People Ex Rel. Snyder v. . Hylan

106 N.E. 89, 212 N.Y. 236, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 864
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 106 N.E. 89 (People Ex Rel. Snyder v. . Hylan) 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. Snyder v. . Hylan, 106 N.E. 89, 212 N.Y. 236, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 864 (N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, Ch. J.

On March 27th, 1911, the governor appointed John R Hylan and Robert H. Eoy county judges of Kings county. On April 1, 1911, these gentlemen took and filed the constitutional oath of office and shortly afterward they entered upon the discharge of their judicial duties. This action was brought to test the validity of their appointment; and both at Trial Term and in the Appellate Division it has resulted in an adjudication to the effect that the governor’s action in appointing them was without authority of law.

The appointments were made under the amendment to section 11 of article VI of the Constitution adopted at the general election in November, 1913. That amendment reads as follows, the italicized portions being new, and those in brackets having been excluded or altered:

c< § 11. The existing County Courts are continued, and the Judges thereof now in office shall hold their offices until the expiration of their respective terms. In the County of Kings there shall be four [two] County Judges [and the additional County Judge shall be chosen at the next general election after the adoption of this Oonstitu *239 tion]. The number of County Judges in any county may also be increased, from time to time, by the Legislature, to such number that the total mvniber of County Judges in any one county shall not exceed one for every two hundred thousand, or major fraction thereof, of the population of such county. The additional County Judges in the County of Kings shall be chosen at the general election held in the first odd-numbered year after the adoption of this amendment. The additional County Judges whose offices may be created by the Legislature shall be chosen at the general election held in the first odd-numbered year after the creation of such office. All County Judges, including successors to existing Judges, [The successors of the several County Judges] shall he chosen by the electors of the counties for the term of six years/rom and including the first day of January following their election. * * *”

This amendment took effect on January 1, 1914. The courts below have held that the two additional county judgeships as offices came into existence on that date, but that they cannot lawfully be filled until incumbents áre elected at the general election in 1915, being the first odd-numbered year after the adoption of the amendment. The governor, on the other hand, by making the appointments in question in this litigation, acted on the assumption that the vacancies existed as soon as the offices came into existence and that he was authorized to fill these vacancies “ in the same manner as like vacancies occurring in the Supreme Court.’"' (Const, art. VI, § 15.)

The general rule is that when a law establishing an office takes effect a vacancy in the office at once exists, unless the language of the law imports futurity of selection. Authorities to this effect are to he found in the decisions of the courts of last resort in Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Indiana, Arkansas, Missouri, Oregon, Nevada, Georgia, Wyoming and West Virginia. Some of these cases will he considered presently. So far as I *240 have been able to ascertain the doctrine has been questioned only in Wisconsin and Mississippi. •

In New York the point has not been directly passed upon by the courts; but, so far as it is possible for a rule of law to be established by practical construction, the rule which I have stated has been clearly, emphatically and unequivocally established in this jurisdiction, by the case of Erastus Oooke, who was appointed a justice of the Supreme Court .by Governor Alonzo B. Cornell in 1880, under an amendment to the Constitution authorizing the election of an additional justice of that court in the second judicial district.

By that amendment, adopted in 1879, section 6 of article VI of the Constitution was made to read as follows:

There shall be the existing Supreme Court, with general jurisdiction in law and equity, subject to such appellate jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals as now is or may be prescribed by law; and it shall be composed of the Justices now in office, with one additional Justice to he elected as hereinafter provided, who shall be continued during their respective terms, and of their successors. Existing judicial districts of the State are continued until changed pursuant to this section. 'Five of the Justices shall reside in the district in which is the City of New York, and five in the Second Judicial District and four in each of the other districts. ”

Immediately after this amendment took effect Governor Cornell requested the opinion of the attorney-general as to the manner of filling the office of the additional justice of the Supreme Court thereby provided for. The attorney-general at that time was Hamilton Ward, afterward a justice of the Supreme Court, of recognized ability, and one of the original members of the Appellate Division of the fourth department. In a carefully written opinion, dated January 17,1880, he advised the governor that there was a vacancy in the office of justice of the Supreme Court in the second judicial district, created by the con *241 stitutional amendment of 1879, and that under the provisions of section 9 of article 6 of the Constitution, the vacancy might be filled by appointment from the governor, to continue until and including the last day of December, 1880. Governor Cornell thereupon appointed Erastus Cooke, who entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office and continued to discharge them, without question or objection in any quarter, until he was succeeded by Justice Edgar M. Cullen on the 1st of January, 1881. Judge Cooke was recognized as a justice of the Supreme Court by the executive, legislative, judicial and administrative departments of the state government. The governor appointed him, the legislature made the requisite appropriation for his salary, the comptroller paid him, and the General Term and Court of Appeals reviewed his decisions. Where a particular construction has been generally accepted as correct and especially when this has occurred contemporaneously with the adoption of the Constitution and by those who had opportunity to understand the intention of the instrument, it is not to be denied that a strong presumption exists that the construction rightly interprets the intention.” (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations [7th ed.], 102.) The language of the constitutional amendment providing for two additional county judges in Kings county is so nearly identical with that of the amendment providing for an additional Supreme Court justice in the second district, under which Judge Cooke was appointed, that it is impossible to distinguish between them in principle. When the'people voted upon the latter amendment, it is to be presumed that they knew of the practical construction which had been given to the former amendment. They knew that the governor had exercised the power of appointment thereunder, and hence must be deemed to have sanctioned the exercise of that power when they adopted an amendment identical in phraseology except that it related to two county judges instead of one justice *242 of the Supreme Court.

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Bluebook (online)
106 N.E. 89, 212 N.Y. 236, 1914 N.Y. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-snyder-v-hylan-ny-1914.