People Ex Rel. Joyce v. . Brundage

78 N.Y. 403, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 930
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 14, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 78 N.Y. 403 (People Ex Rel. Joyce v. . Brundage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Joyce v. . Brundage, 78 N.Y. 403, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 930 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Chüech, Ch. J.

It was suggested on the argument that an early decision of this case is desirable, to enable the electors of Niagara county to fill the office of county judge at the ensuing election, if the decision should be adverse to the defendant. We have therefore given the case as full an examination and consideration since the argument, as the limited time intervening would permit.

Levi F. Bowen was elected county judge in November, 1873, and entered upon the duties of his office January 1, 1874. He arrived at seventy years of age in November, 1878. The defendant was elected county judge at the general election of 1878, and entered upon his duties January 1, 1879. The question is whether the term of Judge Bowen expired on the last day of December, 1878, by reason of his having before that arrived at the age of seventy, or whether that circumstance created a vacancy, to be filled in the way provided by law.

If his term expired the election of the defendant in the fall of 1878 is conceded to have been regular; if not, it was unauthorized.

Article 6, section 15, of the constitution provides: “ The existing county courts are continued, and the judges thereof in office at the adoption of this article, shall hold their offices *405 ■until the expiration of their respective terms. Their successors shall be chosen by the electors of the counties, for the term of six years.”

Article 6, section 13, provides : “ But no person shall hold the office of judge or justice of any court, longer than until and including the last day of December next after he shall be seventy years of age.” It has been held that this provision applies to county judges (People v. Gardner, 45 N. Y., 812), and its general language “judge or justice of any court ” would necessarily include that officer. Does this provision create a limitation or qualification of the term prescribed, or is it merely a personal disability creating a vacancy, like death, removal, etc. Aside from the merits as an original question, the tendency of legislative and judicial construction has been in favor of the defendant's contention, that the provision last quoted operates to limit the term of six years prescribed for this office. By chapter 86, of the Laws of 1870, passed to carry into effect some of the provisions of the new judiciary article, it was provided that certain judges, expressly including judges of county courts, “ shall within ten days after ho enters on the duties of his office, make and sign a certificate in which he shall state his age, and the time when his official term will expire, whether by effluxion of a full term, or by reason of the disability of age prescribed in the constitution.” (§ 8.) This certificate is required to be filed in the office of the secretary of State and that officer must keep a record of the time of the commencement and termination of the official term of every such judge. It is very clear from this statute that the Legislature understood the disability of age as a restriction upon the term, and they provided means of making it certain, and of preserving record evidence of the fact. This statute is confirmed by section 54, of the Code of Civil Procedure, in which these provisions are substantially re-enacted, the language being that the certificate shall state “ the time when his official term will expire, either by completion of a full term, or by reason of the disability of age, prescribed by the constitution.”

*406 These expositions 'are entitled to great weight, as they evince the sense in which the language was understood at the time. It is not unlikely that the Legislature was composed of some of the same persons who composed the constitutional convention. At all events the discussions in and out of the convention were then fresh, and the Legislature would naturally be governed by considerations similar to those which actuated members of the convention. This construction is in harmony with the views expressed in the convention. The disability of age was considered when the question of the extent of the term was under consideration, and in fixing long terms for judicial officers, it was deemed wise, instead of prohibiting the election of those who wore too old to serve the full period, to limit the term in such eases to the length of time they could serve. The weight to be given to contemporaneous construction is well expressed by Marcy, J., in People v. Green (2 Wend., 274). He snys : “ Great deference is certainly due to a legislative exposition of a constitutional provision, and especially when it is made almost contemporaneously' with such provision, and may be supposed to result from the same views of policy, and modes of reasoning which prevailed among the framers of the instrument propounded.”

The same doctrine has been frequently reiterated. (Coutant v. People, 11 Wend., 513; People ex rel. Williams v. Dayton, 55 N. Y., 378.)

This precise point has not been before this court, but in People v. Gardner (supra), Folger, J., in delivering the opinion of this court said : “ It is palpable that the intention of the convention was to place this limit of age upon the comparatively very extended term which they adopted, and to guard against the possible evil which the lengthened term had alone suggested as possible.” This construction was also adopted by the secretary of State, in giving notice of an election in 1878, and acquiesced in by the relator as well as the defendant in taking an active part in the election as a candidate. With this weight of authority legislative and *407 judicial, we should not feel justified in giving the clause a different construction, unless it clearly appeared to be erroneous. It may be true that there was not the same reason for applying this limitation to the term of a county judge who could hold only six years, as to judges of the Supreme Court, and Court of Appeals, whose term is fourteen years, but as the language of the constitution clearly includes them, the same construction must be applied to them.

It is unnecessary to inquire why county judges were excepted from the ninth section of the act of 1870, as the only effect of it is to leave them to be chosen according to previous laws which provide for their election at the general election previous to the expiration of their term, and the question comes back when that occurs. A term of office is a fixed period prescribed for holding the office. The causes which create a vacancy to be filled by appointment are uncertain, unknown, and contingent, but the term is made certain by specification. The limitation of age is as certain as the specification- of the number of years, and the Legislature has provided record evidence of the fact for the purpose of making the period known.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.Y. 403, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-joyce-v-brundage-ny-1879.