Territory of New Mexico ex rel. Hubbell v. Armijo

14 N.M. 205
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1907
DocketNo. 1185
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 N.M. 205 (Territory of New Mexico ex rel. Hubbell v. Armijo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory of New Mexico ex rel. Hubbell v. Armijo, 14 N.M. 205 (N.M. 1907).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

ABBOTT, J.

1 Dealing first with the question of jurisdiction, we find the defendant’s denial of it is based on ■two grounds: First, that at the time when action was taken in the cause there was no term of the Second District Court for Bernalillo county in existence, for the reason that a term of said court as fixed by law, for Sandoval county had begun after the beginning of the next preceding term for Bernalillo county and before such action taken; and, second, that an. information in the nature of quo warranto is a criminal proceeding and the court could take no action on it except'during a term. That is, it is claimed, in substance, as to the first point, that two terms of the same court for different counties, the same judge being an integral part of the court in each case, are incompatible with each other and that the .beginning of a term at the time prescribed by law in one county neces-sarity makes an end of a term for another county in the same district at that time in progress. It is true, of course, that, ordinarily at least, the presence of the judge is essential to the validity of any act of the court of .which he is a part; but the court survives the absence, removal, or death of the judge, and in case of his disqualification for any particular act, another judge may generally perform it in his place. Besides, a term of court is not the' same thing as the court itself, and i.s no more than a period of time within which, and then only, certain functions of this court can be exercised. The beginning of this period is fixed by law in the territory for each county. Its end comes only by adjournment, or by the arrival of the date designated by law for the beginning of another term of the same court for the same county. Sec. 909, Compiled Laws of 1897; People v. Central City Bank, 53 Barb. 416; Labadie v. Dean, 47 Texas 100. This court has already held, in substance, in Borrego v. Territory of New Mexico, 8 N. M. 446, that merely constructive interference of one term with another does not terminate the existence of either or render anything done in it by the court invalid. That decision was upheld in Gonzales v. Cunningham, 164 U. S. 612. In Territory v. Netherlin, reported in 85 Pacific Reporter 1044, a motion for a rehearing in this court, based in part on the claim that one term of court had destroyed another, was denied. No good reason is perceived against holding any number of terms for different counties in the same district on the same day if the public convenience should require it. To hold otherwise would be to assume that by mere words we had laid hold on time itself and cut it up into portions capable, like solid bodies, of jostling and colliding with each other; an assumption which might have been quite in keeping with the technicalities of an early period in the history of English jurisprudence but would now be out of place. But assuming that an examination of the records of the Second District Court would show that action was taken in the case at bar on one or more occasions after the adjournment without day of a term of that court for Bernalillo county and before the beginning of another term, we arrive at the second point in the defendant’s objection to the jurisdiction, namely, that this is a criminal or quasi criminal cause and that no valid action could be taken in it out of term.

2 The term of court is now preserved in this jurisdiction mainly, if not wholly, for jury trials and matters incidental to or connected with them and except for such purposes the District Courts are declared to be always open. Sub-secs. l'03-4 of Sec. 2685, Compiled Laws of 1897. There is nothing- in the essential nature of quo warranto proceedings to furnish a reason why they should not be had in vacation. On the contrary they are peculiarly such as are most advantageously conducted-by the courts in chambers, and, while it was recited in Territory v. Ashenfelter, 4 N. M. 134, cited by the defendant, that the proceedings referred to were in term and were regular and valid it was not said they would not have been equally valid in vacation, and indeed, the opinion--on that point, we think, strongly favors the opposite conclusion. The-proceeding by inf ormation was never more than incidentally criminal, its main purpose having been in its early history and its only one in recent times being to try title to offiee. Whether, if a fine had been imposed, it would have put the cause on the criminal side, so far as to render that action of the coui*t invalid if not taken in term, we need not now decide, as such action was not attempted; but it should be noticed in this connection that this court in re Sloan, 5 N. M. 614, held, that an order of attachment for contempt by which a fine was imposed was valid although made out of term. See High on Ex. Legal Rem., Secs. 737, 741; 23 Am. and Eng. Enc. of Law. 599; Ames v. Kansas, 111 U. S. 460.

We are of the opinion, therefore, that the objections to the jurisdiction are not well taken.

We come now to the question whether the governor of the Territory had the power to remove the relator from ■office as he attempted and assumed to do.

As the court well says in Territory v. Ashenfelter, supra, “It is a very delicate task for one department of the government to pass upon the acts -of either of the others. It is, however, unavoidable, as the law has imposed upon the judiciary duties it cannot and should not seek to escape, but rather' to discharge them with the highest regard for the other departments, and with the -single purpose to maintain only those principles of law firmly established by the weight of authority and well founded in justice.” It is fortunate and gratifying that our way to a eonelus-ion o-n the highly important question before us has been well lighted from both sides by the able counsel who appeared in the cause, and especially that the full strength, of the position against which we decide has, we believe, been presented in the interesting and comprehensive brief and argument for the defendant, so that, i'f we are in error, it is not from lack of any material which might, have conduced to the opposite result. The issues were limited by the admission in the brief for the relator, if the attempted removal by the governor was valid .he had the-power to fill the vacancy thus created, and by the concession in the brief for the defendant, that unless the power of removal was conferred by Section 3 of the Act of Sept. 30,. 1850, establishing a territorial form of government for-New Mexico, commonly known here as the Organic Act, it does not, for the purposes of this case, exist.

We have not, therefore, considered and do not decide-whether the governor had the right to remove the relator on the charges made against him under the statute law of the Territory.

We might properly, perhaps, apply the doctrine of stare decisis in this case on the authority of Territory v. Ashenfelter, supra, The case of Field v. The People, 3 Ill. 79, was given great weight by the court in the Ashenielter case, to which it was well entitled by virtue of the-high standing of the judge who rendered the decision. But it is urged, with much force, that the governor of a state-stands in widely different relations to its people, even when the same language is used to prescribe them, from those-held by the governor of a Territory of the United States-toward its people.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.M. 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-new-mexico-ex-rel-hubbell-v-armijo-nm-1907.