Trent v. State ex rel. Smith

259 S.W.2d 657, 195 Tenn. 350, 31 Beeler 350, 1953 Tenn. LEXIS 348
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 259 S.W.2d 657 (Trent v. State ex rel. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trent v. State ex rel. Smith, 259 S.W.2d 657, 195 Tenn. 350, 31 Beeler 350, 1953 Tenn. LEXIS 348 (Tenn. 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gailor

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On October 29, 1952, this suit was instituted in the name of the State on relation of the District Attorney General of the 20th Judicial Circuit, against Grover Lee Trent, Circuit and Criminal Clerk of Hamblen County, Tennessee, to remove said Clerk from office, declare a vacancy in said office, and to appoint a successor pro tempore. Among other things, the petition alleged that Defendant had been indicted on September 15, 1952, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee, Northeastern Division at Greeneville, for a felony; that he had pleaded guilty on said indictment; and that he had been convicted and placed on probation. The prayer of the petition is that Defendant be suspended or removed from office because of the conviction of a felony, and that a successor be appointed to fill the vacancy in office so created.

The summons issued against Defendant on said petition and he accepted service thereon; filed an answer to [353]*353said petition, in which he denied that a canse of action was therein stated against him; denied that he had been* convicted as alleged; and asserted his right to continue to hold office as such Circuit and Criminal Court Cleric.

The cause was heard by the Honorable Shelburne Ferguson, Judge of the Circuit Court of Hamblen County, and the Honorable Thomas H. Bogan, Judge of the Criminal Court of Hamblen County, sitting together and on November 15, 1952, they delivered their joint judg-. ment, which at the reguest of the Defendant, contained their findings of fact.

The two Judges found that the Defendant, upon a plea of guilty, in the United States District Court, had been convicted of a felony for violation of the Mann Act, 18 U. S. C. A. Section 2421 et seq. and placed on probation for a period of 18 months.

The Court further found that to permit the Defendant to continue to .act as Clerk, after conviction of the felony, would subject the Court, the Judges and the public to ridicule and embarrassment, and hamper the due administration of justice; and that due to said conviction, under the Constitution and statutes of Tennessee, the Defendant was incompetent to hold the public office of Clerk, and was subject to removal by the Court; and accordingly decreed that said Defendant be removed from office, and that a vacancy in said office be declared .and a successor pro tempore be appointed.

After his motion for new trial was overruled, Defendant appealed to this Court by a proceeding which he defines as an appeal “in accord with Chancery procedure’’ (brief p. 7).

The relator has made motion to dismiss the appeal as prayed, on the ground that it is unauthorized and improper on a proceeding of this sort. It is first [354]*354necessary, therefore, for ns to consider this motion to which the Defendant has not seen fit to reply.

In view of the allegation of the petition, which is admitted, that this proceeding was commenced by the District Attorney General after written request of the Judges of the Circuit and Criminal Courts of Hamblen County, and in view of the statutes invoked by the Judges for their judgment below, we hold that this was not a proceeding under the Ouster Law, Code, Secs. 1877-1902, but was a summary proceeding for the removal of a disqualified clerk of the Court under Code, Secs. 10076-10081, pertinent parts of which Sections are as follows:

10076. The court may remove its clerk upon conviction of a misdemeanor in office or of a felony # # * ’
‘ ‘ 10079. The court may direct the district attorney to file and prosecute the charges, if thought proper, and .may suspend the clerk and appoint .a clerk pro témpore * * *.
' “10077. Immediately upon indictment found against any clerk for a felony or misdemeanor in office, the court of which he is clerk may suspend him from office and appoint a clerk pro tempore, until a final decision can be had, who shall be entitled to the fees and perquisites of office during the suspension. ’ ’

Bearing in mind that the foregoing sections of the Code are based on, and in language identical with Acts of the Legislature passed in 1794, 1801, and 1835, we find that the question presented by the motion to dismiss the appeal was decided in the case of Ragsdale v. State, 1852, 32 Tenn. 416, [Reprint page 247], That case presented a motion by the Attorney General before the Judge of the Circuit Court against the Clerk of the Court, to require him to account for certain collections of county [355]*355and state revenue. The Clerk failed so to account; the Judge removed the Clerk from office, and appointed a successor pro tempore. The ousted clerk then undertook to “appeal in error” to the Supreme Court, and in dismissing- the appeal in error, this Court said:

“But we think that the action and order of the court, removing its clerk for any legal cause, and appointing another in his stead, cannot he considered a suit and judgment, in the sense of the statute giving the appeal and error. It is more in the nature of a proceeding in contempt, from which no appeal will lie. The power of a court to remove its clerk for legal and sufficient cause, of which, in the first instance, it is to be the judge, is to be considered as absolute and peremptory. It is indispensable to the proper and efficient administration of the business of the court. If the court err in the exercise of this inherent and necessary power, the clerk is not without remedy. He is entitled to a mandamus to be restored to his office, or to a writ of error to cause the proceedings to be revised, and reversed if erroneous. The writ of error will lie at the common law, independent of the statute, to revise the proceeding; it being the final order and judgment of a court of record, proceeding according to the course of the common law. If the appeal in .error were allowed, it would have the effect to suspend the judgment of removal, and continue the clerk in office, pending the appeal. He may have been removed as a public defaulter, or for other odious and flagrant cause that would render it still more inconvenient and prejudicial to the public interest that he he continued in office; yet, if the appeal will lie, he may, at his own option, suspend the judgment, and continue in office until the appeal in [356]*356error be determined, and the conrt be powerless to rid itself of the incumbrance. Such a practice cannot be tolerated, unless it were expressly declared by statute. The appeal in error will lie only where it is given by the statute; and we are satisfied, as before stated, that a case like this is not within either the letter or intendment of the statutes which give the appeal and error.
“The order and judgment of the court, removing’ its clerk, are absolute and effectual. The office becomes thereby vacated, and it is competent for the courts to fill it by a pro tempore appointment as directed by the Statute.” Ragsdale v. State, 32 Tenn. 416 [Reprint pages 247, 249-250].

The decision of the Court in the Ragsdale case is consistent with several other early cases, and explained by them. Hardin County Court v. Hardin, 7 Tenn. 291, [Reprint page 233]; Sevier v. Justices, 7 Tenn. 146, [Reprint page 268]; Garner v. Carroll, 15 Tenn. 365, [Reprint page 239]; Evans v.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W.2d 657, 195 Tenn. 350, 31 Beeler 350, 1953 Tenn. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trent-v-state-ex-rel-smith-tenn-1953.