State Ex Rel. Rundbaken v. Watrous

68 A.2d 289, 135 Conn. 638, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 184
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 1, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 68 A.2d 289 (State Ex Rel. Rundbaken v. Watrous) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Rundbaken v. Watrous, 68 A.2d 289, 135 Conn. 638, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 184 (Colo. 1949).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

The actions now reserved to us were brought to determine whether the plaintiffs or the defendants in the several cases are lawfully entitled to hold office as judges of certain municipal courts. Section 3 of article fifth of the constitution of this state provides in part: “The judges of the Supreme Court of Errors, of the superiour and inferiour courts, and all justices of the peace, shall be appointed by the General Assembly, in such manner as shall by law be prescribed.” After fixing the terms and providing for the impeachment or removal of judges of the Supreme and Superior Courts, it stated: “All other judges and justices of the peace shall be appointed annually.” An amendment to the constitution, adopted in October, 1876, contained this provision: “Judges of the city courts and police courts shall be appointed for terms of two years.” Conn. Const. Amend. XX. Until De *642 cember 16, 1948, when the forty-seventh amendment to the constitution became effective, these constitutional provisions required judges of city and police courts to be appointed by the General Assembly for terms of two years. In 1889, a statute which had previously regulated the procedure to be followed by the General Assembly upon the nomination of judges of Courts of Common Pleas was extended to include every nomination of a judge of any “city, police, or borough court.” General Statutes, Rev. 1888, § 754; Public Acts, 1889, c. 42. In the Revision of 1902, § 56, the statute was made applicable to every judge of a “city, police, town, or borough court,” and that provision has been continued ever since. Rev. 1949, § 72. The unbroken practice of the General Assembly, at least since 1902, has been to treat judges of all courts having primary jurisdiction over criminal offenses, whether called city, town, borough or police courts, as being within the designation in the constitution “city courts and police courts”; and if there was any doubt that this was the true meaning to be accorded the constitutional provision, it is removed by this long practical construction. Wheeler’s Appeal, 45 Conn. 306, 315; Sanger v. Bridgeport, 124 Conn. 183, 190, 198 A. 746. In fact, unless the twentieth amendment did include all such courts, the selection of judges for those not falling within the strict designation of “city courts and police courts” would be still governed by the provision in § 3 of article fifth, “All other judges . . . shall be appointed annually”; but annual appointments of judges of any municipal court have not been made since 1876. The twentieth amendment to the constitution limited the terms of all judges of municipal courts to two years.

Since 1889 the procedure for the appointment of such judges has been regulated by statute. General *643 Statutes, Rev. 1930, §§ 50, 51; Cum. Sup. 1935, § 9c; Rev. 1949, §§ 72, 73. In 1935 the statutes were amplified to include a provision that on and after July 1, 1935, each judge, associate judge or deputy judge of a town, city, borough or police court “shall be appointed for a term of two years from July first in the year of his appointment”; Cum. Sup. 1935, § 10c; and this provision is still in effect. Sup. 1947, § 24i; Rev. 1949, § 76. There has never been any special statutory provision for filling vacancies in these courts, but there has long been a general provision authorizing the governor to fill vacancies. Since 1931 a statute has provided as follows: “When the general assembly shall not be in session and when no other provision shall have been made for filling any vacancy in an office originally filled by the general assembly or either branch thereof, or by the governor with the advice and consent of the general assembly or either branch thereof, the governor may fill the same until the sixth Wednesday of the next session of the general assembly, and until a successor shall be elected or appointed and shall have qualified. He may fill any vacancy in any office to which he has power of appointment.” Sup. 1931, § 6a; Cum. Sup. 1935, § 11c; Rev. 1949, § 92. The forty-seventh amendment to the constitution provides: “The judges of minor courts, including town, city, borough and police courts, shall, upon nomination by the governor, be appointed by the general assembly for such term and in such manner as shall be by law prescribed.” See Sup. 1947, p. 745.

The parties now before us fall into two classes. On one side stand certain judges appointed by the General Assembly at its 1947 session, under the provisions of the constitution and statutes then in effect, to hold office for two years from July 1, 1947, and one judge who was appointed by the governor to fill a vacancy caused *644 by the resignation of a judge appointed for that term at that session; and on the other side stand judges who were appointed by the governor in June of this year, after the forty-seventh amendment to the constitution became effective, to hold office from July 1, 1949. The first question we have to determine is whether the judges falling within the first class are entitled to hold office as of right after July 1 of this year.

In State ex rel. Eberle v. Clark, 87 Conn. 537, 89 A. 172, the question was whether Eberle or Clark had the right to hold office as judge of the “city police court” of Hartford. Clark had been duly appointed judge of that court by the General Assembly at its session in 1911 to hold office “for the term of two years from and after the first day of July, 1911, and until his successor is duly appointed and qualified.” The General Assembly at its 1913 session failed to appoint a successor before it adjourned sine die, and on June 24, 1913, while it was not in session, the governor appointed Eberle “to fill a vacancy which will occur on the first day of July, 1913, by expiration on that day” of Clark’s term. We held that the provision of the twentieth amendment that judges of city courts and police courts shall be appointed “for terms of two years” established a constitutional limitation of the term of such judges and that the General Assembly had no power to extend it by the provision that Clark should serve until a successor was appointed and qualified, nor could that result be legally brought about by a like provision in the city charter. This decision establishes as our law that, as the constitution stood until the adoption of the forty-seventh amendment, judges appointed by the General Assembly ceased to hold office as of right at the conclusion of their two-year term.

Our decision in State ex rel. Eberle v. Clark, supra, *645 also establishes the fact that the governor, under the provisions of chapter 233 of the Public Acts of 1907, the predecessor of § 11c of the 1935 Cumulative Supplement, which we have quoted, and its successor, § 92 of the 1949 Revision, has the right to appoint a judge to fill a vacancy arising from the death or resignation of a judge appointed by the General Assembly. The judge, a party to this case, who was so appointed on May 1, 1948, held office thereafter as of right for the legal term.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.2d 289, 135 Conn. 638, 1949 Conn. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-rundbaken-v-watrous-conn-1949.