Respublica v. M'Clean

4 Yeates 398
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 15, 1807
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Yeates 398 (Respublica v. M'Clean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Respublica v. M'Clean, 4 Yeates 398 (Pa. 1807).

Opinion

Tilgi-iman, C. J.

The question for the court’s decision is, whether William.M‘Clean can lawfully exercise the office of a justice of the peace for the county of Adams ? The facts, out of which the question arises, have been stated.

By the 10th sec. of the 5th article of the constitution of Pennsylvania, “the governor shall appoint a competent number of “ justices of the peace, in such convenient districts in each ^ , “ ^'county, as are or shall be directed by law. They shall 4 ^ “be commissioned during good behaviour.”

By the 8th section of the 2d article of the constitution, “ no “ person shall be appointed to an office within any county, who “ shall not have been a citizen and inhabitant thereof, one year next before his appointment if the county shall have been so “ long erected ; but if it shall not have been so long erected, “ then within the limits of the county or counties, out of which “ it shall have been taken.”

There is no express provision in the constitution, that county officers shall continue to reside within their respective counties : out it has always been understood, that if an officer removes out <¡f the'*county, for which he was appointed, his office becomes void.

It is necessary in the first place to consider what was the extent of Mr. M‘Clean’s jurisdiction at the time of the division of York county. He was commissioned as a justice of the peace, in the district of Hamilton’s Bann ; yet his jurisdiction was not confined to that district, but extended through the county of York. If that county had been increased or diminished, his [400]*400jurisdiction would have increased or diminished accordingly This I think, is universally agreed.

It is also agreed, that those justices who were commissioned before the division of York county, and who fell within that part which is still called York, are limited in their jurisdiction to the present county of York. It follows therefore, that the county is a very essential part of the commission' of a justice of the peace. When the present constitution was framed, it was well understood, that the power of altering the bounds of counties, had always been exercised by the legislature, and that it- was necessary that power should continue. It was understood too, that certain consequences necessarily flowed from the alteration of counties. In construing the constitution therefore, we must take care not to destroy those implied powers, without which society could not exist.

The legislature, in pursuance of their acknowledged power, divided the county of York. The consequence was, that Mr. M‘Clean ceased to belong to the county of York; his actual residence was in another county ; he no longer answers the description of his commission, which is for the county of York. It is true, he still lives in the same district, but that district never bounded his jurisdiction; it only marked his residence. This cause must be decided on general principles. The same law that governs Mr. M‘Clean’s case, must govern the case of every other justice, who lives in a newly erected county. Now to make the matter more plain, let us suppose a county newly *erected out of two or three old counties, as was the case of Centre county, (which was composed of parts of four *- ^OI old counties,) I ask, what would be th.e jurisdiction of a justice, who belonged to one of the old counties, of which Centre is composed ? Would his process run through the county of Cen tre ? That is impossible, for he never was commissioned for Centre, nor for qither of the sections of the old counties composing Centre, except that in which he resides. Shall he be restrained to that section of the old county, for which he was commissioned, which falls within Centre? That is a kind of jurisdiction unknown to the law, and which I believe is not contended for. I know of no way of avoiding these difficulties, but by adopting the plain principle, that his commission has neces-sarially become void, by the political annihilation of that part of the county, for which he was commissioned, and in which he resides. Mr. M‘Clean was commissioned for the county of York; but he resides in the county of York no more.

I should feel greater difficulty in this case if it was entirely new. But it appears to me, that the principle which must decide it, has frequently occurred, and been acted upon for twenty years before the division of York county.

By the 30th section of the frame of government of the constitution made in 1776, justices of the peace were elected by the freeholders of each city and county; that is to say, two or more [401]*401might be chosen for each ward, township or district, as the law should thereafter direct, of whom the Supreme Executive Council should commission one or more for each ward, township or district for seven years, removable for misconduct by the general assembly. Now those justices had as absolute an interest in their offices, during the seven years for which they were commissioned, as the present justices have during their lives. The first new county erected after the making of this constitution, was Washington, which was carved out of Westmoreland, and the act for its erection (passed 28th March 1781) provided that the freeholders of each township or district should elect two fit persons for justices of the peace for each township; which would have been improper, if any of the old justices had been authorized to act under their commissions. From that time to the year 1790, when the present constitution was adopted, many new counties were erected; and it will appear from the several acts of assembly erecting them, that it was taken for granted, that all authority of county officers, including justices of the peace, ceased in the new counties, immediately on their erection, unless it was otherwise provided by law. Since the adoption of the present state constitution, the acts of assembly for erecting m , *'the counties of Somerset, Greene and Wayne, contain 4 J provisions respecting justices of the peace, incompatible with the idea of their having any authority by virtue of commissions granted before the erection of those counties. It is true that a legislative construction of the constitution is not binding on courts of justice. It has been so decided, and is understood to be the settled law. But at the same time, it cannot be denied, but that a legislative construction, uninfluenced by party spirit, introduced soon after the making of a constitution, and frequently carried into effect without opposition for the course of twenty years, is entitled to very considerable weight. The public happiness requires, that it should have weight.

But it has .been strongly urged by the counsel for Mr. M‘Clean, that the legislature having no right to annul by a direct act, the commissions of officers who held during good behav-iour, cannot do it indirectly, and that the most pernicious consequences may flow from the exercise of this power for party purposes. In answer to this, it may be said, that if the legislature was to make a division of a county for no other purpose than barely to deprive justices of the peace of their commissions, it would be a case very different from that which comes before the court, and concerning which it would be imprudent to deliver an unnecessary opinion. It is not pretended that the county of York was divided for any such purpose. The question is, whether from an act of the legislature within their acknowledged powers, the destruction of Mr. M'Clean’s commission does not necessarily follow ? I will add, that the possible abuse of any given power, is no argument against the right to exercise it.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Yeates 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/respublica-v-mclean-pa-1807.