Opinion to the Governor

116 A.2d 474
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 1, 1955
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 116 A.2d 474 (Opinion to the Governor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion to the Governor, 116 A.2d 474 (R.I. 1955).

Opinion

116 A.2d 474 (1955)

OPINION TO THE GOVERNOR.

Supreme Court of Rhode Island.

Filed August 8, as of August 5, 1955.
August 5, 1955 To His Excellency Dennis J. Roberts Governor of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.

We have received from your excellency a request for our written opinion, in accordance with the provisions of section 2 of article XII of amendments to the constitution of this state, upon the following question:

"Would acceptance by the Governor of the State of Rhode Island of designation by the President of the United States under sub-section (c) of Section 287 of Chapter 7 of Title 22 of the United States Code as a special representative of the United States to the 10th Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations, to serve no longer than December 31, 1955, to act in accordance with the provisions of Section 287a of said chapter in carrying out the functions prescribed for said Assembly by Chapter IV of the Charter of the United Nations ratified by the President of the United States August 8, 1945, constitute a violation of the provisions of Section 6 of Article IX of the Constitution of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations so as to vacate his office as Governor?"

The answer thereto involves an application of article IX, sec. 6, of the constitution of this state, which reads as follows: "No person holding any office under the government of the United States, or of any other state or country, shall act as a general officer, or as a member of the general assembly, unless at the time of taking his engagement he shall have resigned his office under such government; and if any general officer, senator, representative or judge shall, after his election and engagement, accept any appointment under any other government, his office under this shall be immediately vacated; but this restriction shall not apply to any person appointed to take depositions or acknowledgment of deeds, or other legal instruments, by the authority of any other state or country."

In this connection it is unnecessary to restate the history of our constitution and to establish the fact that from the beginning Rhode Island has been exceptionally jealous of its independence and sovereignty as a state. For the present problem it is sufficient to point to the explicit provisions *475 of the above-quoted section of our constitution which are as strong, if not stronger, than similar prohibitions found in the constitutions of the other states.

The intent of that language is clear. It was designed to secure the undivided loyalty and service of such officers to this state. The framers of the constitution deemed it prudent to prevent even the possibility of a conflict between loyalties. Therefore they dealt with the problem in two ways. In the first clause of sec. 6 they provided that no person while holding an office under any other government, state or country could act as a general officer or as a member of the general assembly. Apparently not content with this exclusion they then provided in the second clause that if any such officer or judge, after his election and engagement, accepted any appointment under any other government then his said office shall be immediately vacated.

In the circumstances here we are concerned only with the second provision. Whatever may have been intended by the use of the words "any appointment," as distinguished from any appointment to an office under any other government, it is clear in any event that the general language necessarily includes an appointment to a public office under the United States government. Therefore in order to give a construction to the words "any appointment" that will be most liberal and favorable, we shall assume for our present purpose that these words imply an appointment to office and not merely an appointment of any kind whatever.

The question then is whether the designation of a special representative of the United States to the general assembly of the United Nations constitutes a public office in the constitutional sense so that such an appointment, if accepted, would be in conflict with the provisions of the second clause of article IX, sec. 6, of our constitution.

The rule for determining what constitutes a public office in the constitutional sense has already been decided in this state. It is not governed by a consideration of whether the two offices are naturally incompatible as required at common law, because the explicit prohibition in the constitution makes them incompatible if the position in question is an office under another government. Nor is it decided by whether an oath may be required or waived; or by whether the tenure or term is of short or long duration; or by whether the incumbent is entitled to an emolument which he may desire to waive. In our judgment these are accidentals which perhaps may be considered when the basic elements are not clear. But the essential question is always to be resolved by a consideration of the nature, duties and functions of the position in order to determine whether they entitle the incumbent to exercise some portion of the sovereignty of another government.

That general question was considered by this court in Attorney General ex rel. Adams v. McCaughey, 21 R.I. 341. There the court, at page 344, adopted and quoted with approval the text of Spelling on Extraordinary Relief, § 1780, as follows: "There are three principal tests for determining whether one performing duties of a public nature is a public officer, in the sense of subjecting his incumbency or employment to a quo warranto proceeding: First, whether the sovereignty, either directly through legislative enactment or executive appointment, or indirectly as through a municipal charter, is the source of authority; second, whether the duties pertaining to the position are of a public character — that is, due to the community in its political capacity — and third, whether the tenure is fixed and permanent for a definite period fixed by law, unless for neglect of duty or malfeasance, or subject to termination at the will of others without the assignment of cause."

In connection with the same subject, this court in an earlier case, State v. Brown, 5 R.I. 1, held in effect that it does not change the constitution to say that such an appointee or designee would avoid the conflicts contemplated by the constitution by conducting himself so as "to be clear" in both offices. It is therein stated at page 10: "The law is adapted not to individual *476 and exceptional cases, but to human nature as it ordinarily exhibits itself; and it cannot afford to dispense with the well-known guards of common policy for the chance of now and then stumbling upon a bright example, or producing a startling effect. The question of incompatibility is to be determined from the nature of the duties of the two offices, and not from a possibility, or even a probability, that the defendant might duly perform the duties of both." See In re Corliss, 11 R.I. 638. See also Opinion to the Governor, 67 R.I. 197, 21 A.2d 267, and State ex rel. Costello v. Powers, 80 R.I. 390, 97 A.2d 584.

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