Court Opinion

ID: 3627371
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 00:07:36.987968+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:24.736069
License: Public Domain

It is conceded that the term of the successor to Judge McCarthy will not expire till December 31, 1917. I think that the term of the successor to Judge Hascall will not expire till the same time. *Page 581 
Following the resignation of Judge Van Wyck in 1897, Judge Hascall was elected in 1898 a justice of the City Court. In form, his election was for ten years; in reality, since Judge Van Wyck's term would have expired at the end of 1901, the same date marked the close of Judge Hascall's term as a de jure officer. After that, until his death in March, 1908, he was a judge defacto only.
When a de jure judge dies or resigns during his term, there exists (under the laws governing the City Court) a residue of a term to be filled for the unexpired period. When a de facto
judge dies or resigns, there exists, not a residue of a term, but a complete term. We did not hold in the Trounstine case (People ex rel. Trounstine v. Britt, 212 N.Y. 421) that out of infinite time the legislature carved successive periods of ten years, and established them as terms of office. We held that, when by election of a judge de jure a term begins, the vacancy created by his death is limited to the residue of the term thus lawfully initiated. After 1901 the continuing duty rested on the people in each odd-numbered year of choosing some one as Judge Hascall's successor, not for an uncompleted term, but for a full term. They neglected to fulfill that duty in 1903, 1905 and 1907. When, therefore, they elected a successor to Judge Hascall in 1908, the election was really to fill a vacancy that should have been filled for ten years in 1907. The result was that the person then elected became a judge de jure for a period ending December 31, 1917. Till then, there will be no vacancy.
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and that of the Special Term affirmed, without costs to either party.
MILLER, J., concurs. *Page 582