Territory of New Mexico ex rel. Ma. Sandoval v. Albright

78 P. 204, 12 N.M. 293
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1904
DocketNo. 1023
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 78 P. 204 (Territory of New Mexico ex rel. Ma. Sandoval v. Albright) 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. Ma. Sandoval v. Albright, 78 P. 204, 12 N.M. 293 (N.M. 1904).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT.

McFIE, J.

In deciding this case in the court below, the learned judge who tried the cause, held that, section 3 of chapter 27, Laws of 1903, and section 1, chapter 19, Laws of 1903, in effect, declared the office of assessor of Bernalillo county vacant. In construing these sections the court arrived at the conclusion, that it was the intention of the Legislature to declare that office vacant and therefore, although those sections do not contain a declaration to that effect, the court was of the opinion that those sections should be given, the effect of such a declaration. We cannot concur with the trial court in this conclusion.

The facts admitted by the pleadings are, that the relator Jesus Ma. Sandoval, was elected by the people of Bernalillo county at a general election held on the fourth day of November, 1902, to the office of assessor of the county; that he duly qualified on the first day of January, 1903, and entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office; that the term for which he was elected was two years from the date of his qualification, and that he did not resign, vacate or abandon the office voluntarily. It must be 'conceded therefore that Mr Sandoval was still the assessor of that county, unless the Legislature by the acts referred to declared the office vacant in express terms or clearly intended so to declara That the Legislature did not so declare in express terms, will not be denied, therefore we must examine the legislation involved with a view of ascertaining what the. intention of the Legislature was, in relation to the office of assessor of Bernalillo county, that being the only office directly involved in the case.

Chapter 27, Laws of 1903, is an act for the creation of, and government of the new county of Sandoval. It is not reasonable to take the view, that by such legislation it was the intention of the Legislature to deprive officers, elected by the people of the old county of offices held by them, and against their will and consent, unless such legislation necessarily has the effect of vacating such offices. The old county does not become a new county by the withdrawal of some of its territory; its organization remains the same, and only such changes can, of right, be made, as necessarily result from the formation of the new county. In such case, legislation relating to those holding office in the old county, should not be given the effect of declaring such office vacant, unless the intention to do so is manifest. Nothing should be left to the realm of doubt or inference, for, as was said in the case of Territory v. Ashenfelter, 4 N. M. 147, removal from office “deprives the possessor of a valuable private right.”

Section 3, chapter 27, simply provides for the election by the people of two county commissioners, one probate judge-and one assessor for the county of Bernalillo, as the same will be constituted after the taking effect of the act creating Sandoval county, and further provides for the giving of notice for such election and how the returns shall be made. There is not one word in that section declaring those offices vacant, nor is there such in the entire chapter, for that matter. This omission is very significant, inasmuch as it clearly indicates that the Legislature was acting upon the assumption and theory that the creation of the new county of Sandoval necessarily created a vacancy in the offices of all such officers of the old county as resided within the geographical limits of the new county. This seems to be a much more reasonable interpretation of the act, than that the Legislature intended to single out certain officers and declare their offices vacant in the midst of their terms, without any reason being assigned, as an exercise of a purely arbitrary power. In support of the construction given this act by the learned judge who tried the cause, reference was made to the case of Territory v. Van Gaskin, 6 Pac. 30. In this case the Supreme Court of Montana sustained a legislative act making appointments to fill vacancies, but by reference to- the act under consideration in that case, it will be found, that the act in terms declared the offices of the former commissioners vacant and then proceeded to fill the vacancies. The act was as follows:

“That the offices of county commissioners of the county of Custer be, and the said offices are, hereby declared to be vacant, and no official duty shall be performed by the persons constituting the present board of county commissioners, except to make reports . . . and that William Van Caskin, George M'. Miles and Thomas J. Ryan are hereby appointed commissioners of Custer county.”

The Legislature of Montana first declared the offices vacant, and then filled them by direct appointments., The Legislature of this Territory, however, did not declare the office of assessor of the old county vacant, but provided in one act for the election by the people of an assessor, and by a subsequent act, two days later, that the county commissioners should appoint an assessor for Bernalillo county. It is difficult to account for the failure of the Legislature to declare a vacancy in the office of assessor, except upon the theory that the Legislature was of the opinion that the holder of the office resided in the new county, and that the passage of the act creating the new county, rendered the assessor of Bernalillo county ineligible to hold the office to which he had been elected. That this was the view taken by counsel for the respondent when the answer , was prepared, appears from the following paragraph of the answer:

“Further answering, this respondent alleges that by virtue of an act entitled ‘An act to create the county of Sandoval,’ approved March 10, 1903, there was created the county of Sandoval in the Territory of New Mexico', and that the said relator at the time of the creation of said county of Sandoval was and has been for a long time and many years previous thereto', a resident of the portion of Bernalillo county which was incorporated into and made the county of Sandoval, and that by virtue of the passage of said act creating the county of Sandoval, the said relator became and was and still is a resident of the said county of Sandoval and not of the county of Bernalillo, and, therefore, the said relator ceased to be upon the passage of said act a resident of the county of Bernalillo and was disqualified from exercising the duties of the office of assessor of the said county of Bernalillo to which he had' therefore been elected.”

If then, the Legislature did not intend to declare a vacancy but only intended to provide an officer to fill a vacancy believed to exist as a necessary result of the passage of the act creating Sandoval county upon the theory that residence in the new county disqualified the assessor from continuing to hold his office, the effect is the same as if the Legislature had no power to declare or fill a vacancy. It does not,seem necessary or profitable in this case, to consider the question of the power of the Legislature, for the reason, that, however adequate the power of the Legislature might be, if the Legislature did not see fit, nor intend, to exercise the power to declare the office of assessor of Bernalillo county vacant by the legislation enacted the legal right of the incumbent elected by the people of the county is not affected by the legislation and no vacancy existed, to be filled either by election or appointment..

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Related

Albright v. Sandoval (No. 2)
216 U.S. 331 (Supreme Court, 1910)
Sandoval v. Albright
94 P. 947 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
78 P. 204, 12 N.M. 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-of-new-mexico-ex-rel-ma-sandoval-v-albright-nm-1904.