Davis v. Williams

12 S.W.2d 532, 158 Tenn. 34, 5 Smith & H. 34, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 121
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 532 (Davis v. Williams) 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
Davis v. Williams, 12 S.W.2d 532, 158 Tenn. 34, 5 Smith & H. 34, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 121 (Tenn. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The defendant and appellant, Mrs. DeWitt Williams, was designated by the County Judge of Hamilton County as “Delinquent Poll Tax Collector,” under the authority of Private Acts of 1927, chapter 395. She issued a distress warrant against complainant, Mrs. Nita Davis, for the collection of a poll tax assessed against her, together with penalties and fees, increasing the tax of $2 to an aggregate of $6.14. Mrs. Davis then filed her original bill in this cause to enjoin levy and execution of the distress warrant, upon the ground that the statute creating’ the office held by Mrs. Williams is unconstitutional and void. The Chancellor sustained the bill, and the defendant has appealed to this court.

The Chancellor held the act unconstitutional as in violation of article 11, section 17, of the Constitution, winch provides: “No county office created by the legislature *39 shall be filled otherwise than by the people or the county court. ’ ’

•(l) The statute provides that “the office of Delinquent Poll Tax ¡Collector is hereby created” for counties of a designated population, including Hamilton County. It provides that the office shall have a term of four years. The duties and powers of the officer are designated, and penalties for misfeasance in - office are prescribed. The collector is required to subscribe to an oath of office, and to execute a bond for the protection of the state and county. The collector is allowed the same fees for services rendered as is allowed by law for similar services by other officers.

In prescribing a term of office, a bond, an oath of office, and in designating the powers and duties of the officer, and his compensation for services performed, the statute clothes the incumbent with all the attributes of an officer, as distinguished from a mere employee.

The contention of appellant that the statute provides for the appointment of an employee rather than a county officer is, therefore, overruled. Whitehead v. Clark, 146 Tenn., 660; State ex rel. v. Jones, 143 Tenn., 575; State ex rel. v. Buck, 138 Tenn., 112.

(2) Section 1 of the statute provides: ' ‘ The first term of said office shall be filled by appointment of the county judge and the person so appointed shall hold office until July, 1931, and until his or her successor is appointed and qualified.”

It is then provided that beginning with July, 1931, each four-year term shall be filled by appointment of the county judge, confirmed by the quarterly county court.

It is contended for the appellant that this method of filling the office is in compliance with article 11, section *40 17, of the Constitution, on the theory that the words bounty court,” as used in the Constitution, mean either the quarterly county court, held by the justices of the peace, or the county court presided over by a county judge.

Unless the constitutional provision can be given this construction, it is obvious that the method of filling .the office, prescribed by the statute, is unconstitutional. The power conferred upon the county judge to name the first officer cannot be sustained, because the officer so named is to continue in office until 1981, with many sessions of the county court intervening. Grindstaff v. Carter County, 152 Tenn., 605.

(3) And in so far as the subsequent terms are concerned, it is obvious that the mere right of confirmation, conferred upon the quarterly county court, is not equivalent to the power to appoint.

(4) The validity ’of the statute must, therefore, depend upon whether the reference to the county court in the constitutional provision above quoted is. only to the quarterly county court, or whether it leaves the General Assembly with a discretion to provide for the filling of a county office by the quarterly county court or the county court presided over by the county judge or chairman.

(a) At the time of the adoption of the Constitution in 1870 the Code of 1858, by sections 41791 et seq., provided that the county court consists of the justices of the county, held monthly, and divided into a quarterly and a quorum court, the first held by all or any number of the justices necessary to transact business, and the latter held by any three or more of the justices, designated at the quarterly session.

Section 4197 of the Code of 1858 abolished the quorum court in each county authorized to elect a county judge, and vested the county judge with “all the jurisdiction and powers now belonging to the said quorum court.”

*41 The quorum court was abolished in all counties of the State by chapter 70 of the Acts of 1875; and in all counties not authorized to elect a county judge the jurisdiction and powers of the quorum courts were vested in the chairman of the county court.

(b) In State ex rel. v. Glenn, 54 Tenn., 472, 491, 494, decided in 1872, Justice McFarland, speaking with reference to article 11, section 17, of the Constitution, observed :

“. . . for although this clause of the Constitution does say that the office shall not be filled otherwise than by the people or the County Court, yet it does not say in which one of the two modes the office is to be filled, and it is clear that in such a case there must of necessity be legislation upon the question before this provision could be fully carried into effect, and, in some cases, a serious difficulty might arise as to whether the power was to be exercised by the County Court held by the Judge, or the Quarterly Court held by the Justices; the clause only says the County Court.”

References to the “county court” in statutes have been variously construed by this court to apply in some cases to the court presided over by the county judge and in other cases to the quarterly session of the justices of the peace, according to the subject-matter of the legislation construed and the conclusion of the court as to the intention of the legislature, in the light of other statutes and the underlying division of jurisdiction between the quarterly sessions and the monthly.sessions.

(c) In State v. Campbell, 76 Tenn., 74, a statutory direction that a vacancy in the office of county court clerk should be filled by the court, following' the similar provision of the constitution in article 7, section 2, was con *42 strued to confer the power upon the quarterly county court; the Supreme Court being carried to this conclusion by the fact that other statutes dealing generally with the filling of vacancies by the county court made provision for notice to the justices of the peace and appeared to contemplate an election rather than an appointment. The court concluded the consideration of the subject by saying:

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 532, 158 Tenn. 34, 5 Smith & H. 34, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-williams-tenn-1928.