Dobbs v. Board of County Com'rs of Oklahoma County

1953 OK 159, 257 P.2d 802, 208 Okla. 514, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 827
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 26, 1953
Docket35947
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 1953 OK 159 (Dobbs v. Board of County Com'rs of Oklahoma County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dobbs v. Board of County Com'rs of Oklahoma County, 1953 OK 159, 257 P.2d 802, 208 Okla. 514, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 827 (Okla. 1953).

Opinions

HALLEY, C.J.

Betty O. Dobbs, a resident taxpayer of Oklahoma county, attacks the constitutionality of H. B. No. 646 of the 1953 Legislature, which became effective March 24, 1953, and prays that we prohibit the board of county commissioners of Oklahoma county from appointing a second county judge.

The above law amends sec. 131(a), Title 19, O.S. 1951, and provides addi[515]*515tional county judges in all counties in Oklahoma having a population of 300,000 or more, as shown by the last Federal Decennial Census, and which further provides that any resident taxpayer of a county having that population may contest the constitutionality of the Act by original action in this court.

It is admitted that Oklahoma county has the required population to justify the appointment of an additional county judge, if H.B. No. 646 is held valid. An amended petition was filed showing that the board of county commissioners of Oklahoma county did, on March 24, 1953, appoint William A. Berry as an additional county judge for Oklahoma county and he is joined herein as a party defendant with the county commissioners who made the appointment.

The petition alleges that H. B. No. 646 is ineffective because it violates sec. 11, article VII of the State Constitution.

The pertinent portion of H.B. No. 646 is sec. 1, which is as follows:

“(A) At the general election to be held in November, 1948, and each two (2) years thereafter, there shall be elected in each county of the State of Oklahoma, a County Judge, provided however in each County having a population in excess of Three Hundred Thousand (300,000) as shown by the last preceding regular Federal Decennial Census, there shall be elected an additional County Judge, and in all counties of the State of Oklahoma, a County Attorney, a Court Clerk and a County Sheriff, who shall hold office for a term of two (2) years beginning, except that of the County Judge, as provided in Section 11, Article VII, Constitution of Oklahoma, on the first Monday in January following their election, and until their successors are elected and qualified.”

Section 11 of article VII of our Constitution provides:

“There is hereby established in each county in this State a County Court, which shall be a court of record; and, at the election to ratify this Constitution, there shall be elected in each county a County Judge, who shall hold his office until the close of the day next preceding the second Monday in January, nineteen hundred and eleven; and thereafter the term of office of the County Judge shall be two years, and he shall be elected at each biennial general election. The county judge shall be a qualified voter and a resident of the county at the time of his election, and a lawyer licensed to practice in any court of record of the State. The county judge shall be judge of the county court.”

Section 2 of article XVII provides:

“There are hereby created, subject to change by the Legislature, in and for each organized county of this State, the offices of Judge of the County Court, County Attorney, Clerk of the District Court, County Clerk, Sheriff, County Treasurer, Register of Deeds, County Surveyor, Superintendent of Public Instruction, three County Commissioners, and such municipal township officers as are now provided for under the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma, except as in this Constitution otherwise provided.”

Petitioner points out that in Nichols v. Levy, 151 Okla. 245, I P. 2d 766, this court had before it a similar law, being H.B. No. 131, effective March 5, 1931, providing for two county judges in a county having a population of 220, 000, and held the same unconstitutional and void.

The principal objective of the Act here attacked is the same as that of the 1931 Act. We have examined carefully the opinion in the Nichols v. Levy case, decided by this court in 1931, and also the two dissenting opinions, and agree that if H.B. No. 646 is upheld it will be necessary to overrule the decision in Nichols v. Levy. In that case it was agreed that the real issue was: “Does our Constitution prohibit the Legislature from providing for more than one judge for the county court regardless of the size of the county or the amount of court work?” Such is clearly the real issue before us.

The defendants contend that the opinion in the Nichols v. Levy is erroneous in the following particulars:

[516]*516(a) The failure to sustain the constitutionality of an Act of the Legislature in the absence of clear prohibition and the limitation in the Constitution of the power of the Legislature to enact the law in question.

(b) The decision failed to consider certain pertinent provisions of the Constitution.

(c) It failed to consider the Bill of Rights expressed in sec. 6, Article II, of our Constitution, and,

(d) Their reasoning in the opinion is fallacious.

The above contentions are treated together in the brief of the defendants, and since Nichols v. Levy is the only case relied upon by plaintiff, we have considered them together, with reference to the decision which must be overruled if H.B. No. 646 is to be sustained. That decision is based principally upon the provisions of sec. 11, art. VII, supra, which provides for the establishment in each county of “a county court,” and that there shall be elected in each county “a county judge” who shall hold “his” office until a time fixed, and that thereafter the term of office of “the county judge” shall be two years, and that “he” shall be elected each biennial election. The qualifications of “the county judge” are prescribed and he is required to be “a lawyer”.

The original jurisdiction of the county court is fixed by sec. 12, art. VII, “until otherwise provided by law”; that sec. 10 of the same Article, a district court, “or any judge thereof” shall have power to issue writs, while sec. 12 provides that the county court, “or judge thereof,” shall also have such power.

It was pointed out that while article VII provides for changes of certain sections of law, there is no such provision relative to changing the number of county judges. The provision fixing the jurisdiction of the county court contains a clause that the same may be changed by the Legislature, as has been done many times.

It was also pointed out that district judges might be sent into other counties .outside their district to try cases, but no such provision was made as to county judges.

The opinion in Nichols v. Levy is very well summarized in the body of the opinion, on page 248, 151 Okla. Reports, wherein the court expressed disagreement with a decision handed down by the Supreme Court of Arkansas, in the following language:

“We cannot follow the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Arkansas in State v. Martin, 60 Ark 343, 30 S.W. 421, 28 L.R.A. 153; to the effect that the articles used in a constitutional provision are too indefinite to define or limit the number of judges which may be provided by legislation. We cannot hold that ‘a county judge’, ‘the county judge’, ‘his election’, and ‘a lawyer’ refer to two or more judges. As well might it be said that the provision in the Constitution for ‘a Governor’ would authorize a legislative enactment for two Governors. The illustration used by the plaintiff is that an agent authorized to buy ‘a horse’ would not thereby be authorized to buy two horses.”

Before discussing certain phases of the Nichols v.

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

Related

TOBACCO SETTLEMENT ENDOWMENT TRUST FUND v. STITT
2026 OK 1 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2026)
WATSON v. BNSF RAILWAY COMPANY
2024 OK 74 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2024)
STITT v. TREAT
2024 OK 21 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2024)
Opinion No. (1999)
Oklahoma Attorney General Reports, 1999
Jackson v. Freeman
905 P.2d 217 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1995)
Way v. Grand Lake Ass'n, Inc.
1981 OK 70 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1981)
State Ex Rel. Oklahoma Tax Commission v. Daxon
1980 OK 28 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1980)
OKLAHOMA CTY. UTIL. SERV. AUTH. v. Corporation Comm'n
519 P.2d 919 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1974)
Colpitt v. Herrington
1974 OK CIV APP 5 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 1974)
Jones v. State
1967 OK CR 61 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1967)
Taff v. State
1966 OK 266 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1966)
Sanchez v. Melvin
418 P.2d 639 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1966)
State ex rel. Cities Service Oil Co. v. Board of Appeals
124 N.W.2d 809 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1963)
Tate v. Logan
1961 OK 136 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1961)
Munson v. Snyder
1954 OK 257 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1953 OK 159, 257 P.2d 802, 208 Okla. 514, 1953 Okla. LEXIS 827, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbs-v-board-of-county-comrs-of-oklahoma-county-okla-1953.