State ex rel. Major v. Ryan

133 S.W. 8, 232 Mo. 77, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 31, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 8 (State ex rel. Major v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Major v. Ryan, 133 S.W. 8, 232 Mo. 77, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 289 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Respondents are severally judges of the criminal court of Buchanan county and of subdivisions one and two of the Buchanan Circuit Court.

The Attorney-General exhibits here an information, ex officio, in the nature of quo ivarranto, to try the title of respondents to the office of, and to oust them as, a Board of Jury Commissioners of Buchanan county.

The information pleads by title and sections two acts of the General Assembly — one found in the Laws of 1905, p. 174, entitled, “Jurors: Board of Commissioners in Counties containing City of 150,000 and less than 400,000 Inhabitants” — the other, in the Laws of 1907, p. 322, amendatory of the first.

The information shows that as amended in 1907’, section 1 of the first act now reads: “In each county of this State now containing or which may contain hereafter a city' having, according to the last preceding national census, more than one hundred thousand inhabitants and less than four hundred thousand inhabitants, petit jurors for the circuit court and for the court having jurisdiction of felony cases shall be selected as hereinafter provided.”

Section 2 of the original act, not amended, in part reads: “The circuit judges of said counties, and the judge of the court having jurisdiction in felony cases, shall be and constitute a board of jury commissioners for such counties, a majority of whom shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. .’ . . Each member of said board shall, as compensation for his [80]*80services under this act, as jury commissioner solely, receive a salary of fifteen hundred dollars per annum. Said salaries shall be paid by the county monthly in equal monthly installments. The time, place and manner of meetings of said board and the rules for performing its duties shall be fixed by said board.

As amended in 1907, section 3 of the original act now reads: “In every county in this State to which this act may apply, the board of jury commissioners of said county, at its first regular meeting, after it is ascertained from the last preceding national- census that said county contains a city of more than one hundred thousand inhabitants, and less than four hundred thousand inhabitants, shall cause to be made, under its supervision, a complete list, as near as they can, alphabetically arranged, of all the qualified jurors in the county and their residences; and in compiling said list said board of jury commissioners, and their clerks and assistants, may have access to the books of the county assessor and to any registration of voters required by law to be made.”

The amendatory act had an emergency clause based on the “necessity of the immediate revision of the jury laws in counties affected by its provisions,” and was approved February 26,1907. The original act had the same emergency clause and' was approved February 21, 1905'. The other provisions of the original act, not amended, consist of 14 sections, working out the details of the plan — all immaterial here. The original act ran in favor of every county of the State “now containing or which may contain hereafter” a city having, according to the last preceding national census, more than 150,00 and less than 400',000 inhabitants. At the outset the act took effect in only one county — that of Jackson — Kansas City being the only town then fitting the- statutory requirement in population. The amendatory act of 1907, by reducing the requirement in population to 100,000, including Buchanan [81]*81county — the city of St. Joseph, contained therein, according to the then last national census having the required number.

Further outlining the information, its theory is that according to the national census of 1910', as officially promulgated, the city of St. Joseph does not contain 100,000 inhabitants, nor does the county of Buchanan have so many; that by virtue of the Act of 1905 as amended in 1907, respondents at once assumed the office of jury commissioners in Buchanan county, constituting its board of jury commissioners, put on foot its jury scheme and took to themselves its duties, honors and solatium; that by virtue of the official promulgation of the national census of 1910, establishing the fact that the population of St. Joseph was less than 100,000, the law ceased to be operative in Buchanan county; and that such board of jury commissioners became functus officio and no longer had any right to legal existence. It is charged that despite that fact respondents continued to perform and are performing such duties and usurping the office of jury commissioners “in contempt and to great prejudice and damage of the authority of the State of Missouri.” Process was prayed against them that they be cited to make answer to the State and show by what authority they claimed to use and enjoy the rights, liberties, privileges and franchise aforesaid.

The suit is a friendly one to set at rest a vexed question relating to selecting jurors for service in the courts of Buchanan county.

Respondents enter their voluntary appearance, submitting the cause on demurrer — the grounds of which are:

“First. The petition in quo warranto filed by the Attorney-General does, not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against respondents.

[82]*82“Second. The petition on its face shows that respondents are lawfully performing the duty of jury commissioners in Buchanan county, Missouri.”

We are furnished with forceful, briefs of excellent pith and temper on both sides. A .resume of points there made will aptly and concisely outline the general contentions pro and con, viz.:

For respondents (inter alia) it is argued.it was the intention of the Legislature in the Act of 1905 as amended in 1907 that it should afford a permanent jury system for Buchanan county without reference to any possible decline in its population; that in framing the various jury law's of this State no attempt has been made to create a general system founded upon popula,tion either urban or general; that in framing the law under consideration the Legislature was skillful and intelligent in the selection and use of words expressive of its purpose to make the law applicable to Buchanan county irrespective of any future decrease in the population of St. Joseph; that the act is not a local or special law; and that if that act is not operative in Buchanan county, then it has no jury law — this by virtue of the fact that prior laws operative in that county have either been repealed or are no longer applicable.

Por relator (inter alia) it is argued that for the purpose of prescribing. the manner of selecting petit jurors the Legislature has classified the counties of this State, and cities which are separate from counties, according to population; and that, since the population of St. Joseph as shown by the last national census is less than 100,000', Buchanan county, as to the manner of selecting petit jurors for the circuit and criminal courts, is not now subject to the provisions of the Act of 1905 as amended in 1907.

There is a reply brief controverting the propositions and arguments in respondents’.

[83]*83In our opinion, a judgment of ouster will have to go. This, because:

(a).. To show they are not overlooked, we shall consider some phases of the argument of respondents’ counsel in limine. For example:

(1). By way of argument

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 8, 232 Mo. 77, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-major-v-ryan-mo-1910.