Commonwealth v. Wehr

17 Pa. D. & C. 689, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 198
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County
DecidedFebruary 29, 1932
DocketNo. 47
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Pa. D. & C. 689 (Commonwealth v. Wehr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lehigh County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Wehr, 17 Pa. D. & C. 689, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 198 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Reno, P. J.,

— By the Act of June 23, 1931, P. L. 931, the General Assembly established a separate orphans’ court for Lehigh County, consisting of one judge, who was to be elected “and duly commissioned to hold office from the first Monday of January next succeeding such election.” Hon. Ethan Allen Gearhart was elected and commissioned. He qualified and assumed the duties of his office on January 4,1932, when he formally opened and organized a separate orphans’ court. Two parties claim the office of clerk of the court. Henry P. Wehr, the respondent herein, was elected clerk of the orphans’ court in November, 1929, was duly commissioned and qualified, and entered upon the discharge of his duties on the first Monday of January, 1930. He was elected for the period of four years and his claim to the office is founded upon the election for a four-year term which has not expired. The other claimant is Asa H. Neimeyer, who was elected register of wills at the election held in November, 1931, and who has been duly commissioned and qualified. He entered office on January 4,1932, and he claims the office of clerk of the orphans’ court under the Constitution, Art. V, Sec. 22, which provides that “in any county in which a [690]*690separate orphans’ court shall be established, the register of wills shall be clerk of such court. . . .”

The Commonwealth, at the relation of the district attorney, instituted this quo warranto proceeding to test Wehr’s title to the office. To the district attorney’s suggestion Wehr filed an answer and, subsequently, a supplemental answer. The relator filed a general demurrer to the respondent’s answer, and, by agreement of counsel at bar, the demurrer applies as well to the supplemental answer.

Thus, the contest is between the respondent whose title to the office rests upon an election for a four-year term commencing January, 1930, prior to the establishment of the separate orphans’ court, and the register of wills, who stands upon the constitutional provision. The case of French v. Com. ex rel. Zimmerman, 78 Pa. 339, furnishes the complete solution of the problem. There, immediately after the adoption of the Constitution of 1874, precisely the same controversy arose, and the Supreme Court, reversing the court below, held:

“The former clerk of the Orphans’ Court does not become clerk of the new court, but the register of wills becomes its clerk. It is not the former clerk of the Orphans’ Court that the constitution declares shall be subject to the direction of the new court; but it is the new clerk, the register of wills. It is this new clerk, and not the old one, who is authorized to appoint assistant clerks. There is nothing in the section, either expressed or implied, indicating that the clerk of the former Orphans’ Court should become clerk of the new Orphans’ Court for a single hour. The manifest design was to establish a new tribunal for the administration of that branch of the law and provide for its new officials. The same section that takes from the judges of the Court of Common Pleas all Orphans’ Court jurisdiction, and from a register of wills all power to sit in a Register’s Court, just as clearly withholds from the former clerk of an Orphans’ Court the newly-created powers and duties appertaining to a clerk of the new court.”

It is vigorously contended that the French case must be understood as establishing a rule applicable only to those clerks of the orphans’ courts who were in office when the Constitution of 1874 became effective. It is true that consideration was given to the twenty-sixth section of the schedule to the Constitution and it was discovered that, since it was “otherwise provided in this Constitution,” the clerk “in office ... at the time of the adoption of . . . [the] constitution” did not continue in office. But the case did not turn upon the provision of the schedule; it was decided upon an examination of article five, section twenty-two; in other words, it was held that the provisions in the schedule did not prevent the operation of the explicit language of article five, section twenty-two. The clerk’s term ended, not merely because the schedule failed to save it from expiration, but because article five, section twenty-two clearly designated the officer who was to be the clerk of the newly-established separate orphans’ court. It follows that the conclusion there announced must govern this case.

Even if we were free to examine the question, we should, upon slightly different premises, reach the conclusion announced by the French case. The respondent’s election did not vest in him an absolute and unqualified tenure for four years. Apart from the circumstance that the duration of his term could be cut down by the adoption of a new constitution (cf. French v. Com. ex rel. Zimmerman, supra), he could be expelled from the office by impeachment (Constitution, Art. VI, Sec. 3), by removal upon conviction of a crime (Art. VI, Sec. 4), or by the Governor on the address of the Senate (Art. VI, Sec. 4), or for engaging or participating in a duel (Art. xii, Sec. 3). That is, he holds his office upon [691]*691the condition that he behaves himself well (Art. VI, Sec. 4). His tenure is subject to a conditional limitation, or, more properly, a collateral limitation, by virtue of which it is cut down by the happening of an event nominated in the instrument, the Constitution, under which he holds the tenure. It must be presumed that, since the conditional or collateral limitation appears in the same instrument which granted the tenure, he had knowledge of the limitation, although this is not material. The provision in article five, section twenty-two, provides an additional collateral condition. It prescribes another event which, when it happens, terminates the tenure. It provides that when a separate orphans’ court shall be created the register shall be its clerk. As in the physical world, two bodies cannot occupy the same space at the same time, so in the political world two officers cannot hold the same office at the same time. It follows that when, by the mandate of the Constitution, a separate orphans’ court is established, the tenure of the clerk ends. In short, that provision of the Constitution (Art. xiv, Sec. 2, as amended November 2,1909) which grants a tenure of four years is, so far as the clerk of the orphans’ court is concerned, subject to the collateral limitation provided by article five, section twenty-two, and when a separate orphans’ court comes into existence, the tenure of the clerk is, by the happening of that event, cut down.

This conclusion rests upon a ehoiee-between two apparently conflicting provisions of the Constitution. The provision fixing the clerk’s term at four years is, under our construction, defeated because of its conflict with the provision relating to the orphans’ court. This circumstance calls for a consideration of the problem presented by conflicting constitutional provisions and “it is well established that, where a conflict exists between a specific constitutional provision, which is unquestionably applicable to a particular case, and certain general provisions, which, were it not for such conflict, might apply, the specific provision will prevail:” Philadelphia v. Com., 270 Pa. 353, 358. And see Buckley v. Holmes et al., 259 Pa. 176, 188; Com. ex rel. v. Mathues, 210 Pa. 372, 398, 415; Com. v. Emmers, 221 Pa. 298, 312. In the case at bar, the specific provision that the register of wills shall be the clerk of the orphans’ court conflicts with the general provision fixing the term of county offices at four years, but, under the cases, the specific provision must apply.

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Related

Wheeler v. Philadelphia
77 Pa. 338 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1875)
French v. Commonwealth ex rel. Zimmerman
78 Pa. 339 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1875)
Commonwealth ex rel. Chase v. Harding
87 Pa. 343 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1878)
Morrison v. Bachert
5 A. 739 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
Seabolt v. Commissioners of Northumberland County
41 A. 22 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1898)
Commonwealth ex rel. Attorney General v. Mathues
210 Pa. 372 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1904)
Commonwealth v. Emmers
70 A. 762 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1908)
Gottschall v. Campbell
83 A. 286 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1912)
Commonwealth v. Hopkins
88 A. 442 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1913)
Gerlach v. Moore
90 A. 399 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)
Philadelphia & Reading Railway Co. v. Walton
94 A. 79 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1915)
Commonwealth v. Heck
95 A. 929 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1915)
Noecker v. Woods
102 A. 507 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)
Buckley v. Holmes
102 A. 497 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)
Nolan v. Jones
106 A. 235 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1919)
Philadelphia v. Commonwealth
113 A. 661 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1921)
Findley v. Bryans
58 Pa. Super. 399 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)
Reid v. Smoulter
18 A. 445 (Luzerne County Court of Common Pleas, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Pa. D. & C. 689, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-wehr-pactcompllehigh-1932.