State ex rel. Mitchell v. Bloxham

26 Fla. 407
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 Fla. 407 (State ex rel. Mitchell v. Bloxham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Mitchell v. Bloxham, 26 Fla. 407 (Fla. 1890).

Opinion

Raney, C. J.

The relator was at the ratification of the present Constitution in 1886, Commissioner of Lands and Immigration under the Constitution of 1868, as amended in 1871, and claims that he continued to be such officer till the first Tuesday after the first Monday in January, 1889, and that he was entitled to be paid a salary at the rate of $2,000 per annum. The defendant’s contention is that the relator ceased to be Commissioner of Lands and Immigration, and became Commissioner of Agriculture under the new'Constitution upon its ratification in November 1886, or its becoming operative in January 1887, and that $1,500 per annum was his salary from the latter date.

The present Constitution was framed in 1885, ratified by the people at the election held in November, 1886, and under a provision of the ordinance directing its submission to a popular vote, went into effect the first day of January, 1887.

The 20th section of the Executive Article is : The Governor shall be assisted by administrative officers as follows: A Secretary of State, Attorney-General, Comptroller, Treas[414]*414urer, Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Commissioner of Agriculture, who shall be elected at the same time as the Governor, and shall hold their offices for the same term ; Provided, That the first election of such officers shall be at the time of voting for Governor, A. D. 1888.

The 26th section of the sáme article is as follows : The Commissioner of Agriculture shall perform such duties in relation to agriculture ds may be prescribed by law | shall hdve supervision of all matters pertaining to thephblic lands under regulations prescribed by law, and shall keep the Bureau of Immigration. He shall also have supervision oí the State Prison, and shall perform such, other duties as may be prescribed by law.

The 1st section of the schedule, or 18th article, of the Constitution reads thus : “The Constitution adopted A. D. 1868, with amendments thereto, is declared to be superseded by this Constitution. But all rights, actions, claims and contracts, both as respects individuals and bodies corporate, shall continue to be as valid as if this Constitution had not been adopted. And all fines, taxes, penalties and forfeitures due and owing to the State of Florida, under the Constitution of 1868, shall enure to the use of the State under this Constitution.”

The 3d section of this article is : All persons holding any office or appointment at the ratification of this Constitution, shall continue in the exercise of the duties thereof according to their respective commissions or appointments or until their successors are duly qualified, unless by this Constitution otherwise provided.

The 4th section is: Nothing contained in this Constitution shall operate to vacate the office of Lieutenant-Governor until the expiration of his present term.

[415]*415- The 8th section is: Upon the ratification of this Constitution the Commissioner of Lands and Immigration shall assume the office of Commissioner of Agriculture, and his duties as such shall be prescribed by the first Legislature assembled under this Constitution.

The Constitution of 1885 is a revision of that of 1868, (State ex. rel. vs. George, 23 Fla., 585,) and both as a revision, and by virtue of the 1st section of the schedule, supra, the former organic law was entirely done away with by the latter upon its going into effect January 1, 1887, except such parts of the old as were expressly retained by the new.

We held in State ex rel. vs. County Commissioners of Duval county, 23 Fla., 483, that the office of Lieutenant-Governor under the former instrument would have expired upon the election of a President of the Senate in 1887, under the 6th section of the Legislative Article of the new organic law had it not been for the fourth section of the schedule, supra, but that the effect of this section was to continue the office of Lieutenant-Governor, with its functions, as it was constituted by the former Constitution, Section 14, Article 5, as amended in 1875, until the expiration of the term for which the incumbent holding at the ratification of the new instrument, was elected, and that that part of Section 6 of the new Constitution providing that the Senate at the convening of each regular session should choose a permanent President, did not go into effect until the session of 1889, as the functions of the office of Lieutenant-Governor, continued by the 4th section of the schedule, included the presidency of the Senate, and it must have been the purpose of the framers of the Constitution and of the people, in adopting it, that the provisions of the new instrument as to a President of the Senate should stand inoperative until the jneeting of the Legislature of 1889. The Legislature of [416]*4161887 did not elect a permanent President, but was presided over by the Lieutenant-Governor.

The 8th section of the schedule, in providing that the Commissioner of Lands and Immigration should, upon the ratification of the new Constitution, assume the duties of Commissioner of Agriculture, affords an instance in which that instrument did not intend that a person holding office should continue after the new instrument became operative in the exercise of the duties of the sama office, according to his commission, until his successor was duly qualified. The person holding the office' of Commissioner of Lands and Immigration was to assume the office of Commissioner of Agriculture, The purpose of the third section was to continue the occupants of office in office where the office itself was continued. It was not to continue an office which other parts of the Constitution showed a clear intent to abolish upon the ratification or the taking effect of that instrument. The office which the person holding the office of Commissioner of Lands and Immigration was to assume under section eight was that of Commissioner of Agriculture under the new instrument. The duties of this office as shown above, Section 26 of the Executive Article, were such duties in relation to agriculture as might be prescribed by law, supervision of all matters pertaining to the public lands under regulations prescribed by law, to keep the Bureau of Immigration, and have supervision of the State Prison, and such other duties as might be prescribed by law. An amendment of 1871 to the Constitution of 1868 consolidated the office of Surveyor-General and that of Commissioner of Immigration under the name of Commissioner of Lands and Immigration. The duties of the former office as prescribed by that Constitution were the supervision of all matters pertaining to the public lands, and of the other [417]*417office to organize a Bureau of Immigration for the purpose of furnishing information and for the encouragement of immigration. The office of Commissioner of Immigration was under the original instrument, as it stood prior to the amendment, to expire at the end of fifteen years from the ratification of the instrument, with power, however, in the Legislature to continue it by law.

It is clear that the person holding the office of Commissioner of Lands and Immigration was to assume under the new Constitution an office whose duties included all those which had devolved upon him as such Commissioner, and also other duties of another character.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Fla. 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-mitchell-v-bloxham-fla-1890.