Ridout v. State

30 S.W.2d 255, 161 Tenn. 248, 8 Smith & H. 248, 71 A.L.R. 830, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 55
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 30 S.W.2d 255 (Ridout v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ridout v. State, 30 S.W.2d 255, 161 Tenn. 248, 8 Smith & H. 248, 71 A.L.R. 830, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 55 (Tenn. 1930).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appealing- from a conviction for voluntary manslaughter, plaintiff in error challenges the validity of the indictment on the ground that the trial judge was not qualified to act on the day when he organized the grand jury. Certain other errors assigned have been considered, but found without merit, and this opinion is confined to the single question above stated.

*253 The terms of the Shelby County Criminal Court, three a year, open on the third Mondays of January, May and September. Unless earlier adjourned each term runs until the opening of the succeeding term.

It appears that the regular judge was “absent on account of illness” on the 12th day of December, 1928, and on that day an election by the members of the local bar in attendance was duly held and the Honorable Phil Wallace was regularly elected, pursuant to section 5730' of Shannon’s Code (Acts of 1870, Chap. 78), to preside during the absence on account of1 illness of the regular judge.

On the 16th day of the following month, January, Judge Wallace, continuing to preside during the absénce of the regular judge, opened the January term of the court without objection and empaneled and instructed the grand jury, which was duly sworn and later returned the indictment in this case. At a later day, in March following, the trial was had by a jury regularly-empaneled and sworn and before a judge whose right to preside at that time is in no way questioned. The validity of the indictment only is attacked and this attack is directed and confined to the insistence that the authority of Judge Wallace to sit and act instead of the regular judge expired with the closing of the September term' during which he had been elected, and that indictments returned by the grand jury thus unlawfully empaneled and instructed are void.

The pertinent parts of Section 5730 of Shannon’s Code read as follows:

“When, from any cause, the judge of any court of record in this State, except the Supreme Court, fails to attend, or, if in attendance, cannot properly preside in a cause or causes pending in such court, or is unable to hold the court, a majority of the attorneys of the court *254 ■who are present and are residents of the State, shall elect one of its [their] number then in attendance to hold the court for the occasion, who shall have all the qualifications of a judge of such court, and who shall accordingly preside and adjudicate.
“(2) The person elected shall, during the period that he acts, have all the powers, and be liable to all the responsibilities, of a regular judge.”

It will be seen that the special judge so elected is “to hold the court for the occasion,” and that “the person elected shall, during the period that he acts, have all the powers, and be liable to all the responsibilities, of a regular judge. ’ ’ The ‘ ‘ occasion, ’ ’ or contingency, which arose in the instant case, justifying an election under the statute, was the absence on account of illness of the regular judge. “Occasion” is defined as “a condition of affairs;” or as “a juncture entailing need;” an “exigency,” or '“a juncture affording ground or reason for something. ’ ’

The constitutionality of the statute above quoted was passed upon and approved in the early cases of Ligon v. State, 3 Heisk., 159, Hundhausen v. Insurance Co., 5 Heisk., 703, and Halliburton v. Brooks, 7 Baxt., 318. It was recognized in those eases that the intention of the legislature was to make provision for filling a vacancy in an office during the temporary absence or disqualification of the regular judge only, it being contemplated that the authority of the special judge thus elected would expire with the expiration of the occasion or exigency calling for his election. And, in this connection, in the Ligón case Judge Fbebman remarked: “We can see no objection to making this appointment by the members of the Bar. It no more contravenes the ‘principle’ of uni *255 versal suffrage and election of all officers by the people, as insisted by counsel, than would an act of tbe legislature which should provide for the appointment of a person to hold the court by the Governor. The members of the Bar are interested in selecting the best, man for the place, and certainly are better qualified to judge of the fitness of the party who may be selected by them, than the Governor of the State, who may know nothing on the subject.” And in the Hundhausen case he said,'“we can see no better mode of meeting the exigency than the one provided by the statute.” And so Judge Deadeeick, in the Halliburton case^ commented to the same effect.

In Harris v. State, 100 Tenn., p. 287, it was held that a special judge selected under this statute to preside in the absence of the regular judge may try and dispose of criminal, including capital cases, as well as civil cases.

This Court in Low v. State, 111 Tenn., 81, held that the authority of a special judge chosen under this statute expires with the particular term of court during which he is elected. It is insisted that the language of that opinion in" giving construction to the word “occasion” comprehends every case of election under this statute, and that upon that authority the power of Special Judge Wallace to act ceased with the September term, and that his action in organizing the grand jury on the opening day of the following term was void.

Just here, as emphasizing- the vital importance of the issue presented, it is significant that the grand jury organized under the direction of this presiding judg;e returned not only the indictment" in the case at bar, but a great number of others, and that this same judge presided at the trial of numerous cases, resulting in convictions on the one hand and acquittals on the other, his authority being recognized without question or objection *256 by the Bar, tlie litigants, court officials, including' the regular judge, and the public.

Now, conceding that the election of this special judge was for the September term only, and that when, on the opening day of the succeeding term, he organized the grand jury, his term of office had expired, was he hot, while thus holding over, in good faith believing himself 'to have continuing authority, and acting with general acquiescence and with all the indicia, of reputation, a judge' de facto, and his acts therefore beyond collateral, attack by those third parties affected?

The general definition of an officer de facto, as expressed by Lord Ellenborough in Rex v. Bedford Level, 6 East 356, is “an officer de facto is one who has the reputation of being the officer he assumes to be, and yet is not a good officer in point of law. ’ ’ This definition has been generally approved in this country and in England. Bouvier defines de facto,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 S.W.2d 255, 161 Tenn. 248, 8 Smith & H. 248, 71 A.L.R. 830, 1929 Tenn. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ridout-v-state-tenn-1930.