Schaffner v. Shaw

191 Iowa 1047
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 31, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 191 Iowa 1047 (Schaffner v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schaffner v. Shaw, 191 Iowa 1047 (iowa 1920).

Opinion

Ladd, J.

The thirty-seventh general assembly enacted an amendment to Section 253 of the Supplemental Supplement to the Code, 1915, increasing the annual salary of district judges from $3,500 to $4,000. See Chapter 235, Acts of the Thirty-seventh General Assembly. This enactment, approved by the governor on April 12, 1917, was without publication clause. By Chapters 255 and 256 of the Acts of the Thirty-seventh General Assembly, the number of judges in the eleventh and fourteenth judicial districts was increased, one judge in each district, and the governor was authorized to fill by appointment the vacancies so created. These acts ivere approved by the governor on April 17, 1917, and went into effect on their publication, April 19th of the same year. The governor appointed James DeLand as district judge in the fourteenth judicial district, and G. D. Thompson as district judge in the eleventh judicial district, and [1049]*1049both qualified, about May 1, 1917, for terms expiring January 1, 1919, or until successors should be elected and qualified. The auditor of state issued warrants on the treasurer of state for their salaries at the rate of $3,500 per annum until January 1, 1919, notwithstanding their demand that warrants be issued to them at the rate of $4,000 per annum from July 4,1917, when the amendment increasing the salary of district judges took effect.

Section 26 of Article 3 of the Constitution declares that:

“No law of the general assembly, passed at a regular session, of a public nature, shall take effect until the fourth day of July next, after the passage thereof. Laws passed at a special session shall take effect ninety days after the adjournment of the general assembly by which they were passed. If the general assembly shall deem any law of immediate importance, they may provide that the same shall take effect by publication in newspapers in the state. ’ ’

Section 9 of Article 5 of the Constitution provides that judges of the supreme and district courts “shall severally receive such compensation as the general assembly may, by law, prescribe; which compensation shall not be increased or diminished during the term for which they shall have been elected.”

The auditor’s contention is that, though the judges were appointed and qualified subsequent to the passage and approval of the amendment increasing district judges’ salaries, that amendment, being without publication clause, did not become effective until long afterwards, to wit, July 4, 1917, and that, therefore, such increase could not become operative during the respective terms of office extending to January 1, 1919. On the other hand, counsel for plaintiff urges: (1) That the office created by this special act of the legislature was distinctively an appointive office, and the judges were not elected, but were appointed, and that the Constitution applies to elected officers only; and (2) that the amendment increasing the salary became a law before the office was created or the judges appointed, and that, therefore, there was no legislative increase in salary during their respective terms of office.

[1050]*1050creation ¿f”™ office' [1049]*1049I. Chapter 255 of the Acts of the Thirty-seventh General Assembly merely amended Section 227 of the Supplemental Supplement to the Code, 1915, by striking out “two” as the num[1050]*1050ber of judges in tbe fourteenth judicial district and inserting “three” instead, authorizing the governor to fill the vacancy so created, and providing that the person so appointed should hold office until January 1,1919, or until his successor should be elected and qualified. The same is true of Chapter 256 of the Acts of the Thirty-seventh General Assembly, save that the word “four” was substituted for “three” in the paragraph of said Section 227 relating to the eleventh judicial district. Neither purported to create another court, but assumed that, in the generic sense, the district court existed as created by Section 1 of Article 5 of the Constitution. The judges are but organs of the court, the conduits through which it speaks. The court and judge are by no means a unit. They coexist, but not all in the same person. Magruder v. Swann, 25 Md. 173. For the transaction of business, that court “consists of a single judge, who shall be elected by the qualified electors of the district in which he resides.” Constitution, Section 5, Article 5. The amendments increasing the number of judges were authorized by an amendment to Section 10 of Article 5 of the Constitution, providing that:

“At any regular session of the general assembly, the state may be divided into the necessary judicial districts for district court purposes, or said districts may be reorganized and the number of the districts and the judges of said courts increased or diminished; but no reorganization of districts or diminution of judges shall have the effect of removing a judge from office.”

The increase or diminution of the number of judges contemplated by Section 10 of Article 5, as so amended, is of the districts and judges, but not of the court. The court existed from its creation by the Constitution. Its functions are exercised through a single judge, and the addition of a judge in a district does not change the court, but amounts to no more than adding another to the numerous offices of district judge. The acts, then, did not create a distinctively new office, but added to the number of the offices previously existing. See State v. Emmons, 72 Iowa 265.

[1051]*10512. officers: existence of vacancy, [1050]*1050II. The effect of increasing the number of judges in each of these districts created a vacancy in the office of district judge in each. The word “vacancy,” as applied to an office, has no [1051]*1051technical meaning. “Vacant” means empty, unoccupied. As applied to an office, it means “without an incumbent.” Thus an existing office without an incumbent is vacant; and by the great weight of authority there is no difference, in so far as the right to appoint is concerned, whether the vacancy is occasioned by death or resignation of the incumbent, or the office has been created, and no incumbent has been appointed or elected to the office. Any office without an incumbent is deemed to be vacant. As said in State v. Mayor of Butte, 41 Mont. 377 (109 Pac. 710) :

“The office, having been newly created, became ipso facto vacant in its ereation.”

See In re Fourth Jud. Dist., 4 Wyo. 133 (32 Pac. 850); State v. Askew, 48 Ark. 82 (2 S. W. 349). As declared in Stocking v. State, 7 Ind. 326:

“An existing office without an incumbent is vacant, whether it be a new or an old one.”

Many courts, as said in Knight v. Trigg, 16 Idaho 256 (100 Pac. 1060), hold that:

“The word ‘vacancy’ as aptly and fitly applies to and describes the condition of a newly created office, and before it is filled with an incumbent, as it does to an office that has been occupied by a duly elected officer who subsequently died or re signed. ’ ’

The Supreme Court of New York remarked, in In re Application of Collins, 16 Misc. Rep. 598 (40 N. Y. Supp. 517), that:

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