Wilson v. . Jordan

33 S.E. 139, 124 N.C. 683, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 9, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 33 S.E. 139 (Wilson v. . Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. . Jordan, 33 S.E. 139, 124 N.C. 683, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 108 (N.C. 1899).

Opinion

The complaint in substance alleges that, under the act of 1895, chapter 75, entitled "An act to establish a criminal circuit court to be composed of the counties of Buncombe, Madison, Haywood and Henderson," the plaintiff, at the general election in November, 1896, was duly elected and qualified as clerk of said criminal court for Buncombe County for four years, and entered upon his office on the first Monday in December, *Page 434 1896, and that his term was not yet expired; that the defendant, under color of an appointment by the Judge of the "Western Criminal District Court," had entered upon, usurped and illegally taken possession of his office, and ejected him therefrom, his Honor, the judge making the appointment, claiming to act under the authority of several acts of the Legislature of 1899, viz.: the act of 27 February, entitled "An act to abolish the Criminal Circuit Court, composed of the counties of Buncombe, Madison, Haywood, Henderson and McDowell"; the act of 3 March, entitled "An act to establish the Western District Criminal Court"; and the act of 6 March, entitled "An act to abolish the Criminal Circuit, composed of the counties of Buncombe, Madison, Haywood, Henderson, and McDowell"; that none of the acts, separately or combined, had the legal effect of abolishing the office which had been given to plaintiff by the people, and out of which he had been wrongfully ousted, and he asks to be reinstated.

The defendant demurred to the complaint, claiming the office of clerk by the appointment of the judge under authority of the acts of the session of 1899, cited in the complaint.

The court sustained the demurrer, and rendered judgment (685) dismissing the complaint.

The plaintiff excepted and appealed. The Legislature of 1895, chapter 75, established criminal courts in Buncombe, Haywood, Henderson and Madison counties. These courts only had criminal jurisdiction. It was provided in that act that these counties should compose a criminal circuit, and that there should be a judge elected, styled a criminal circuit judge, who should preside over and hold these courts.

The Legislature of 1897 (chapter 6) amended the act of 1895 by giving these courts a civil as well as criminal jurisdiction, and by changing the name to "Circuit" instead of "Criminal Circuit Courts." And the same Legislature (chapter 7) created a similar court in McDowell County, with the same jurisdiction of those of Buncombe, Henderson, Haywood and Madison, and placed it in the "Circuit" with those counties, and to be held by the same judge. Under this legislation these courts were organized, a judge and clerks elected by the people. The plaintiff, being elected for the county of Buncombe, gave his bond *Page 435 and was inducted into office as clerk for a term of four years, which has not expired; and the plaintiff is still entitled to this office, unless he has been removed therefrom by the legislation of 1899.

The Legislature of 1899, by an act passed 27 February, enacts as follows: "Section 1. That the Criminal Circuit Court, composed of the counties of Buncombe, Madison, Haywood, Henderson and (686) McDowell, be, and the same are hereby, abolished"; and it provides that all the business pending in those courts be transferred to the Superior Courts of their respective counties; that on 3 March, four days thereafter, the Legislature passed another act, entitled "An act to establish the Western District Criminal Court." This act is elaborately drawn, being almost a perfect copy of the act of 1895, except as will be pointed out hereafter; and on 6 March, three days after the passage of the act to "establish the Western District Criminal Court," the Legislature passed another act, entitled "An act to abolish the Criminal Circuit composed of the counties of Buncombe, Madison, Haywood, Henderson and McDowell."

If the act of 27 February, 1899, stood alone, we would hold that it "abolished" the Criminal Court of Buncombe County, though it does not say that it abolishes this court. It says "that the Criminal Circuit Court," composed of the counties of Buncombe, Madison, Haywood, Henderson and McDowell, is abolished. If no other act had been passed reestablishing this court, the intention of the Legislature would be manifest, and it would be our duty to hold that this court was "abolished." If the Criminal Court of Buncombe County has been abolished and not restored by this legislation, the clerkship being but an incident depending on the existence of the court, it is also abolished, and the plaintiff has no office and no right to maintain this action. If it is claimed that the act of 6 March is the act that abolished this court, then the act of 3 March was passed when plaintiff was in office, and the act of 3 March legislated him out of it.

The act of 3 March, as we have said, is almost an exact copy of the act of 23 February, 1895, and, so far as the powers and (687) jurisdiction and territorial extent of the courts established by the two acts are concerned, they are the same.

The act of 1899 differs from the act of 1895 in these respects: It is extended to the counties of Burke, Surry, Yancey, Forsyth and Caldwell. It provides that the commissioners of the counties, included in this act, shall not draw less than twelve nor more than twenty-four jurors for the first week of the Superior Courts embraced in this criminal circuit. It provides a solicitor to be appointed by the judge for the most of the counties embraced in the circuit. It provides that these solicitors, so appointed by the judge of this criminal circuit, shall go *Page 436 into the Superior Courts and prosecute for the State. It increases the judge's salary from $1,800 to $2,750; and while it provides for the appointment of clerks, it fails to provide that he shall enter into bond for the discharge of his duties, and it fails to provide any fees for the clerk, except as may be provided in section 13 of the act, which is as follows: "That it shall be the duty of the board of county commissioners of each of said counties to provide for the payment of fees of the solicitor and the fees and compensation of the clerks and the sheriffs of said counties respectively, and the pay of jurors and witnesses as is now provided by law, and all other expenses incident to said court, by order on the county treasurer of said respective counties." And it only vests the court with criminal jurisdiction, as did the act of 1895, before the amendment of 1897. If there be other changes made in the act of 1895 by the act of 1889, they are of minor importance, or have escaped our attention.

All acts of the same session of the Legislature upon the same subject-matter are considered as one act, and must be construed (688) together, under the doctrine of "In pari materia." S. v. Bell, 25 N.C. 506; Black on Interpretation of Laws, sec. 86; Endlich on Interpretation of Laws, sec. 45; 20 Tex. 355. They should be consideredin pari materia, whether passed at the same session or not. Simonton v.Lanier, 71 N.C. 478; Rhodes v. Lewis, 80 N.C. 136.

Where a former act has been repealed or has expired by its limitation, when it is in pari materia, it must be considered in connection with the last act, and, if necessary, a part of it. Potter's Dwarris, 190. "It certainly appears strange," said Williams, J., in a late case, "that when an act of Parliament is per se `abolished,' it shall virtually have effect through another act. But in that case the former act was substantially reenacted. Reg. v. Merionethshire, 6 Adol. and Ellis, 343.

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.E. 139, 124 N.C. 683, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-jordan-nc-1899.