People ex rel. Whipple v. Auditor General

5 Mich. 193, 1858 Mich. LEXIS 32
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 5 Mich. 193 (People ex rel. Whipple v. Auditor General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Whipple v. Auditor General, 5 Mich. 193, 1858 Mich. LEXIS 32 (Mich. 1858).

Opinion

Campbell J.:

This is an application for a mandamus to compel the Auditor General to pay certain arrears of salary, claimed to [195]*195have been due to the deceased (who was one of the circuit judges elected in 1851, under the new Constitution) for services as judge of the Supreme Court. His salary as circuit judge was paid in full, and the claim is now made that he was also entitled to an additional annual salary of $1,500, under section 24, of “An Act to provide for the Organization and Powers of the Supreme Court,” approved April 4, 1851.

The application is resisted, on the double ground, that the Constitution fixes the only salary lawfully receivable by a judge holding that position, and that the statute did not in law, make any additional provision. It is claimed that if the object of the statute was to create an additional salary to the one contained in the Constitution, then the statute itself would be void, as in violation of the Constitution.

It is suggested on the part of the respondent, that there has been a practical construction, by usage or acquiescence, against the construction set up by the relator, both of the Constitution and the statute. Without deciding hoAV far, if at all, a written Constitution is to be controlled by usage, we do not conceive that the case before us requires any investigation into that field of inquiry. We see nothing in the nature of the questions presented to us, which removes the necessity of examining into the Constitution and the statutes, in the same manner as if these questions had arisen earlier. There has been no such building up of public or private rights, dependent upon one or another construction, as to require or permit the introduction of any rule which the subject would not allow as res integra.

The provisions of the Constitution which are thought to bear upon the question are the following:

Article YI., section two, declares that, “For the term of six years, and thereafter until the Legislature otherwise provide, the judges of the several Circuit Courts shall be judges of the Supreme Court, four of whom shall constitute a quorum. A concurrence of three shall be necessary to a -final decision. After six years, the Legislature may provide [196]*196by law for the organization of a Supreme Court, with the jurisdiction and powers prescribed in this Constitution, to consist of one chief justice and three associate justices, to be chosen by the electors of the State. Such Supreme Court, when so organized, shall not be changed or discontinued by the Legislature for eight years thereafter. The, judges thereof shall be so classified that but one of them shall go out of office at the same time. Their term of office shall be eight years.”

Section six: “The State shall be divided into eight judicial circuits, in each of which the electors thereof shall elect 'one circuit judge, who shall hold his office for the term of six years, and until his successor is elected and qualified.” Section nine: “Each of the judges of the Circuit Court shall receive a salary payable quarterly. They shall be ineligible to any other than a judicial office, during the term for which they are elected, and for one year thereafter,” &c.

Article IX., section one: “The judges of the Circuit Court shall each receive an annual salary of one thousand five hundred dollars.”

The same section provides salaries for the other State officers, and then proceeds thus: “ They shall receive no fees or perquisites whatever, for the performance of any duties connected with their offices. It shall not be competent for the Legislature to increase the salaries herein provided.”

Before recurring to the law of 1851, under which this claim arises, it will not be out of place to notice what was the existing state of things at the time the old Constitution was superseded by the new one.

The Constitution of 1835 vested the judicial power in one Supreme Court, and such other courts as the Legislature might, from time to time, establish. The judges of the Supreme Court were to receive an adequate salary, the amount of which it was left to the Legislature to fix, but not to diminish during their term of office. It was provided that “they shall receive no fees nor perquisites of office, nor hold any [197]*197other office of profit or trust under the authority of this State, or of the United States.” No provision was made in the Constitution for the presiding judges of Circuit Courts, but associate judges of those courts were to be elected, whose office was subsequently abolished. — See Article 1J£., Constitution of 1835. At the session of the first State Legislature, a judiciary system was adopted, whereby the Circuit Courts were created, and it was declared that, “one of the judges of the Supreme Court shall perform, the duties of circuit judge in each of said circuits.” — L. of 1835-6, p. SO. The salary was given to them as judges of the Supreme Court. The tenure of the judges was, in 1850, changed from an executive to an elective choice, but in all other respects the law remained, unchanged, until the adoption of the present Constitution. The Supreme Court, which originally was created with three judges, received subsequently two additional members, and in 1*850 consisted of five.

We find, then, in that year, that the same persons who collectively formed a Supreme Court, with appellate jurisdiction only, except in a few cases, presided, each in his own circuit, -over the several Circuit Courts established by law in each organized county. At that time the Court of Chancery had been abolished, and all equity causes orginated in the Circuit Courts. In the exercise of his original powers in the Circuit Courts, each justice of the Supreme Court was called a “ circuit judge.” The language of the statute may be quoted, as not without significance in the inquiry before us. It is as follows: uJEach of the justices of the Supreme Court shall, twice in each year, except in the cases hereinafter otherwise provided, hold a Circuit Court in each of the counties in the circuit designated in his appointment, and in the performance of such duties shall he denominated circuit judge? — R. S. of 1846, p. 353. The Constitution prohibited the Supreme Court judge from holding any other office whatever. He held the Circuit Court by virtue of his constitutional office, to which that additional duty was attached by the Legislature. No [198]*198new office was created. He was simply, for obvious reasons of convenience, called by tbe name appropriate to tbe functions he was performing for the time being; as the Governor,, or one of the judges, was, in the performance of certain other functions appertaining to his office, styled a member of the board of regents of the University. The additional duties are all laid upon him as a justice of the Supreme Court; and the abolition of any of them would not have altered his legal position in that regard: he would still have been, as before, a justice of the Supreme Court.

Sirch being the old law, in what respect was it changed by the new Constitution? That instrument provided, that it might be lawful, after a certain period, to organize a Supreme Court, with the powers specified; which should consist of a chief justice and three associates, who should be judges of that court only. It is under this provision that we now act. But this was prohibited until the expiration of six years, during which period another provision was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Mich. 193, 1858 Mich. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-whipple-v-auditor-general-mich-1858.