State ex rel. Robert v. Murphy

32 Fla. 138
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 32 Fla. 138 (State ex rel. Robert v. Murphy) 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. Robert v. Murphy, 32 Fla. 138 (Fla. 1893).

Opinion

Raítiíy, C. J.:

In this cause Benjamin R. Powell, George A. De-Cottes and B. M. Baer, with J. D. Kelley and W. S. Pickett, were nominated by the Governor and confirmed as county commissioners of Duval county by the Senate at the session of the Legislature which met on the first Tuesday after the first Monday of April, 1891, and adjourned June 5th of the same year, and they were commissioned by the Governor on the 12th day of the-latter month. At the session of the Legislature con-[141]*141veiling on the corresponding Tuesday in April of. the-present year, and adjourned on the second day of June, the Governor nominated for county commision-ers of that county Charles Marvin, T. Y. Porter, E. P. DeCottes, J. D. Kelly and W. S. Pickett,, but the Senate adjourned without taking any action on the-nomination; and subsequently on the 16th day of June the Governor commissioned the last named parties, each for a separate district, to be county commissioners 1 ‘until the end of the next ensuing session of the Senate unless an appointment be sooner made and confirmed by the Senate.” Powell, George A. DeCottes and Baer claim they continue to be the lawful county commissioners by virtue of their former appointment; whereas the others are asserting their claim under the later commissions.

The Constitution (sec. 5 of Article VIII) ordains that there shall be appointed by the Governor, by and with the consent of the Senate, in and for each county five county commissioners, and that “their terms of office shall be two years,” and that one commissioner shall be selected from each of five districts of a county. The 14th section of Article XVI of the Constitution is, that ‘ ‘all State, county and municipal officers shall continue in office after the expiration of their official terms until their successors are duly qualified.’’ The contention of the Powell board is that they are continued in office by this section until the qualification of successors who may be nominated by the Governor and confirmed by the-Senate at some ensuing session of the Legislature, and that the Governor’s action in the appointment of the new or Marvin board was without authority of law.

There has been no decision of the precise point by this court. At the general election held November-6th, 1888, persons were elected to fill severally certain [142]*142•county offices in Duval county, but they failed to give .bond and qualify within sixty days after their election; .and it was held in an advisory opinion rendered January 16th, 1889, to the then recently installed Governor, that the terms of such county offices beginning on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in January, 1889, had become vacant on account of the omission stated; and that he was authorized to fill such vacancies by appointments which would expire on the qualification of successors to be chosen at the general election in 1890. In this opinion several provisions of the ■Constitution are referred to; the controlling ones as to the power and its limitations being the 7th section of Article YIII, in providing that ‘ ‘if any person elected or appointed to any county office shall fail to give bond and qualify within sixty days after his election, the said office shall become vacant;” and Sections 6, 7 and 9 of Article XVIII, of which the first is, that “the term of office of all appointees to fill vacancies in any of the elective offices under this Constitution shall extend only to the election and qualification of a successor at the ensuing general election;” and the second, that “in all cases of elections to fill vacancies in offices the election shall be for the unexpired term;” and the last fixing the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1888, and every two years thereafter, as the days for the election of all elective State and county officers “whose terms are about to •expire, or for any office that shall have become vacant.” As is mentioned in that opinion, the seventh section of the fourth or executive article provides that “when any office, from any cause, shall become vacant and no mode is provided by this Constitution or by the laws of the State for filling such vacancy, the Governor shall have the power to fill such vacancy [143]*143by granting a commission for tlie unexpired term;” but it was held that the term of the executive appointment was limited not by this, but by the sixth section of the sixteenth article, supra. It was not thought then that the power and duty of the incumbents of the preceding terms to hold over under Section 14 of Article XVI, supra (State ex rel. Law vs. Saxon, 25 Fla., 792, 796-7, 6 South. Rep., 858; s. c. 30 Fla., 668, 700, 12 South. Rep., 218), was a limitation upon the power of the executive to appoint to fill the vacancies recognized by Section 7 of Article VIII to exist; nor is it so contended now; but, on the contrary, we understand the correctness of the conclusion reached in the advisory opinion to be conceded.

The primary question presented by the case before us is whether or not there was a vacancy in the -office of county commissioner of Duval county when the Governor commissioned the Marvin board. The position of counsel for the Powell board is that there was not a vacancy, and for the reason that the ■Constitution contemplates that the old commissioners shall continue in office until new commissioners, confirmed by the Senate on the nomination of the Governor, have “duly qualified;” that such commissioners and no others, as long as the old remain in office, are the “successors” of the latter within the meaning of Section fourteen of Article XVI. Of course it is not to be denied that it was the duty of the Governor to send to the Senate nominations for confirmation as he did at the last session of the Legislature; and we deem it entirely immaterial to the decision of this case to consid- • er whether the terms of such nominees, had they been confirmed, would have begun at the time of such confirmation, or not until the 12th of June, the day suc•ceeding the expiration of the two years named in the [144]*144commissions of the Powell board, or at a still different time. Passing, as not meriting discussion, when the term actually began, there was still a term, either begun, or about to begin, which the law required to be filled by the action of the Governor, with the consent of the Senate. That it was the duty of the Senate to. act on these nominations, giving or refusing consent thereto, can never be seriously denied, except upon the hypothesis that the terms of the old commissioners had not expired in fact, and that consequently there were not yet any terms to fill. No such contention as this is presented. Assuming, what is not denied, that the nominations were lawfully made, there was at least a prospective vacancy in office which the Constitution contemplated should be filled by the Governor, with the consent of the Senate, and we are fully satisfied, even assuming that the two years for which the old board were confirmed had actually expired, that pending the session of the Senate there was no power in the Governor alone to appoint to fill a vacancy. Pending such session the old commissioners continued in office under Section 14 of Article XVI. They did not hold over, however, as furnishing the “mode” provided by the Constitution for filling the new term, but simply as filling a part of the newT term temporarily and, at least, until the Governor and Senate, both of whom were in a position to act, should do-so.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Fla. 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-robert-v-murphy-fla-1893.