State ex rel. Adams v. Peterson

74 Ind. 174
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1881
DocketNo. 9472
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 74 Ind. 174 (State ex rel. Adams v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Adams v. Peterson, 74 Ind. 174 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Woods, J.

The question in this case is whether the relator and appellant, George B. Adams, or the appellee, Henry C. Peterson, is the prosecuting attorney of the Thirty-fifth Judicial Circuit of the State. There is no material dispute in reference to the facts on which the decision must rest. We give a summary of them :

Prior to March 21st, 1879, the Thirty-fifth Judicial Circuit was composed of the counties of Noble, DeKalb and Steuben. John W. Bixler, a resident of Noble county, was at that time the prosecuting attorney of the circuit, entitled by his election and commission to hold the office until October 28th, 1879. At the general election of 1878, the relator, Adams, a resident of Steuben county, was duly elected, and on the 24th day of October, 1878, was duly commissioned, to succeed Bixler in said office, and to hold the same for the period of two years, to wit, from October 28th, 1879, until October 28th, 1881.

By an act of the Legislature, approved March 21st, 1879, the counties of Steuben and DeKalb were deolared to constitute the Fortieth Circuit. Among the provisions of that act are the following:

“Sec. 5. The Governor shall appoint a judge and prosecuting attorney for said circuit, who shall receive and be [176]*176paid such salaries as are now paid to other judges, and prosecuting attorneys.
“Sec. 6. The prosecuting attorney elect, of the Thirty-fifth Circuit, whose term of office has not yet commenced,, and who resides in the county of Steuben, shall be the prosecuting attorney of the Fortieth Judicial Circuit, after he qualifies and his term commences.
“Sec. 7. The prosecuting attorney, appointed by the Governor, shall hold his office until the prosecuting attorney elect qualifies, and his term commences.
“Sec. 9. * * * There is therefore an emergency for the immediate passage of this act, and the same shall be in force from and after its passage: Provided, however, That the circuit thus formed shall only continue until the 1st day of October, 1880, when said counties of DeKalb and Steuben shall then become and form a part of the Thirty-fifth Judicial Circuit of the State of Indiana, and the courts therein shall thereafter be held, as they are now required by law, to be held.”

By the 2d, 3d and 4th sections the terms of court in said, counties were fixed, and so fixed as that the courts of the two-circuits were, or were liable to be, in session at the same time.

Upon the passage of this act, the Governor appointed and commissioned said Adams as the prosecuting attorney for-said Fortieth Circuit, and he, accepting said commission, qualified and entered upon and continued in the discharge of' the duties of said office, until October 28th, 1879, when he-qualified under the commission issued to him by virtue of' his said election, taking and endorsing the proper oath of' office on said commission, and giving bond in the sum of' $5,000, to the approval of the judge of the Thirty-fifth Circuit. After thus qualifying, he continued to prosecute the-pleas of the State in the counties of Steuben and DeKalb, until October 1st, 1880; and, to all indictments and informations, and in all .official transactions, requiring his official signature, he continued to sign and to designate himself as> [177]*177the “Prosecuting Attorney of the Fortieth Circuit,” and as. such drew and receipted for his salary and the fees appertaining- to said office in said circuit; and, on February 3d,, 1881, still styling and signing himself as prosecuting attorney of said Fortieth Circuit, and not of the Thirty-fifth, he prosecuted, in the Steuben Circuit Court, the pleas of the State in the case of the State of Indiana against James N. Carpenter. See Carpenter v. The State, 72 Ind. 331.

The Hon. Hiram S. Tousley, a resident of Noble county,, was judge of the Thirty-fifth Circuit, and, after the passage of said act, continued to servé as such judge in said county of Noble, and is still judge of said circuit. Said Bixler held his office of prosecuting attorney, and discharged the duties thereof, in Noble county, until October 28th, 1879, when the* Governor appointed David Perew the prosecuting attorney for the Thirty-fifth Circuit, and, a contest having arisen between Bixler and Perew over their respective claims to said, office, the same was carried into said court, and there settled by agreement of the parties, in favor of Perew, who thereafter discharged the duties of said office in said county, S0‘ long as it remained a separate circuit, and until October 28th,. 1880. At the general election in October, 1880, the appelleewas elected prosecutor for the Thirty-fifth Circuit, and claimed a commission as such for a term commencing October 28th, 1880, but received no commission until February 10th, 1881, when one was issued to him, under which he qualified and gave bond, and was recognized by the judge of the circuit as the lawful prosecutor, and entered on the- duties of the office.

We find no difficulty in deciding this dispute, in accordance with what seems to us to have been the plain legislative intention, as manifested in the act whereby the Fortieth Circuit was created.

In the case of Carpenter v. The State, supra, we have al[178]*178ready held that said circuit ceased to exist on the 1st of October, 1880, as in the act it was declared it should. Upon the creation of that circuit, the existing judge and prosecutor being residents of Noble count}', there were vacancies in the offices of both judge and prosecutor in the new circuit, to be tilled by appointment. Adams had been elected to succeed Bixler, but it was some months yet before his term should begin. He resided in Steuben county, and, for the evident purpose of saving his right to the office to which he had been elected, the 6th and 7th sections of said act were embodied therein. The Governor appointed Adams to fill the vacancy in the proseeutorship, for the time which must elapse before his term by election could begin ; but when that term did begin, and he had qualified under his commission, granted in pursuance of his election, his rights were just the same as if he had not been appointed to fill the preceding vacancy. He then entered, by right of election, upon a full term of two years, running from that date ; but, by force of the 6th section quoted, supra, he was to be the prosecuting attorney of the Fortieth Judicial Circuit after he had qualified and his term had commenced ; and this clearly means that, by virtue ■of his election and .by force of said enactment, he was to be the prosecutor of the new circuit, so long as the same should last, and thereafter of the original Thirty-fifth Circuit, until October 28th, 1881, when his term will expire by limitation, .and the term of the appellee will begin. By force of this provision, though elected and commissioned as prosecutor of the Thirty-fifth Circuit, he was in fact and in law the prosecutor of the Fortieth Circuit, and it was proper, that •during the existence of that circuit and while doing the duties of his office therein, he should sign and designate himself as the prosecutor thereof, and as such should draw his salary and fees. To say the least, there was no harm in his so designating himself, and the fact that he did so, under [179]*179the circumstances, constitutes no evidence of an abandonment of his right to the office by election.

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74 Ind. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-adams-v-peterson-ind-1881.