Court Opinion

ID: 8006748
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:54:01.783109+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:54.876274
License: Public Domain

Henry, J.
On the 4th day of August, 1874, the respondent was elected judge of the probate court of Lafayette county for the term of six years, and was commissioned and qualified and entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office. It is agreed that his term of office expired in August, 1880. At the general election in November, 1880, Jas. B. Hord was elected to said office, and the only question to be determined relates to the validity of that election. If it was authorized by law, Hord is entitled to the office, otherwise respondent holds under his election in 1874, and until a successor shall be duly elected and qualified.
By section 34, article 6, constitution 1875, it is provided : “ The general assembly shall establish in every county a probate court, which shall be a court of record, *424and consist of one judge, who shall be elected. Said court shall have jurisdiction over all matters pertaining to probate business, to granting letters testamentary and of administration, the appointment of guardians and curators of minors and persons of unsound mind, settling the accounts of executors, administrators, curators and guardians, and the sale or leasing of lands by administrators, curators and guardians; and also jurisdiction overall matters relating to apprentices; Provided, That until the general assembly shall provide by law for a uniform system of probate courts, the jurisdiction of probate courts heretofore established, shall remain as now provided by law.” And by section 35, article 6, constitution of 1875, it is further provided: “ Probate courts shall be uniform in their organization, jurisdiction, duties and practice, except that a separate clerk may be provided for, or the judge may be required to act, ex officio, as his own clerk.” And by subsequent legislation under these constitutional provisions, embraced in the act of April 9th, 1877, (Acts 1877, p. 229,) and the amendment thereof, as incorporated in the present Revised Statutes of 1879, page 209, section 1177, it is provided that “at the general election in the year 1878, and every four years thereafter, except as hereinafter provided, a judge of probate shall be elected by the qualified voters in every county. Said judge shall be commissioned by the Governor, and shall take the oath prescribed by the constitution for all officers, and shall, enter upon the discharge of his duties on the 1st day of January ensuing his election, and continue in office for four years, and until his successor shall be duly elected and qualified,” and by section 1192, Revised Statutes 1879, page 211, (Laws 1877, p. 23*1, § 18 amended,) it is provided that “all probate and ex officio probate judges now in office shall continue in office and discharge all the duties of judges of probate under this article until the expiration of the terms for which they were respectively elected, and shall receive in full satisfaction for their services until the expiration of the time for which *425they were elected, the compensation now provided by law, anything in this article to the contrary notwithstanding; except such ex officio probate judges as have jurisdiction of a part only of the county, in which case they shall receive the same compensation that they receive while sitting as judges of the county court, and no more; Provided, that in all counties where the county courts, or any member thereof, have hy the present existing law, probate jurisdiction, there shall be a judge of probate elected for such counties at the general election in the year 1878, and every four years thereafter; and in every county' where, under existing laws, there shall be a judge of probate whose term of office does not expire until the 1st day of January, 1881, there shall be a judge of probate elected for such county at the general election in the year 1880, who shall hold his office lor two years from said 1st day of January; and in the year 1882, and every four years thereafter, in said county, a judge of probate shall be elected.”
The sections of the constitution and statutes above quoted, are all that have any material bearing on the subject. There is no ambiguity in either of the sections of the statute. By the latter it is expressly provided that in every county, where under existing laws, there shall be a judge of probate whose term of office does not expire until the 1st day of January, 1881, there shall be a judge of probate elected for such county at the general election in the year 1880, etc. There can be no election not authorized by law. The language of section 1192 did not authorize the election of a probate judge at the November election 1880, except for those counties the terms of whose probate judges did not expire until the 1st day of January, 1881.
But it is contended that it was the intention of the legislature to provide for an election in every case where the incumbent’s term of office bad expired, either on or before the 1st day of January, 1881, and that the obligation to make such provision was imposed upon the general assembly hy the constitutional provisions above cited. Sec*426tiou 35 of the constitution requires uniformity in the organization, jurisdiction, duties and practice of the probate courts ; but all this may be attained without having an election for a probate judge in every county in the State at the same time. But, conceding that it was the intention of both the framers of the constitution and the members of the general assembly, that there should be uniformity in this respect also, we cannot give effect to that intention against the clear expression of the act of the legislature. Resort may be had to the intention of the legislature, when it can be ascertained, in the construction of an act whose phraseology is ambiguous, but when the language of the act clearly expresses a specific purpose in conflict with the alleged general intent, it would be an exercise of legislative power by the courts, to give effect to such general intent, against the express provision of the act. What would be the limit of such authority, if claimed by the courts ? Can they go outside the language of the act to ascertain that the legislature meant one thing when it declared another, and give the act a construction in harmony with such ascertained intent ? The proposition furnishes its own refutation.
The sections of the constitution on this subject are not self-enforcing. The constitution does not establish the probate courts, or the uniformity which it requires. Legislative enactments are required to carry those provisions into effect. We cannot amend section 1192 by striking the words “not” and “until” from the proviso and adding other words to make it read that “ in every county where under existing laws, there shall be a judge of probate whose term of office shall expire on or before the 1st day of January, 1881, there shall be a judge of probate elected,” etc. That such are the changes in the reading of that section necessary to support the views of the relator, is conclusive on the question under consideration. The writ is dismissed.
All concur.