Ex Parte King

35 Tex. 657
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 Tex. 657 (Ex Parte King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte King, 35 Tex. 657 (Tex. 1872).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

This case comes before this court upon a writ of error from the District Court of Anderson county.

It stands upon the docket Wm. II. King, Plaintiff in Error, v. The State of Texas.

It appears from the record that on the tenth of January, 1871, the District Court of Anderson county caused a judgment or order to be entered upon the minutes of the court in the following words:

In the matter of W. H. King, district clerk of Anderson county.—It appears to the satisfaction of the court that Wm. H. King, clerk of the district court of Anderson county y is entirely incompetent to the discharge of the duties of said office, and that his habits of life are dissipated to such a degree as to still further unfit him for said office.

“Now, therefore, by virtue of the authority vested in the presiding judge of this court by Article 5, Section 9, of the Constitution of the State of Texas, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed, that for the causes hereinbefore set forth, the said Wm. II. King be and he is hereby removed from office as clerk of the District Court of Anderson county; and that a certified copy of the entry of this order be transmitted to His Excellency Edmund J. Davis, Governor of Texas, as information to the Executive that said office of district clerk of Anderson county is vacant, to the end that such vacancy may be filled by appointment in pursuance of the provisions of the law. This order to be enforced instanter.”

The Attorney General has moved to dismiss this cause for want of service of the writ of error on the [663]*663district attorney ; to which, motion the counsel of King replies that this proceeding in this court is ex parte, and that service of the writ of error on the district attorney is not necessary; and the counsel suggests, that if the service be quashed, the case should nevertheless stand on the docket, to be heard and determined ex parte; and in support of this suggestion we are referred to the case Ex Parte Crutchfield, 3 Yerger, 336, and Ex Parte Williams, 4 Yerger, 580, and other cases in which appeals from judgments disbarring attorneys and removing guardians, were prosecuted ex parte.

We have carefully considered the motion of the Attorney General, and are of the opinion that the statutory requirements, as to the service of the citation in error, are not applicable to this case.

The proceedings in the court below were not in the name of the State, but were simply an order of the court removing the clerk for incompetency and unfitness for the office of clerk, because of habits of dissipation. So far as the record discloses, the district judge acted upon his own knowledge, and of his own motion. There was no judgment for costs, and it was proper there should be none. The clerk, against whom the order removing him from office was made, had no redress except in this court. The proceeding in error was therefore necessary to invoke the jurisdiction and the protecting power of this court, but the service of the writ upon the district attorney was not necessary.

We therefore overrule the motion of the Attorney General to dismiss the case, and proceed to consider it on its merits.

Article 5, Section 9, of the Constitution, which is referred to in the order of the court as the source of the power to remove the clerk from his office, so far as relates to this case, is in the following words :

[664]*664“A clerk of the district court for each county shall Tbe elected by the qualified electors in each county, who shall hold his office for four years, subject to removal by the judges of said court, for cause spread upon the minutes of the court.”

There is a similar provision in section eighteen of the same article, in relation to sheriffs.

The authors of the Constitution no doubt intended by these provisions to secure the highest degree of efficiency on the part of clerks and sheriffs, but it cannot be supposed that it was intended to clothe the district judge with an arbitrary power to remote an executive officer for any cause that the judge might think proper to spread upon his minutes.

Experience had shown that in some instances incompetent clerks and sheriffs were elected; in other cases, persons chosen to fill these offices became incompetent after their election. It was intended to provide a more certain and speedy remedy against the evils of incompetency and malfeasance on the part of these officers than is afforded by the tardy and uncertain process of indictment; but it could not have been intended to make a mockery of election by the people, by giving to the district judge the power capriciously to deprive an officer chosen by the people of his office.

The language of the Constitution is to be understood with some limitation; we must therefore endeavor to ascertain its true meaning.

Since the introduction of the common law into this State, in the year 1840, our constitutions have been framed with reference to it, and they have been and must continue to be interpreted in the light of its principles and modes of procedure. Summary convictions without trial by jury were unknown to the common law.

[665]*665It was only by virtue of particular statutes that power was given to justices of the peace in England to try offenders summarily, without a trial by jury, and the superior courts always exercised a rigid supervision over the inferior tribunals in all such cases.

Thus it is said that “ where a special power is given to a justice of the peace by act of Parliament to convict an offender in a summary way, without a trial by jury, it must appear that he had strictly pursued that power, otherwise the common law will break in upon him and level all his proceedings.

“Therefore, where a trial by jury is dispensed withal, yet he must proceed, nevertheless, according to the course of the common law in trials by juries, and consider himself only as constituted in the place of both judge and jury. Therefore, there must be an information or charge against a person ; then he must be summoned, or have notice of such charge, and have the opportunity of making a defense, and the evidence against him must be such that the common law approves of, unless the statute specially directeth otherwise. Then, if the person is found guilty, there must be a conviction, judgment and execution, all according to the course of the common law, directed and influenced by the special authority given by the statute ; and in the conclusion, there must be a record of the whole proceedings, wherein the justice must set forth the particular matter and circumstances, so as if he shall be called to account for the same by a superior court, it may appear that he hath conformed to the law, and not exceeded the bounds prescribed to his jurisdiction.” (1 Burns’s Justice, 364.)

Again, it is said: “ It is certain that very rigid rules of construction in regard to these summary proceedings have prevailed in courts of justice. It has been [666]

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Bluebook (online)
35 Tex. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-king-tex-1872.