In re the order of the arrest of Pearson

8 Fla. 496
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Fla. 496 (In re the order of the arrest of Pearson) 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 the order of the arrest of Pearson, 8 Fla. 496 (Fla. 1859).

Opinion

Opinion by

BALTZELL, C. J.

In the latter part of last year, I received from Judge Pearson an official note, dated Jacksonville, 28th December, informing me, that “ the condition of his eyes was such as to preclude him from doing justice to his official station and to himself, and requesting that a Circuit Judge be appointed to take his place.” To this I made prompt and immediate answer, that, “ in my opinion, it could not be done consistently with official propriety.” To this he [497]*497replied by letter, dated tbe 4th of January, acknowledging the receipt of mine, but expressive of “regret that his absence should work any prejudice to the right of parties litigant by virtue of your (my) decision, and would respectfully suggest an adjournment until after, the subsequent terms, when I hope to be with you then.”

The very proposal for the adjournment of all the terms' appeared to me to indicate a purpose on his part to allow them to pass away without the transaction of the public business. It then became matter of serious consideration what should be done under the circumstances. If there had been inability from sickness or other sufficient cause, I should have been the last to complain of his absence; but, as I conceived the cause alleged did not amount to a sufficient excuse, the infirmity being one that existed at the last terms of the Court — not at all aggravated — not in the slightest degree increased. It commenced at Jacksonville and continued to prevail through the succeeding terms of the past year — at Tampa, Marianna and Tallahassee — with entire inability on his part to read a single word, a brief or authority cited, or write a single opinion; the labor of the entire term, with the exception of his sitting on the bench and joining in consultations, having thus been devolved upon his associates. The labor I was willing to have assumed again. There was an additional reason for not allowing his statement as a satisfactory excuse. If disabled or disqualified so as to make the appointment of a Circuit Judge legal and proper, his acting at all, whilst under the disability, was improper, as the decisions in which he concurred might for this reason be justly questionable or even deemed invalid. Moreover, he had assured his brother Judges, that in the event the infirmity continued, or was not relieved by the next term, he would resign. I had a full conviction, too, that the [498]*498appointment of a Judge for the term was not only not provided for by the law, but prohibited by the Constitution. Still farther desirous of satisfying myself, I inquired of citizens direct from Jacksonville, of the highest respectability and standing, as to his condition, and was informed that he was in better health than usual and en gaged in his ordinary pursuits. Tbe result of these inquiries was a belief upon my mind of a decided disregard and refusal on his part to perform the duty of his official station. In this connection, it is important to notice the action of the Court at this period. The third of January being the first Monday, was the day fixed by law for holding the Supreme Court at Tallahassee. On that day was present the C. Justice; on the 4th, the O. J. and Associate Jnstice DuPont. The Court was then adjourned until the 11th, when the C. J. was present. On the 12th and 13th he was present alone. On the latter day the Court was adjourned to the ljth. On the 18th, present the Chief Justice, when an order was made to notify the two Associates to be present on the 24th, with a further order for the attachment of the Hon. B. M. Pearson. On the 24th, present the O. J. and Associate DuPont, when the C. J. proposed to proceed with the business, but Associate Justice DuPont not concurring, the Court was adjourned to the Court in course.

It will thus be seen that no term was held for the transaction of business, owing to the failure of one Associate to attend and of the objection of the other to proceeding with the business in the absence of that Associate, and thus a high co-ordinate department of the government, vested with the most important powers for the preservation of the public peace, of social order, of the administration of justice, was about to be rendered totally inefficient by this suspension of its vital functions.

[499]*499To me above all others, occupying the responsible position of presiding officer, the question addressed itself with irresistible prominence and force whether there was not power in the Court itself, for redress in such emergency, or was the tribunal wholly impotent and powerless. I deemed it due to those who, in a generous confidence, had reposed in me so high and sacred a trust — to my own deep sense of responsibility — to the integrity of the Court, the character of the State, the maintenance of the government itself, that a remedy, if any existed adequate to the occasion, should be applied. In a matter of such serious moment all merely personal considerations, either in reference to others or to myself, did not, as they were not permitted to, have the slightest weight. The question was one, indeed, affecting the very existence of the Court. There was no time for investigation, nor search for precedents, but the event made it incumbent on those having control of the matter to use the means within their reach, without regard to nice and arbitrary distinctions. To save, to rescue from peril, confers extraordinary power. Resources then, are the suggestions of the occasion, and when resorted to in questions of great moment, are not objectionable that they are not of ordinary application. It was easy to see, that if one Judge could, by his absence from Court, impede its progress, arrest its action and subvert its power, the great object of its institution would be defeated. Even when present, he could effect the same purpose by contumelious behavior, refusing to sit in conference — to vote in the trial of cases arid by other expedients. He would thus be armed with the powrnr, to be wielded at his own will, of attacking the Court, obstructing its proceedings, of threatening its action, defying its authority, and assailing it at every step, and this department would thus be exhibited stripped of its legitimate [500]*500power and defenceless before one of its own xnembers. Sxich results would be in direct conflict with the established maxim that every department of the govern ment possesses inherent power adequate to its own pi’otection and fully commensurate to the objects of its creation.

This principle was the basis of the decision of the great case of Cohens vs. the State of Virginia, in which the important question arose whether a sovei’eign State was subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Courts. That profound and distinguished jurist, C. J. Marshall, delivered •the opinion of the Court. • It presents so many views coincident with those we have expressed that we make copious extracts, in order to show the analogy:

“ The questions px-esented to the Court by the two first points made at bar ax-e of gx’eat magnitude, and may be truly said vitally to affect the Union. This excludes the enquiry whether the Constitution and laws of the United States have been violated by the judgment which the plaintiffs in error seek to review and maintain ; that admitting such violation, it is not in the power of the government to apply a corrective.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Fla. 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-order-of-the-arrest-of-pearson-fla-1859.