Boyett v. Cowling

94 S.W. 682, 78 Ark. 494, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 249
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 23, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 682 (Boyett v. Cowling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyett v. Cowling, 94 S.W. 682, 78 Ark. 494, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 249 (Ark. 1906).

Opinion

Hill, C. J.

Ruff Boyett was assessor of Hempstead County, and was re-elected to said office without opposition in the general election of September, 1904. On the 21st of November he wrote the Secretary of State requesting his commission as assessor, and sending the fee, $2, therefor. On December 2, 1904, the Governor took the position that the failure of Boyett to apply for his commission within 60 days and pay the fee therefor and file his duplicate oath of office within fifteen days after the receipt of the commission, vacated the office, and he thereupon appointed L. E. Cowling assessor. This suit resulted, the circuit judge gave judgment for'Cowling, and Boyett appeals.

The appellant makes these contentions:

1. That sections 647-648, Kirby’s Digest, containing the provisions above referred to, viz.: applying and paying for commission within 60 days and filing duplicate oath within 15 days thereafter, were repealed.

2. That said statutes are unconstitutional.

3. That the Governor did not have the right to fill a vacancy in the office of assessor.

1. The contention is made,that said sections were repealed by act of March 14, 1881 (pp. 73-75), and said act being in turn repealed by act of March 2, 1883 (pp. 73-74), which is found in Kirby’s Digest, § 646.

The act of 1881 provides for commissions for district, county and - township offices to be sent to the clerks of the several counties, and that the clerk should collect the fees therefor and deliver the commissions to the officers upon their payment of the fees, and when default was made should return the commissions to the Secretary of State. The clerk was required to notify the officers, and to keep a record of the commissions, date of qualifications and other details. The act of 1883 provided for payment into the treasury, and required the Secretary of State, on receiving duplicate receipt from the Treasurer, to forward the commission. Section 646, Kirby’s Digest. None of these matters reached to the point covered in the act of 1875, which constitutes § § 647 and 648. The requirement that the commission be applied for and paid for within 60 days, and that the oath of office be taken within 15 days thereafter, and the duplicate filed with the Secretary of State, was consistent with each change in the method of receiving the commissions and the amount of fees due therefor and the officer to whom the fees were payable.

It is elemental that repeals by implication are not favored, and they are only recognized when efforts to harmonize the legislation are futile. These acts are susceptible of being read together without being inconsistent or in conflict with each other.

It is also argued that sections 6955, 6956 and 6958, Kirby’s Digest, parts of the Revenue Act of 1883, repealed sections 647, 648, in so far as the assessor is concerned. Section 6955 requires the assessor, within 15 days after receiving his commission, to enter into bond, and section 6956 requires him on or before the first day of January, and before discharging the duties of his office, to take the oath prescribed by the Constitution for all officers, and also an additional oath therein set out, pertaining to his office, which must be indorsed on his book, and sectipn 6958 provides for a forfeiture of the office for failing to obey the foregoing provisions. These are all additional requirements to sections 647, 648, and- there is no such inconsistency between them as to require the court to hold the former act repealed. The whole subject-matter is not covered by any of this later legislation, and, the acts all being susceptible of standing without impinging on each other, it is the duty of the court to give effect to each of these legislative enactments, and therefore the court holds sections 647, 648 not repealed.

2. Are these statutes unconstitutional?

The State has a right to require its officers to take an oath to support the Constitution 'of the United States and of the State of Arkansas and to faithfully discharge the duties of the office. This is not denied. The Constitution requires certain officers to be commissioned by the Governor. Some fee has always been attached to official commissions. In early days only the fee to the Secretary of State for affixing the Great Seal, but later an act graduating fees for the various offices, from one to fifteen dollars, was passed. Persons elected to office take'the office subject to such regulations, impositions and restrictions as the General Assembly may impose which are not forbidden by the Constitution, directly or by necessary implication. Hyde v. State, 52 Miss. 665.

It is urged that the constitutional requirement that the Governor commission the officers carries with it an inhibition on the Legislature fixing a fee to be paid for the commission; but it would be a straining of the purport of this clause to construe it into such a prohibition; it was only a mandate that the officers should be commissioned, and that the Governor was to perform this duty. No question of an unreasonable restriction on the issuance of the commission is in this case as there was in Chism v. Martin, 57 Ark. 83.

The New Hampshire court said: “The choice of a person to fill an office constitutes the essence of his appointment. After the choice, if there be a commission, an oath of office, or any ceremony of inauguration, these are forms only, which may or may not be necessary to the validity of any acts under the appointment, according as usage and positive statute may or may not render them indispensable.” Johnson v. Wilson, 2 N. H. 202, s. c. 9 Am. Dec. 50; Mechem on Officers, § 114.

It will be noted that, this statute renders commission and oath indispensable to the incumbency of the office. In State v. Johnson, 26 Ark. 281, it was held that a provision of the schedule of the Constitution of 1868 requiring officers to qualify within 15 days after notification of election or appointment was mandatory.

After a careful and exhaustive review of the authorities, the Nebraska court says: “It will thus be seen that the overwhelming weight of authority under statutes much less mandatory than our own is to the effect that, where a time is prescribed within which one, in order to be inducted into office, must take the oath or file a bond, the taking of the oath or the filing of the bond is a condition precedent to the right to enter upon the office, and that the right is absolutely lost by a failure to perform the condition within the time limited.” State ex rel. Berge v. Lansing, 46 Neb. 514, s. c. 35 L. R. A. 124. The statutes at bar are of exactly the same character as those above mentioned, and the foregoing statement is equally applicable to them. It follows that these statutes are valid.

3. This brings the case to the question of whether the Governor could fill the vacancy.

In the case of Rice v. Palmer, ante, p. 432, the court holds that the amendment conferring the appointing power upon the Governor failed to be adopted.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Justice v. Campbell
410 S.W.2d 601 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1967)
Meador v. Warrington
307 S.W.2d 75 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1957)
Commonwealth v. DiStasio
8 N.E.2d 923 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1937)
Ashby v. Patrick
28 S.W.2d 55 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1930)
Hill v. Goodwin
101 S.W. 752 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1907)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 682, 78 Ark. 494, 1906 Ark. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyett-v-cowling-ark-1906.