Bushnell v. Koon

18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 367
CourtMorrow Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 367 (Bushnell v. Koon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Morrow Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bushnell v. Koon, 18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 367 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

VOORHEES, J.

The plaintiff’s action is one for equitable relief, to enjoin the defendant Henry C. Koon from enforcing a judgment rendered in his favor against the plaintiff by his codefendant Samuel D. Bush, acting in the capacity of justice of the peace, at the time the judgment in question was rendered.

The contention of the plaintiff, as presented in his petition and by an agreed statement of facts submitted to the court, may be briefly stated, as an action on the part of the plaintiff to enjoin the defendants from enforcing a void judgment. That the defendant Bush is threatening to issue an execution on the judgment claimed to be void by the plaintiff, and that both of the defendants are irresponsible and insolvent, and, therefore, he has no adequate remedy at law and would suffer irreparable injury if this judgment was enforced in the way that it is threatened to be done, by execution; and, in order to restrain the defendants- from thus seizing his property, this action is brought by the plaintiff.

The real question in the case, as shown by the agreed statement of facts and as presented to the court is, whether, at the time this alleged judgment was rendered, the defendant, Bush, was a justice of the peace. If he was a justice of the peace then it is conceded the judgment was regular, and this plaintiff could not maintain this action; otherwise, the judgment was null and void and plaintiff has a cause of action. The real issue presented is, when does the term of a party who has been elected to the office of justice of the peace commence, and when does it expire?

Section 9, Art. 4 of the constitution, provided that the term of office of a justice of the peace shall be three years, but the date for the beginning of the term is nowhere expressly fixed either in the constitution or by statute. It is not provided, either by the constitution or by statute, that the office of justice of the peace may continue until his successor shall be elected and qualified; that is not a provision of the law, except in case of appointment to fill 'a vacancy, as provided in Rev. Stat. 567 (Lan. 899) of Ohio. But it is definitely fixed that his term of office expires [369]*369at the end of three years from the time it commences to run; and the legislature has no power to extend the term or tenure of such office beyond the time so limited. State v. Howe, 25 Ohio St. 588 [18 Am. Rep. 321]; State v. Brewster, 44 Ohio St. 589 [9 N. E. Rep. 849]. The question that we have to determine here is, when does it commence?

There are certain things that are necessary in order that a person may be qualified or clothed with the authority of a justice of the peace. He must be elected to the office; he must be commissioned by the governor of the state; when commissioned he must forthwith take and subscribe the necessary oath appertaining to the office; and, finally, he must give bond as required by the statute. Revised Statutes 83, 579 (Lan. 102, 911).

Revised Statutes 83 (Lan. 102) provides:

“Each judge of the Supreme Court, * * * and justice of the peace, * * shall be ineligible to perform any of the duties pertaining to such office until he shall receive from the governor a commission to fill such office, upon producing to the proper officer or authority a legal certificate of his being duly elected or appointed.”

Revised Statutes 579 (Lan. 911), provides:

“When a person is elected to the office of justice of the peaces and receives a commission from the governor, he shall forthwith take and subscribe the necessary oath appertaining to the office, before the clerk of the court of common pleas of his county, who is authorized to administer the same, or before a justice of the peace of his county, who shall, within ten days, transmit the oath to the clerk aforesaid, who, in either case, shall file the same, and make record of it in a book provided for that purpose; and each justice of the peace so qualified shall, before he is authorized to discharge any of the duties of his office, and within ten days after taking the oath, enter into bond, to be approved by the trustees of his township, payable to the state, with at least two sufficient sureties, with a penalty of not less than one thousand nor more than five thousand dollars at the discretion of the trustees, to be deposited with the township treasurer, unless the township treasurer is the justice elect, then with the township clerk, conditioned that such justice shall well and truly pay over, according to law, all money which shall come into his hands by virtue of his commission, and also that he shall faithfully perform every ministerial act that is enjoined upon him by law; and •on refusal or neglect to enter into such bond, the office shall be deemed vacant, and the trustees shall give notice of a new election to fill the vacancy. ’ ’

Judge Swan in his Treatise, Chap. I, Sec. 5, under the heading of [370]*370“Term of Office of Justices of the Peace,” says: “By the constitution, the term of office of justices of the peace is limited to three years. The three years are computed from the date of the commission.” The author gives as authority for his statement, that the three years are computed from the date of the commission, Sec. 581 Rev. Stat. (see now Lan. 913), which provides:

“Every justice of the peace, when commissioned, shall, in thirty days thereafter, transmit the date thereof to the clerk of the township, who shall make an entry thereof in a book by him to be provided for -that purpose, and before the first day of February of each year, the clerk shall give a written notice to the trustees of all commissions expiring within twelve months after the first day of April following, and the date when each such justice’s commission will expire, and the trustees, on receiving such notice, shall notify the electors of such township to elect at the next regular spring election thereafter, a justice of the peace to fill each such vacancy, in the manner pointed out in Sec. 567 [Lan. 899].”

We think it is implied from this section, though not expressly stated, that the legislature intended the date of the commission should govern in determining the expiration of the term of office of a justice of the peace and for the giving of notice of election to fill vacancies.

It was said by Judge Hitchcock, in State v. Constable, 7 Ohio (pt. 1) 1, on page 11, that,

“When no day is mentioned in the law from which the term of service shall commence, it must commence from the day of election. Any other construction would' lead to this absurdity, that the officer elect would have it in his power to fix the commencement of the term of service for himself and his successor, at any time he should think proper to qualify.”

This was not a case of a justice of the peace, and we think the reasons assigned by Judge Hitchcock do not apply to such officer. From experience we know that it is impossible for an officer to be elected and commissioned on the same day; and further, if the term of office commences on the day of election the term of a justice may not have expired at the time of the election of his successor, and, therefore, there was no vacancy on the day of election, and two officers would then be qualified for .the same office — one, because his term of three years had not expired, the other, because he had been that day elected to that office.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Ohio C.C. Dec. 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bushnell-v-koon-ohcirctmorrow-1903.