State Ex Rel. Arceneaux v. Breaux

125 So. 283, 169 La. 394, 1929 La. LEXIS 1995
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 12, 1929
DocketNo. 30027.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 So. 283 (State Ex Rel. Arceneaux v. Breaux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Arceneaux v. Breaux, 125 So. 283, 169 La. 394, 1929 La. LEXIS 1995 (La. 1929).

Opinions

JANVIEB, Judge ad hoc.

Prior to August 25, 1928, George Breaux was the qualified registrar of voters for the parish of Lafayette. On that day he was removed from his said office by the state board of registration, which, board assigned no reason for its action.

The position of registrar of voters is created and controlled by the provisions of sec *397 tion 18 of article 8 of the Constitution of 1921, which article reads in part as follows:

“There shall be a registrar of voters for the parish of Orleans, who shall he appointed by the Governor, and one for each parish in the State, who shall be appointed by the police jury or other governing authority of such parish.

“The Governor shall issue a commission to each registrar who shall thereupon make such bond, subscribe to such oath, and receive such compensation as the Legislature may prescribe ; provided, that the State and the parish shall each pay one-half of such compensation.

“The Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, and Speaker of the House of Representatives shall compose the Board of Registration and any two members of same shall have power to remove, at will, any registrar in this State. ■A * *

“Should a registrar be not appointed by December 15,1921, or any subsequent vacancy be not filled, within thirty days after its occurrence, by the above constituted authority, a majority of the Board of Registration shall appoint and the Governor shall commission a registrar of voters in each parish which has none.”

Act No. 269 of 1926, § 1, which is the latest statute on the subject, amends section 15 of Act No. 122 of 1921 (Ex. Sess.) so that that section now contains the same provisions as does the above-quoted article of the Constitution.

On September 13,1928, nineteen days after the removal of Breaux from the said office, the police jury of the parish, by a vote of S to 2, appointed him to the same office as his own immediate successor.

Shortly thereafter, and before the expiration of thirty days from the date of Breaux’s removal, the board of registration appointed as registrar for the parish of Lafayette, Marshall Arceneaux, the present relator.

Apparently fearful that the appointment of Arceneaux, having been made within the thirty-day period, was illegal, the board of registration, on October 16, 1928, again appointed Arceneaux to the position.

Breaux refused to surrender the office, claiming it under the appointment of the police jury, whereupon Arceneaux brought this ouster proceeding under the provisions of Act No. 102 of 1928.

The district court held that the action of the police jury in reappointing Breaux was a nullity, and that therefore, since the police jury had not within the thirty-day period filled the vacancy, the board of registration was within its right in appointing Arceneaux. The Court of Appeal for the First Circuit affirmed the judgment of the district court, and the matter is now before us for review.

Arceneaux attacks Breaux’s title to the office on two grounds:

First, that Breaux has never been commissioned by the Governor of the state and has not taken his oath of office.

Second, that the removal by the board of registration disqualified Breaux from becoming his own immediate successor and made him ineligible for the position.

The first ground, that Breaux, since his reappointment by the police jury, has not been commissioned by the Governor, has not given bond, and has not taken the oath of office, does not impress us. Had the Governor issued the commission, of course, the matter would not now be before us. The arbitrary refusal to carry out a ministerial duty cannot deprive the appointed officer of his rights resulting from the appointment. That the Governor has no discretion in the matter is manifest by a mere reading of the constitutional provision:

*399 “The Governor shall issue a commission to each registrar who shall thereupon make such bond, subscribe to such oath, and receive such compensation as the Legislature may prescribe.” Const. 1921, art. 8, § 18.

Breaux could not furnish bond nor take the oath until the commission was issued, and the failure to issue the commission resulted from no fault óf his. The law considers that as done which ought to be done, and, if the appointment of Mr. Breaux by the police jury is valid, the commission ought to have been issued by the Governor, and, so far as the rights of Mr. Breaux jare concerned, if he is entitled to the office, he cannot be deprived of it by reason of the failure of the executive to issue the commission.

“A statute providing that the office shall be vacant or declared vacant in case of a failure to qualify within the time prescribed only applies to cases where the officer is at fault, and the vacancy will not occur when full compliance with the law has been prevented by the neglect or the unlawful act or willful refusal on the part of some other officer to perform a duty imposed upon him in regard to the bond.” 46 C. J. p. 963.

The second ground of attack is more serious. If Breaux, by reason of his prior removal, was rendered absolutely ineligible for reappointment, his selection by the police jury was a nullity,.and had no more effect than if no action whatever had been taken by that body.

It is claimed that this ineligibility is twofold, in that it results from an affirmative provision contained in section 18 of article 8 of the Constitution 1921, to the effect that “no registrar of voters shall be elected or appointed to any other office within twelve months after vacating that of registrar”; and for the further reason that, to allow the police jury to reappoint a person who had been removed by the board of registration, would, in effect, give to the police jury the right to deprive the board of registration of its power of removal.

With regard to the first ground, we are of the opinion that, to hold that the Constitution itself affirmatively prohibits a registrar from succeeding himself, would require that we ignore the plain meaning of the word “other” as it appears in the above-quoted provision from section 18 of article 8 of the Constitution.

We must assume that the framers of the Constitution inserted the word “other” ex industria, and that they intended it to convey its usually accepted meaning. There can be no doubt that the word “other” ordinarily means “different from.”

The American and English Encyclopedia of Law states that “the word ‘other’ means different from that which has been specified.”

According to 29 Cyc. 1532: “The word has been defined as meaning different from that which has been specified; not the same; not this or these; different.” .

Had the word “other” been omitted, there would be no doubt that a registrar could hold no office during the twelve months next succeeding the termination of his tenure of office as registrar. Since the word “other” was intentionally inserted in the provision of the Constitution, it is equally clear that it was intended that he could not, during the said twelve-month period, hold any other, or different office, but that he could be reappointed to that office.

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 283, 169 La. 394, 1929 La. LEXIS 1995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-arceneaux-v-breaux-la-1929.