguous, that the position of superintendent of on-base schools at Fort Richardson, Alaska, held by appellant Begich, was a position of profit under the State of Alaska within the intendment of article II, section 5 of the Alaska constitution, that such “dual office holding” by appellant Begich was in direct violation of article II, section 5, that AS 24.05.040 is unconstitutional and void, 4 and that appellant Begich should be enjoined from acting as superintendent of on-base schools of the State of Alaska during any period he holds office as a member of the Legislature of the State of Alaska. In awarding summary judgment to appellee State of Alaska in its separate declaratory judgment action against appellants, the superior court specifically decreed that:

[T]he positions of teacher, principal, or superintendent in a State operated school constitute positions of profit under Article II, § 5 of the Constitution of the State of Alaska, which provides that no legislator may hold any other office or position of profit under the United States or the State.

The order granting summary judgment also decreed that the 1965 amendment to AS 24.05.040 was inconsistent with article II, section 5 of the constitution of Alaska, and thus unconstitutional. It was further decreed that appellants “Begich, Young and Hohman are enjoined from holding their respective positions as teachers, or as school superintendent, while they are members of the legislature of the State of Alaska.” 5

The focus of our initial inquiry is upon the meaning of the phrase “position of profit” as used in article II, section 5 of the Alaska constitution. As originally proposed by the Committee on the Legislative Branch at the Alaska Constitutional Convention, section 5 read:

No member of the legislature shall hold any other office which has been created, or the salary or emoluments of which have been increased while he was a member of the legislature, during the term for which he was elected and for one year after the expiration of such term. No legislator or other elective or appointive officer of this state shall file *30 or run for election to any other state office until his services have been terminated, but a member of one house .of the legislature may be nominated and elected to the other house. This section shall not apply to positions of employment in or elections to any constitutional convention. 6

When the Committee on the Legislative Branch first introduced its Committee Proposal No. 5 at the constitutional convention (section 5 of this proposal being the forerunner of article II, section 5), the committee also made of record its commentary concerning this proposal. In this document, it was stated in part that :

It is generally agreed that the temptation to create jobs or to increase the salary in existing jobs which legislators would then accept ought to be removed. 7

During the January 25, 1956, proceedings of the Alaska Constitutional Convention, Mr. Steve McCutcheon, chairman of the Committee .on the Legislative Branch, submitted an amendment to the then proposed sections. The amendment offered an addition to section 5 which read as follows: “No legislator may hold any other office .or position of profit under the United States or the State.” 8 At the time this amendment was introduced, Mr. McCutcheon made the following statement:

Mr. President, I will say, before objection is made, that it was the intent of the Legislature Committee that there should be no dual office holding from the standpoint of a legislator, and it was drawn to our attention thát our article, Section 5 at least in the article, wasn’t entirely clear that dual office holding was prohibited. So this terminology has been offered in order to clarify and fortify that point.

It is apparent from the foregoing that any allusions at the constitutional convention to the meaning of the phrase “position of profit” were of a rather sketchy and inconclusive character. To further illumine the task of construing this language, we turn to other portions of our constitution in which “position of profit” has been employed. In article ..III, section 6, which deals with the executive branch of Alaska’s government, it is provided that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
441 P.2d 27, 1968 Alas. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/begich-v-jefferson-alaska-1968.