The King v. Testa

7 Haw. 201
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Haw. 201 (The King v. Testa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The King v. Testa, 7 Haw. 201 (haw 1888).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court, by

Judd, C.J.

The question before us was reserved by Mr. Justice Bickerton as follows:

[202]*202“ On the third day of January instant an indictment was presented by the Attorney-General against the defendant, and was duly found a true bill by the Chief Justice.
“Subsequently, on the same morning, I took my seat on the Bench and called upon the Attorney-General to present the indictment and take the defendant’s plea.
“The Attorney-General then stated that under the circumstances he must decline to present the indictment on the ground that by virtue of the Act of the Legislature passed at its special session, and approved November 26, 1887, entitled ‘An Act to Repeal an Act entitled an Act relating to the Justices of the Supreme Court, approved October 15, A. D. 1886, and to re-enact the laws thereby repealed,’ my commission had expired, and consequently that I had no jurisdiction to take the defendant’s plea.
“ Mr. Rosa, on behalf of the defendant, contended that the said Act was unconstitutional and void, and I thereupon under the powers conferred upon me by Section 834 of the Civil Code and of all other powers enabling me, do hereby reserve the question raised, that is to say : Is the said Act of November 26, 1887, constitutional or not ? for the consideration of the Court in Banco.
“Richard F. Bickerton,
“Justice of the Supreme Court.
“January 3, 1888.”

Mr. Justice Bickerton was appointed and commissioned as Third Associate Justice of the Supreme Court on the 28th of December, 1886. The Act of 26th November, 1887, repeals in terms the Act of 1886, in pursuance of which Justice Bickerton was appointed, and re-enacts certain statutes which by that Act were repealed, the intention of the Act of 1887 being to repeal the existing provisions of law that the Supreme Court shall consist of a Chief Justice and four Associate Justices, and to provide that-it shall consist of a Chief Justice and two Associates.

[203]*203The Constitution, Article 65, provides that the Supreme Court shall consist of a Chief Justice and not less than two Associate Justices. It is within the power of the Legislature to increase the number of Associate Justices by statute.

It is likewise within its power by statute to reduce again the number to not less than two Associate Justices, unless some appointment made under the statute authorizing the appointment of more than two Associates shall have prevented this. We presume it would be competent for the Legislature in a contingency of there being but a Chief Justice and two Associate Justices in commission, to enact that no further appointments should be made, and that they should constitute the Supreme Court. The fact that there was a Third Associate Justice in commission (Mr. Justice Bickerton) when the Act of 1887 was passed, raises the question whether this Act, which purports to destroy his office, is constitutional.

Before this Act went into effect a Fourth Associate Justice, Mr. S. B. Dole, was appointed.

The articles of the Constitution relating to the Supreme Court are from 64 to 72 inclusive. Article 65 of the Constitution prescribes that the Justices shall hold their offices during good behavior, subject to removal upon impeachment, and by the Legislature for cause, as fully set forth in the said article. This article defines the tenure of office of a Justice of the Supreme Court. It is not limited to those who happen to be in office when the Constitution was promulgated. The fundamental law creates the tenure and prescribes that whoever shall be appointed to this office thereafter shall hold during good behavior.

To claim that the Chief Justice and two of the Associate Justices shall hold office by this tenure, and that additional Justices hold subject to the will of the Legislature, would be in effect to admit that they were not Justices of the Supreme Court.

The office of a Justice of the Supreme Court is created by the Constitution, which vests the judicial power of the Kingdom in this one Supreme Court. The Constitution has placed this [204]*204Court beyond the control of the Legislature, but adds that this judicial power is also vested in inferior courts over which the Legislature has power, for it can create them and prescribe the tenure of office of the Judges of these Courts. By the 66th Article the judicial power can be distributed by the Legislature among the Supreme Court and the inferior courts; but this does not create the office of a Justice of the Supreme Court, or define the tenure by which it is to be held, nor does any article of the Constitution grant such power to the Legislature.

A Justice of the Supreme Court, when appointed, holds his office in accordance with Article 65 of the Constitution — that is, during good behavior. A statute which, in terms or by implication, prescribes any other tenure of office would be contrary to the Constitution. Suppose, for example, the Act of 1886 had read that the additional Justices should hold office only so long as the Act remained unrepealed. It would be apparent that this would make the tenure of their office at the will of the Legislature, whereas the Constitution says they shall hold office during good behavior.

But a statute of this nature would be, in effect, what is claimed for the Act of 1887 under consideration, for it undertakes by repealing the law which authorized his appointment to remove a Justice of the Supreme Court. This cannot be done, for it is not one of the methods of removal prescribed by the Constitution.

It is claimed that one Legislature cannot bind a succeeding one; and that since the Legislature of 1886 enacted the law providing for two additional Justices, the Legislature of 1887 can repeal this law.

On this question Chief Justice Marshall, of the Supreme Court of the United States, says: “ The principle asserted is that one Legislature is competent to repeal any Act which a former Legislature was competent to pass, and that one Legislature cannot abridge the powers of a succeeding Legislature. The correctness of this principle, so far as respects general legislation, can never be controverted. But if an Act be done under [205]*205a law, a succeeding Legislature cannot undo it. The’ past cannot be recalled by the most absolute power. * * * When, then¿ a law is in its nature a contract, when absolute rights have vested under that contract, a repeal of the law cannot divest these rights.” Fletcher vs. Peck, 6 Cranch, 87-148.

But without deciding whether the acceptance of an office with a definite term amounts to a contract, it is sufficient to say that the organic law of this Kingdom does not confer upon the Legislature the power to legislate upon the tenure of office of a Judge of the Supreme Court. It is not a subject within itB jurisdiction, and the Legislature is not competent to pass any law abridging it. The exerc se of such a power would be ultra vires.

At this late day no one can seriously question the wisdom of thus placing the superior judiciary in a position of complete independence of the executive or legislative branches of the Government.

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