State ex rel. Rambo v. Maloney

92 Tenn. 62
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 92 Tenn. 62 (State ex rel. Rambo v. Maloney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee 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. Rambo v. Maloney, 92 Tenn. 62 (Tenn. 1892).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

This case involves the title to the office of County Judge of Knox County. It is an “agreed case,” submitted to the Chancery ■Court upon the following written stipulation:

“ The aforesaid parties, stated as complainant and respondent in the caption hereof, beg leave to •submit to your Honor’s adjudication an agreed ■ease, upon the following state of facts, which they .aver are real facts, and that the matters in controversy between them constitute a real controversy, to wit: The defendant, George L. Maloney, at [64]*64the regular August elections for the county of Knox, in the year 1888, was elected County Judge of Knox County, under the Act of the Legislature of 1887, Chapter - 148, page 258, and was duly commissioned and qualified, under the provisions of said Act, to fill said office of County Judge of Knox County, agreeably to the Constitution ' and laws, during the term, with all the powers, privi- • leges, and emoluments thereunto appertaining by law; and, for the term of four years from that time, has occupied said office.
“At the regular- August elections for said county in the present year (18921), the relator, T. A. Rambo, offered himself as a candidate for said office, had no opposition, and received- all the votes cast in said election for said office, and was declared by the officer holding said election duly elected thereto; and, in pursuance thereof, received his commission from the Governor, and has qualified as such County Judge, under said statute; and, on the first Monday in September after said election, and after his commission and qualification as aforesaid, he applied to the defendant, George L. Maloney, to be inducted into said office, and demanded of him the books, records, and papers of said office, which demand the said George L. Maloney refused, and he continues to hold said office and the possession of said books, records, and papers, insisting that he is entitled to hold said office under his said election, and under the Constitution of the State, for a term of eight years from the date [65]*65thereof, or of four years from the first Monday of September, 1892,
“During his occupancy of said office, the said Maloney has performed • the duties imposed upon him as such County Judge, by the Act above referred to, and lias received the salary therein provided and allowed, the same having been paid by said county, as directed by said statute. In addition thereto, the said Maloney has- been acting as a Turnpike Commissioner for Ivnox County, under the provision of §1491 of Milliken & Vertrees’ Code of Tennessee, and subsequent sections, and, for such services, has received from said county, in addition to the salary above named as County Judge, a salary of $100 for the term of one year, and $150 per annum for two years.
“He has likewise, during his term of office as such County Judge, been acting as one of the Board of Commissioners of the work-house of Knox County, under Act of 1891, Chapter 123, and, for such services, has received from the County Trustee of said county, in addition to the salaries above mentioned, the sum of $50.
“Since he has been acting as such County Judge, he has investigated the accounts of former Trustees of Knox County, and discovered a default of two of said Trustees, or a discrepancy in their settlements, upon which there was found due to said county the sum of about $33,000, which has been partly recovered and paid into the county treasury, and the rest secured. 3?or his services in this re[66]*66gard, lie was allowed and paid by the County Court, in addition to all sums hereinbefore mentioned, the sum of $600, which was the amount of the commission that said Trustees would have received had they settled without defalcation.
“ During his said term of, office, he also acted, under appointment of said County Court, as a commissioner or a member of a building committee to build a new jail for said county, for which service he was paid by said county the sum of $250. Also during his said term of office, and before the passage of the work-house Act of 1891, Chapter 128, he acted as a member of a committee appointed by' said Court to superintend the work-house of said county, for \ which service he was paid by said county $300 for two years’ service.
“ Upon these facts the parties to this agreed-case pray your Honor to adjudge whether the said G-eorge L. Maloney is entitled to retain and hold said office for the full term of eight years-from the date of his said election, as he now contends, or until the next regular election for judicial officers of the State of Tennessee, two years hence, or for any time beyond the first day of September, 1892, and the commissioning and qualification of his successor; and, if not, that your Honor adjudge his removal from office, and that the relator herein be inducted into said office as his duly qualified successor thereto. And also that your Honor will adjudge all questions of law, legitimately arising out of the facts of this case,, [67]*67as hereinbefore stated, and grant all such relief to the plaintiff and relator herein as he shall be justly entitled to in your Honor’s Court upon the facts of this case.”

Upon the foregoing facts the Court adjudged and decreed that “the respondent, G. L. Maloney, is entitled to hold the office of County Judge of Knox County for the constitutional term of eight years (8 years) from the date of his commission, and that the application of the relator to be inducted into said office must be denied.”

Erom that decree the relator has appealed.

Generally the counties of this State have no County Judges. "Where they exist, it is by virtue of special statutes.

The office of County Judge of Knox County was created by Chapter 148 of the Acts of 1887. By the first section of the Act the term of the office was expressly limited to four years. If that limitation be valid, the term of Maloney has expired, and Rambo is entitled to the office. How that is, depends upon certain provisions of the organic law. Sections 1, 2, and 3 of Article VI. of the Constitution of 1870, so far as relating to this question, are in the following words:

“Section 1. The judicial power of this State shall be vested in one Supreme Court, and in such Circuit, Chancery, and other inferior Courts as the Legislature shall, from time to time, ordain and establish, in the Judges thereof, and in Justices of the Peace. * * *
[68]*68“Sec. 8. The Judges of the Supreme Court shall be elected by the qualified voters of the State. * * * Every Judge of the Supreme 'Court shall be thirty-five years of age, and shall, before his election, have been a resident of the State for five years. His term of service shall be eight years.
“Sec. 4. The Judges of the Circuit and Chancery Courts, and of other inferior Courts, shall be elected by the qualified voters of the district or circuit to which they are to be assigned. Every Judge of such Courts shall be thirty years of age. * * * Iiis term of service shall be eight years.”

A County Judge is a Judge of one of the “inferior Courts” contemplated by those provisions of the Constitution. That construction is so well-settled that no discussion of the question is necessary in this case. State of Tennessee v. Glenn, 7 Heis., 472; State of Tennessee

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Bluebook (online)
92 Tenn. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rambo-v-maloney-tenn-1892.