Quitman County v. Turner

18 So. 2d 122, 196 Miss. 746, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 254
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 8, 1944
DocketNo. 35557.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 18 So. 2d 122 (Quitman County v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quitman County v. Turner, 18 So. 2d 122, 196 Miss. 746, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 254 (Mich. 1944).

Opinions

Alexander, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause involves the applicable salary basis for the county judge of Quitman County. By chapter 131, Laws 1926, county courts were established in all counties, meeting’ fixed requirements as to assessment valuations and population. Smaller counties were authorized to establish such courts after election expressing the will of the citizens to this end. Such court was so established by the peoplé of Quitman County which falls within a classification whereby the salary of the county judge was fixed at $2,000. This was the status of such courts when the Code of 1930 was adopted, which included a chapter on County Courts (Sections 693-708). At the latter date there were in existence county courts of each category, namely, those established by the Act of 1926- and those in the several classes which had availed of the enabling* provisions of the Act by elections. Chapter 17 of the Code of 1930, just referred to, is a substantial rescript of the 1926- Act, particularly in those respects relevant to the present inquiry.

In an obvious attempt, both to acknowledge the existence of courts theretofore established and to provide for. others to be established by proclamation of the governor or by popular referendum, Section 693 used the following language in its initial statement: “In and for each county of the state wherein a county court is now in existence, and hereafter in and for each county which has” the population .and assessment requirements authorizing automatic establishment, “there shall be an inferior court to be known as the county court.” It is clear that courts theretofore existing were not thereby created but were rather recognized.

*757 Section 6 of the 1926 Act, after fixing the qualifications of the county judge, provided “He shall receive a salary of thirty-six hundred dollars per year. ’ ’ Without further reference, this basis would seem to apply to the judges of such courts, however established. But in the latter part of the same section a sliding salary scale' is set forth, under which, as stated, Quitman County would fall in a $2,000 category.

Under the 1930 Code, the first part of Section 6 of the 1926 Act was carried forward, section 697, but the graduated scale applicable to smaller counties electing to qualify was transplanted in haec verba into Section 706, Code 1930' (2 Miss. Code 1942, Section 1618). This latter section, however, was with a single exception, hereinafter noted, a rescript in words and figures from Section 6 of the 1926 Act. The latter act dealt with only two categories, namely, those automatically created, and those which should elect to come thereunder, hence the opening sentence of that part of'Section 6 (which later became Section 706, Code 1930): “Provided, that in any county not affected by the provisions of this act . . ,” an election may be held to decide whether such court is desired. The introductory clause of Section 706 of the 1930 Code, enacted at a time when there were in existence courts established under both procedures, reads as follows: “In any county not brought Avithin the provisions of this chapter by the terms of the first section thereof . . .” an election may be held to this end. The salary bases are set forth folloAving this language: “The salary of the county judge in all counties which may come under the provisions of the chapter by a special ■ election, shall he fixed as follows: . . .” Such was substantially the language of the original act, and there being no counties theretofore qualified by election and no such courts then “in existence,” it was properly prospective. However, when the same language is carried forAvard six years later, after many counties had so qualified, a retention of the same prospective words creates a seeming hiatus *758 whereby counties theretofore 'qualified are bound by no explicit language to any fixed basis unless they seek cover under Section 697 of the 1930 Code (2 Miss. Code 1942, Section 1608). As already stated, this section is lifted bodily from the 1926 Act and provides a salary of $3,600 in those counties automatically established by that Act. Had the language of Section 706 read “in all counties which may or have come under the provisions of this chapter by special election” there would unquestionably have been no litigation here. It is just here that the legislature should have looked both ways — forward and backward — and thus have avoided the collision between the letter and the spirit of the Act.

We are brought now to the facts of the instant case. P. H. Lowrey was appointed county judge of Qpitman 'County in 1935, was afterwards elected and served until his death in May, 1941. During his tenure, he received a salary of $2,000 per year, this being the applicable basis when the county established the court. An agreed statement of facts reveals that this distinguished incumbent took oyer the duties of the office upon the assumption that the original basis was applicable, and that “he supposed that was about all it was worth and he was satisfied to act as county judge for the salary of $2,000.” It is further disclosed therein that he stated to the attorney for the board, of supervisors that, under the law, he was entitled to 'a salary of $3,600. The two statements are saved from inconsistency by the assumption that the latter was made as a result of subsequent advice or examination of the several statutes. After the death of Judge Lowrey, suit was brought by his executor for adjustment of the difference between the bases of $3,600 and $2,000 during the period of his incumbency. The circuit judge sitting as trier of both the law and the facts gave judgment for the executor. The county appeals.

The nub of the present case is this: Did the codifiers of the 1930 Code and the legislature intend to retain all county courts established in the smaller counties by elec *759 tion upon the progressive scale set forth in the original act and in the 1930 Code, or did they intend to place in the category of the largest counties (in which courts were automatically established), all of the elective courts as were then existing? To support his contention, appellee clings tenaciously to the words of the 1930 Code, which opens with the quoted language “In and for each county of the state wherein a county court is now in existence, and hereafter in and for each county, ’ ’ which is large enough to fall in a class justifying automatic establishment. Section 697, Code 1930, thereupon states flatly, “He shall receive a salary of thirty-six hundred dollars. ’ ’

It will be seen that Section 693, above quoted, while taking note in its opening sentence of pre-existing courts, whether elective or automatic, does not refer to the future establishment of any courts save those which the law itself thrust upon a county. Provision for smaller counties seeking in the future to qualify by vote is made in Section 706. The Act of 1926 had stated equally as flatly that “he shall receive a salary of thirty-six hundred dollars per year,” but no ambiguity was thereby caused since the act later provided the elective scheme of qualification by smaller counties and set up a graduated scale of salaries.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 So. 2d 122, 196 Miss. 746, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quitman-county-v-turner-miss-1944.