Ex parte Lawhorne

18 Va. 85
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1868
StatusPublished

This text of 18 Va. 85 (Ex parte Lawhorne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Lawhorne, 18 Va. 85 (Va. 1868).

Opinion

TMONCTTRE, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case depends upon the question, whether the Governor is an officer within the meaning of the twenty-second section of the sixth article of the constitution of the State, which declares, that “judges and all other officers, whether elected or appointed, shall continue to discharge the duties of their respective offices, after their terms of service have expired, until their successors are qualified.”

If this section stood alone, and unaffected by the context, there could not be two opinions as to its meaning. It uses the plainest possible language to embrace all officers, except that it does not mention them all by name. “’Judges” alone are specifically named, no doubt because the provision was made in that part of the constitution which relates, generally, to the “Judiciary Department.” Had it been made in that part which relates to the “Executive Department, ’ ’ the 1 ‘Governor’ ’ would no doubt have been named instead of the “Judges,” and the language would then have been, “the Governor and all other officers, whether elected or appointed, ” &c. The Governor is certainly an officer in the proper and ordinary acceptation of the word; and he is expressly called an officer, and described as holding an office, in the constitution itself. Article V, 1, 3, 4 and 9. There is at least as much reason for including the Governor in the provision in question as any other officer of the government. If it be important that there should always be some person in existence to perform the duties of every office of government, and especially every constitutional office, surely this reason applies with the greatest possible force to that office to which belongs “the chief executive power of the commonwealth. That this was the view of the framers of the constitution is shown by the fact that j they took special care to provide for the I performance of the duties of the office of j Governor in case of his death or failure or inability *to discharge his ! duties during the terjn for which he i was elected. Art. V, § 9. They made no | such provision in regard to any other office 1 (except for the appointment of a clerk pro ¡tempore), leaving that to be done by the Legislature. But in regard to the performance of the duties of all officers, including the Governor, after their terms of service have expired, and until their successors are qualified, ample provision is made by the twenty-second section of the sixth article. This was a natural and proper provision for the case. It is important, as before stated, that there should be some person always ready to perform the duties of very office; and when an incumbent has served out the term for which he was elected or appointed, who can be more suitable than he, as a general rule, to continue to discharge the duties of his office until his successor is qualified? He has been once elected or appointed to the office, and is therefore presumed to be fit for it. He has served out his term, and is therefore presumed to be familiar with its duties.

Now can it be supposed that the framers of the constitution would have used the broad and plain terms used in the section in question without expressly excepting the office of Governor, if they had intended to except it? They were not like an unlearned testator making his will, in extremis and inops concilii, and whose words, therefore, will be indulgently expounded to effectuate his intention. They were selected for their wisdom to do the important work of framing a constitution of government for the State. They had time to do their work with deliberation, and the presumption is that they weighed with care and well understood every word which they used, and felt the importance of expressing their meaning plainly. When, therefore, they declared that ‘ ‘Judges and all other officers, whether elected or appointed, shall continue to discharge the duties of their respective offices,” &c., they must have *known that this plain and comprehensive language, standing alone, embraced the office of Governor, and would be so understood; and they must have seen the necessity of expressly excepting that office, if they did not intend to embrace it in the language used. That they did not expressly make the exception, shows very strongly, if not conclusively, that they intended to embrace the office of Governor.

Such being the plain meaning of the section in question, taken by itself, if there can be anything in the context (short of express words) sufficient to change or restrict this meaning so as to exclude therefrom the office of Governor, surely the evidence of intention ought to be very strong to have that effect. Let us now see what is relied on in the argument to sustain the restricted construction contended for.

It is argued that article V, which relates [552]*552to the “Executive Department” makes all the provision which was intended to be made in the constitution in regard to the office of Governor, and shows that he was not intended to be embraced in the twenty-second section o.f the sixth article. The only sections of the fifth article which have a material bearing on the subject are the 1st, 8th and 9th, which are as follows:

“1. The chief executive power of this commonwealth shall be vested in a Governor.' He shall hold the office for the term of four years, to commence on the first day of January next succeeding his election, and be ineligible to the same office for the term next succeeding that for which he was elected, and to any other office during his term of service.”

“8. A Dieutenant-Governor shall be elected at the same time, and for the same term as the Governor, and his qualification and the manner of his election in all respects shall be the same.”

*“9. In case of the removal of the Governor from office, or of his death, failure to qualify, resignation, removal from the State, or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the office, the said office, with its compensation, shall devolve upon the Bientenant-Governor; and the 'General Assembly shall provide by law for the discharge of the executive functions in other necessary cases.”

Much stress is laid on the first of these sections, which declares the Governor, after holding the office for the term of four years, to “be ineligible to the same office for the term next succeeding that for which he was elected,” &c., from which an intention is inferred to make him incapable of continuing to discharge the duties of his office after the expiration of his term of 'service. But this is not a well founded inference. The policy of making him ineligible to the same office fór the next succeeding term was to avoid exposing him to the temptation of using means afforded him by his office to secure his re-election to the same office, or his election to another office during his term of service. There was no reason whatever for rendering him incompetent to continue to discharge the duties of his office after the e'xpiration of his term of service and until the qualification of his successors. No policy of the law requires it. He cannot be supposed to have any agency,, official or otherwise, in bringing about the occasion for such continuance. There is not a word in the constitution which either expresses or implies an intention to render him incompetent to continue to discharge the duties of his office on such an emergency.

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Bluebook (online)
18 Va. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-lawhorne-va-1868.