State Ex Rel. Greene v. Owen

34 S.E. 424, 125 N.C. 212, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 21, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 34 S.E. 424 (State Ex Rel. Greene v. Owen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Greene v. Owen, 34 S.E. 424, 125 N.C. 212, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 195 (N.C. 1899).

Opinions

The complaint alleged that the plaintiffs were rightfully entitled to the office under provisions of the act of 1897, ch. 108, and were wrongfully excluded therefrom by defendant claiming under legislation of 1899.

The answer alleges that the defendants are legally in possession (213) and entitled to the office; that the act of 1897, ch. 108, was repealed by the act of 1899, ch. 374, and that they were themselves elected by the Legislature of 1899 as the County Board of School Directors. It also alleges that none of the plaintiffs were original appointees, and that two of them, Greene and Sheets, were appointed after defendants had been elected by the Legislature, and that the appointment of Nifong was void, because the original appointing body had no authority to fill vacancies.

His Honor, upon the pleadings, rendered judgment in favor of defendants. Plaintiffs appealed. *Page 150 DOUGLAS, J., writes the opinion of the Court.

CLARK, J., writes dissenting opinion as to Nifong. This is an action in the nature of quo warranto brought to test the title to the office of County Board of School Directors. On the first Monday in June, 1897, under the provisions of section 6, chapter 108, of the Public Laws of 1897, G. W. Holmes, T. H. Strohecker and R. S. Greene, Jr., were elected as members of the County Board of Education for the term of three years by the joint action of the county commissioners, the clerk of the Superior Court, and the register of deeds. On the 6th day of September, 1897, R. S. Green, Jr., resigned as a member of said board and John R. Miller was elected to fill the vacancy by the county commissioners, the clerk of the Superior Court, and the register of deeds, the original appointing power. Some time during the year 1898 T. H. Strohecker resigned as a member (214) of said board, and J. M. Nifong was elected to fill the vacancy by said commissioners, clerk, and register of deeds. On the 3d day of July, 1899, John R. Miller resigned from said board, which had then become, by virtue of chapter 732, of the Laws of 1899, the County Board of School Directors, and Ed. L. Greene was elected to fill the vacancy by the remaining members of the board. On the 3d day of July, 1899, George W. Holmes resigned as a member of said board, and Henry Sheets was elected by the two remaining members of the board to fill the vacancy. It will thus be seen that J. M. Nifong is the only plaintiff in this case claiming under an election prior to the passage of the act of March 7, 1899, being chapter 732 above mentioned. His case therefore stands upon a different footing from the others, and will be considered first.

Some things must be considered settled law in spite of the volcanic energy of a progressive and expanding age. Among these is the doctrine laid down in Hoke v. Henderson, 15 N.C. 1, that an officer has a right of property in his office of which he can be deprived only in accordance with the law of the land; and that while the Legislature may abolish the office, it can not continue the office and transfer its duties and emoluments to another against the will of the vested incumbent. The opinion in that celebrated case was delivered at the December Term, 1833, of this Court, by Chief Justice RUFFIN, and was concurred in by his associates, Judges DANIEL and GASTON, men whose names are the expression of the highest qualities that can adorn the bench. This opinion has never been questioned by this Court, but on the contrary has been repeatedly cited and approved, affirmed and *Page 151 reaffirmed, until its very name has become the embodiment of a vital principle. We find it cited with approval upon one point or another in the following cases: Houston v. Bogle, 32 N.C. 496; State v.Moss, 47 N.C. 66; Thompson v. Floyd, 47 N.C. 313; State v. (215)Glenn, 52 N.C. 321, 327; Cotton v. Ellis, 52 N.C. 545; Barnesv. Barnes, 53 N.C. 366; Galloway v. R. R., 63 N.C. 147; State v. Smith,65 N.C. 369; King v. Hunter, 65 N.C. 603; Clark v. Stanly,66 N.C. 59; Brown v. Turner, 70 N.C. 93; Bunting v. Gales,77 N.C. 382; Vann v. Pipkin, 77 N.C. 408; Prairie v. Worth, 78 N.C. 169;Lyon v. Aiken, 78 N.C. 258; McNamee v. Alexander, 109 N.C. 246; State v.Cutshall; 110 N.C. 545; Board of Education v. Kenan, 112 N.C. 568; State v.Womble, 112 N.C. 867; Trotter v. Mitchell, 115 N.C. 193; McDonald v.Morrow, 119 N.C. 676; Wood v. Bellamy, 120 N.C. 216; Ward v. ElizabethCity, 121 N.C. 3; Caldwell v. Wilson, 121 N.C. 468; Miller v. Alexander,122 N.C. 721; Day's case, 124 N.C. 362, 366; Wilson v. Jordan,124 N.C. 683, 694; Bryan v. Patrick, 124 N.C. 651, 666.

In Ward v. Elizabeth City, supra, this Court says: "The only restriction upon the legislative power is that after the officer has accepted office upon the terms specified in the act creating the office, this being a contract between him and the State, the Legislature can not run him out by an act purporting to abolish the office, but which in effect continues the same office in existence. This is on the ground that an office is a contract between the officer and the State, as was held in Hoke v.Henderson, 15 N.C. 1, and has ever since been followed in North Carolina down to and including Wood v. Bellamy, supra, though this State is the only one of the 45 States of the Union which sustains that doctrine."

In the above list, we have included only those cases where it is directly cited by name in the opinion of the Court, omitting all those merely tending to sustain it.

In reviewing the list of the judges who wrote the above (216) opinions or concurring therein we find the name of every Chief Justice who has since presided over this Court, and of all the Associate Justices before whom the question was raised.

An examination of the constitutional history of the State, we think, will show conclusively that the principles so clearly enunciated in Hoke v.Henderson have not only received the practically unanimous approval of succeeding judges, but have by direct implication been repeatedly ratified by the people themselves. The first "Constitution of North Carolina" as a State was framed by a "Congress" elected and chosen for that particular purpose, which assembled at Halifax on the *Page 152

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.E. 424, 125 N.C. 212, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-greene-v-owen-nc-1899.