State Ex Rel. Morgan v. Knight

245 P. 267, 76 Mont. 71, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 72
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1926
DocketNo. 5,879.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 245 P. 267 (State Ex Rel. Morgan v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Morgan v. Knight, 245 P. 267, 76 Mont. 71, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 72 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This proceeding was instituted by the relator against the defendant to try title to the office of city attorney of Anaconda. After the issues had been made up the parties entered into a written stipulation as to the facts. The controversy was decided in favor of the defendant and judgment was entered in his favor, from which relator has appealed.

The facts, as stipulated, are that the city of Anaconda is a municipal corporation organized under the laws of this state, having a population of more than ten thousand people. The city has executive and legislative departments, fhe chief executive officer being the mayor. The office of city attorney of Anaconda was created under the laws of this state, and is filled by the appointment of the mayor and confirmation by the city council.

A municipal election has been held in Anaconda in each odd-numbered year commencing with 1895, at which the *74 mayor and one-balf of tbe aldermen have been elected, tbe other half of the aldermen having been elected on the even-numbered years. The term of office of the elective officers of the city commences on the first Monday of May after their election, the term being two years.

Prior to 1895, the office of city attorney was an elective one; in 1895 the office was made appointive. Mr. Timothy O’Leary, the first city attorney of Anaconda under appointment, was appointed on May 6, 1895, for a term of two years, and on the first Monday of each odd year thereafter a city attorney has been appointed by the mayor and confirmed by the council.

Pursuant to election Jas. B. McCavitt became mayor on the first Monday of May, 1923, and on the same day appointed W. H. Trippet, Esq., city attorney for the term beginning on that day, and the council promptly confirmed the appointment. Mr. Trippett qualified, entered upon and continued in the discharge of the duties of the office until March 18, 1924, when he departed this life. On that day Mayor McCavitt appointed the relator city attorney. The appointment was in writing and reads as follows: “I hereby nominate, and with the approval of the council, appoint D. H. Morgan city attorney for the city of Anaconda, Montana, to fill the vacancy occasioned in the office by the death of W. H. Trippet. J. B. McCavitt, Mayor.” On the same day the appointment was confirmed by the city council, whose minute entry reads as follows: “March 24th, 1924. The Mayor appointed D. H. Morgan city attorney to fill the unexpired term' of W. H. Trip-pet, deceased.” Mr. Morgan, relator, qualified immediately and entered upon the performance of the duties of the office.

On May 4, 1925, pursuant to election, Mr. C. W. Smith succeeded Mr. McCavitt as mayor of Anaconda. On that day he assumed to appoint J. B. C. Enight, the defendant, to the office of city attorney and the appointment was immediately confirmed by the council. The defendant thereupon *75 qualified and ever since May 4, 1925, bas occupied tbe office and performed the duties thereof.

The relator was present at the meeting of the city council when the appointment of the defendant came before it for confirmation and he orally protested the appointment of the defendant to the office, asserting that his own appointment on March 24, 1924, was for a full term of two years, which would not expire until the twenty-fourth day of March, 1926. The relator was not suspended or removed from his office as provided by the laws of this state, unless the action of Mayor Smith and the city council in appointing the defendant to the office terminated the relator’s right thereto. Relator and defendant each possess the necessary qualifications for the office.

The question for decision then is, notwithstanding the fact that the mayor intended to appoint and the council to confirm relator to fill the unexpired term of W. H. Trippet, was he, as a Matter of law, entitled to hold the office for two years?

Section 6 of Article VI of our state Constitution declares in part that the legislative assembly may provide for the election or appointment of such municipal officers “as public convenience may require and their terms of office shall be as prescribed by law, not in any case to exceed two years, except as in this Constitution otherwise provided.”

Section 5038, Revised Codes of 1921, applicable here, provides that the city attorney “shall hold his office for two years, unless suspended or removed as provided in this Act.” The quoted language has appeared substantially as above since the parent statute was enacted in 1887. (Sec. 358, 5th Div., Comp. Stats. 1887.) That section provided for the election of a city attorney and the term prescribed was one year. The term was made two years in 1889. (Laws 1889, p. 182.) The office was made appointive by an Act of the legislative assembly approved March 7, 1895 (Pol. Code, sec. 4787), which has continued to the present time without change. (Sec. 5038, sugra.)

*76 The phrase “two years” mentioned in the statute means a term of office of two years’ duration. “The expression, term of office, uniformly designates a fixed and definite period of time,” say the authorities. (State v. Stonestreet, 99 Mo. 361, 12 S. W. 895; State v. Williams, 222 Mo. 268, 17 Ann. Cas. 1006, 121 S. W. 64.)

“Term of office” is a phrase used to describe the period of time during which one regularly chosen by election or appointment and inducted into office is entitled to hold the same, perform its functions, and enjoy its privileges and emoluments. The time when a term of office commences is usually fixed by law. (28 Cyc. 423.)

"Where the law creates an office and prescribes the length of the term, omitting to fix the date when the term shall begin, but designates (he power which is vested with authority to fill the office by appointment, it follows necessarily that the appointive power has the right to fix the commencement of the term. (State v. Williams, supra; Attorney General ex rel. Haight v. Love, 39 N. J. L. 476, 23 Am. Rep. 234; Rightmire v. Camden, 50 N. J. L. 43, 13 Atl. 30; Hale v. Bischoff, 53 Kan. 301, 36 Pac. 752.)

When, pursuant to the Act of March 7, 1895, the mayor appointed and the city council confirmed Timothy O’Leary as city attorney for a term of two years, beginning on the first Monday of May, 1895, that was the inception of the term. When the first period or term of two years ended, another immediately began. Each term followed the other in regular succession, each one commencing where the other ended. (People ex rel. Mason v. McClave, 99 N. Y. 83, 1 N. E. 235; State v. Smiley, 304 Mo. 549, 263 S. W. 825; Hale v. Bischoff, supra.)

In such case “the law does not contemplate that there is a new beginning and ending of the term by each appointment, but the term becomes fixed by the first appointment under the Act.” (State v. Williams, supra.)

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Bluebook (online)
245 P. 267, 76 Mont. 71, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-morgan-v-knight-mont-1926.