In Re Advisory Opinion to the Governor

113 So. 113, 93 Fla. 948
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 30, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 113 So. 113 (In Re Advisory Opinion to the Governor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Advisory Opinion to the Governor, 113 So. 113, 93 Fla. 948 (Fla. 1927).

Opinion

*949 STATE OP FLORIDA,

Executive Chambee,

Tallahassee, April 29, 1927.

To the Honorable Justices of the Supreme Court of Florida:

Gentlemen :

The present Session of the Legislature has passed an Act entitled:

"AN ACT Defining and Fixing Territory and Boundaries of the Eighth Judicial Circuit; Creating the Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit; Providing for a Circuit Judge and State Attorney in the Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit; and Providing and Fixing Time for the Holding of Terms of the Circuit Court in said Twenty-sixth Circuit; and Effecting on Pending Litigation, and Making Appropriation for Payment of Salaries of Judge and State’s Attorney.”

Section 1 of this Act reads:

"That the Eighth Judicial Circuit of the State of Florida, heretofore composed of the Counties of Baker, Bradford, Union, Alachua, Gilchrist, Levy, Putnam and Flagler, shall hereafter be composed and constituted of the Counties of Levy, Alachua, Gilchrist, Putnam and Flagler alone; the terms of said Court shall be as heretofore fixed by law in said Counties of Alachua, Gilchrist, Levy, Putnam and Flagler. ’ ’

Certified copy of this Act is attached to this communication for the information of the Court.

The constitutional provisions relating to and governing Circuit Judges, creating additional circuits and creating additional judgeships in circuits, respectively, are:

Provision in Section 8 of Article Y reads:

"The Circuit Judges holding office at the time of such *950 division shall severally continue in office until the expiration of their then existing term of office as judges of the circuits respectively in which, under such division, the County of his residence may he included; and a judge for the additional circuit shall be appointed for a term equal to the unexpired term of the other Circuit Judges upon such division being made.”

Section 35 of Article V of the Constitution reads:

“No Courts other than herein specified shall be established in this State, except that the Legislature may provide for the creating and establishment of such additional Judicial Circuits as may from time to time become necessary, and for the appointment by the Governor and confirmation by the Senate of additional Circuit Judges therefor whose terms of office and general jurisdiction shall be the same as is herein provided for the Circuit Judges herein already provided for, and may clothe any Railroad Commission with judicial powers in all matters connected with the functions of their office.”

In this Section 35 it provides:

“ * * * whose terms of office and general jurisdiction shall be the same as herein provided for the Circuit Judges herein already provided for * * *.”

One question is:

Does this provision relate back to the provision in Section 8 of the Constitution, that:

“The Circuit Judges holding office at the time of such division shall severally continue in office until the expiration of their then existing term of office as Judges of the Circuits respectively in which, under such division, the County of his residence may be included; and a Judge for the additional Circuit shall be appointed for a term equal to the unexpired term of the other Circuit Judges upon such division being made. ’

*951 The Legislature of 1921 proposed an amendment to Article V of the Constitution,, by incorporating therein Section 43. This amendment was ratified and adopted at the General Election in 1922.

This Section 43 authorizes:

' ‘ The Legislature may from time to time and as the business of any Circuit requires, provide for the appointment of one or more additional Circuit Judges for such Circuit. * * * and shall hold office for six years * * *. No additional Circuit Judge or Judges shall be authorized to be appointed in a Circuit having less than 75,000 inhabitants by the last Federal or State census occurring next before the passage of the law for his or their appointment. The Legislature may repeal any law providing for the appointment of an additional Circuit Judge, or additional Circuit Judges for a Circuit, but such repeal shall not affect the term, salary and jurisdiction of a Judge holding an appointment. ’

By the State census of 1925 the Eighth Judicial Circuit as then composed had a population of 79,908.

By Chapter 10088, Acts of 1925, an additional Circuit Judge was provided for the Eighth Judicial Circuit.

In this Act it was provided that the additional Judge should reside in Alachua County.

Under the provisions of this Chapter 10088, Acts of 1925, Honorable A. Z. Adkins was appointed and commissioned the additional Circuit Judge for the Eighth Judicial Circuit. The said A. Z. Adkins' as such additional Circuit Judge, has resided and is now residing in Bradford County, in said Circuit, and- was commissioned as such Circuit Judge for a term of six years from 1925.

At the present session of the Legislature, 1927, the Act above mentioned was passed, dividing the Eighth Judicial *952 Circuit and creating the Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit, composed of the Counties of Baker, Bradford and Union.

Under the provisions of the Act creating the Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit it becomes necessary that said Circuit have a constitutionally appointed and commissioned Judge.

Under the provisions of Section 43 of Article V of the Constitution, and of Chapter 10088, Acts of 1925, Hon. A. Z. Adkins is the duly appointed and commissioned additional Circuit Judge of the Eighth Judicial Circuit for a term of six years from 1925. His term, salary and jurisdiction cannot be taken away by the repeal of Chapter 10088..

Judge Adkins, as such additional Circuit Judge for the Eighth Judicial Circuit, resides in Bradford County, now the Twenty-sixth Circuit.

Under the provisions of Section 8 of Article V of the Constitution, does Judge A. Z. Adkins automatically become the Judge of the Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit, or, under the Constitution, is it necessary for the Governor to appoint, for confirmation of the Senate, a Judge for the newly created Twenty-sixth Judicial Circuit?

Respectfully,

JOHN W. MARTIN,

Governor of Florida.

SUPREME COURT OF FLORIDA.

Hon. John W. Martin,

Sir:—

Your executive communication of the 29th inst., requesting an opinion upon the matters stated therein, has been duly considered. Replying thereto, you are advised that *953 the fact that Honorable A. Z.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Davis v. Giblin
124 So. 375 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
113 So. 113, 93 Fla. 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-advisory-opinion-to-the-governor-fla-1927.