Court Opinion

ID: 8018341
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:07:30.303554+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:42.609390
License: Public Domain

GRAVES, J.
The facts of this case are so succinctly, briefly and fairly stated by counsel for respondent McKay, that I adopt their statement. Such statement reads:
“This is a proceeding by quo warranto, brought by the Attorney-General against William M. McKay, respondent, to require said respondent to show by what authority he holds and exercises the duties of the office of official stenographer of Division No. Two of the Circuit Court of Buchanan county, Sixth Judicial Circuit.
“The undisputed facts as disclosed by the information, and answer and return are as follows:
“At the general election held in November, 1908, one Lucién J. Eastin was duly elected judge of Division No. Two of said court for a term of six years, and duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties on January 1, 1909, following his election. On the fourth day of January, 1909, Judge Eastin duly appointed Harry K. Ford as official stenographer of said court, and said Ford on said date qualified as such stenographer and from said date to the fourth day of January, 1913, has been the .qualified and acting official stenographer of said court.
“On January 3, 1911, Judge Eastin resigned his office, and on said date William K. Amick was ap*253pointed as Ms successor by the Governor. Judge Amick qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties and so continued until the 31st day of December, 1912, when judgment of ouster was- entered against him in a proceeding similar to this in this court. During the time Judge Amick served as such judge the said Ford continued to serve as stenographer without any appointment other than that made by Judge Eastin.
“At the general election held on November 6, 1912, Charles H. Mayer was elected to said office, to fill the vacancy caused by Judge Eastin’s resignation, to hold for the remainder of the term ending on December 31, 1914, and his right to the office for the, time stated was confirmed by this court in the case above mentioned.
“On the first day Judge Mayer held said court, to-wit, January 4, 1913, he appointed the respondent, McKay, as official stenographer for said court, duly entered of record in said court an order to that effect, and the respondent duly qualified and since said time has been acting as such stenographer.
“The case is for determination on the motion filed by information for judgment on the pleadings.”
The statute under which appointments are made in Buchanan county, reads:
“For the purpose of preserving the record in all cases for the information of the court, jury and parties, and for expediting the public business, the judges of the circuit courts of the State of Missouri, for counties having a population of more than forty-five thousand and less than one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants, shall appoint an official stenographer for each court or each division of said circuit court, who shall be well skilled in the art of stenography, and shall have had at least three years’ actual practice in court reporting. Such stenographer shall be a sworn officer of the court, and shall hold his office during the *254term of the judge appointing him.” [R. S. 1909, sec. 11244.]
The last clause of this section “and shall hold his office during the term of the judge appointing him” is the real hone of contention. Other side suggestions, if necessary, will he noted in the course of the opinion.
Ambiguous Statute. I. That there is an ambiguity in this statute is clearly evidenced hy the well defined diverse views of contending counsel, as well as the diverse views members of this court. We usually do not differ where the legislative act is clear and unambiguous. This statute is uncertain, indefinite and ambiguous. In such case there is at least one well defined preliminary rule of construction. This preliminary rule is stated in 23 American and English Encyclopedia of Law, p. 409, thus:
. “If a statute or constitutional provision fixing or limiting the duration of an official term is ambiguous, that interpretation should be followed which limits the term to the shortest time.”
So too 29 Cyc. 1396 announces the rule thus:
“Where the statute fixing the term is uncertain, that interpretation should be followed which limits the term to the shortest period.”
The same idea is expressed by Mechem on Public Officers (Ed. of 1890), paragraph 390, in this language: “Where a constitutional provision prescribing the term of a public officer is uncertain or doubtful in its construction, that interpretation will be adopted which limits the term to the shortest time.” This rule may have some application to the case at bar as we proceed later to discuss this statute. It is at least a sidelight in the construction of a statute which we think is ambiguous as to the actual term of the office attempted to be created. The language of the statute is such that we must try to seek the legislative intent from its face. This act we take next.
*255Term of office: Court Stenographer. II. We come now to the statute itself. It says ‘ ‘ and shall hold his office during the term of the judge appointing him.” Does this mean that the stenogra-P^er goes out when the judge making the appointment goes out, or does it nlean that stenographer holds for the term for which the appointing judge was elected? Judges, of the circuit court are elected for a term of sis years, and if the statute means that his appointment holds for that term, irrespective of the holding by the judge himself, the respondent has no standing, here. If, on the other hand, the statute means that the stenographer shall only hold so long as the appointing judge holds, then McKay is right and the -relator wrong. What is meant by ‘ ‘ the term of the judge appointing him” as used in the statute? An answer solves the case. To my mind one’s term of office does not necessarily refer to the time, in years, for which he was elected. That elective term may be sooner terminated. Death may terminate it. Resignation may terminate it.' Removal may terminate it. However the elective term may be terminated, in ordinary parlance we speak of the time actually served, as “tho term” of the particular officer. That which remains we speak of as “the term” of his legal successor. Had the Legislature desired to fix the term of the stenographer more definitely it no doubt would have done so. That body knew what we all know, that the court stenographer is much more closely connected with the judge than any other official. He receives the dictations and writes the official and other letters of the judge. The judge must have confidence in him, or he is at a loss to know what to do in signing bills of exceptions wherein there is a dispute. In fact, above all others, the stenographer is and should be closer to the judge than any other court official. These things the lawmakers knew when they enacted the law now up for construction. The lawmaking body never intended *256tliat there should be a court stenographer not in full accord with the judge then presiding over the court. The language used may be ambiguous and of doubtful meaning, when read in cold type, but the intent to my mind is plain. That intent was that the stenographer appointed by any individual judge should only serve so long as that judge served. If by death “his term” was ended, the stenographer appointed by him went' with him. So too in case of resignation or removal. In this case when Judge Eastin resigned, his, Eastin’s, term expired. He had no further term of service. With his term¿ likewise expired the term of his stenographer', Mr. Ford. If Ford was permitted to hold on longer it was a pure matter of grace, and not a matter of law. Judge Amick could have appointed his successor. Because Judge Amick did not see fit so to do, does not preclude Judge Mayer from naming his own stenographer. The legal vacancy was there when Judge Mayer assumed office. This statute never contemplated that the sitting judge should not have a stenographer of his own choosing. This, without reference to what his'predecessor in office had done during “the term” of his service.
Counsel for respondent have carefully collected a mass of correlative matter showing that the trend of legislative thought is along the line above suggested. We have compared the statutes and feel that counsel speak correctly. They say:
“The Legislature of this State has been careful in nearly every instance to give the appointing power the right to remove an appointee at pleasure.
“This is true of the assistants and appointees of the Attorney-General. [Sec. 971.]
“It is also true of the assistants, clerks, and stenographers appointed by the circuit attorney. [Sec. 980.]
“Of the assistant prosecuting attorneys. [Secs. 1028-1033.]
*257. “Of the bank commissioner’s clerks and stenographers. [Sec. 1074.]
“Of all officers and employees appointed by tlie managers of State Institutions except superintendents. [Sec. 1387.]
“Of game commissioners’ deputies. [Sec. 6566.]
“Of the food and drug commissioners’ deputies and clerks. [Sec. 6608.]
“Of the superintendent of insurance. [Sec. 6880.]
“Of clerks of justices of the peace. [Sec. 7620.]
“Of the deputies of constables. [Sec. 7631.]
“Of assistant State librarians. [Sec. 8158.]
“Of stenographers of judges of the Supreme Court. [Sec. 11267.]
“Of stenographers of courts, having jurisdiction of felonies in counties or cities having over 100,000 inhabitants. [Sec. 11259.]
“Of sténographers of courts in counties and cities having 350,000 inhabitants or more. [Sec. 11231.]
“And it has been declared to be the law in this State that where no provision is made as to the term of tenure of an appointive officer, he holds his appointment at the pleasure of the appointing officer. [State ex rel. v. Gordon, 238 Mo. 168; Horstman v. Adamson, 101 Mo. App. 119.]
“It would, therefore, be strange indeed if the Legislature had made an exception in this respect and made the stenographer not only not subject to removal by the appointing judge but fixing his term absolutely at six years.”
In the construction of this ambiguous statute these are glaring facts which we must meet. The trend of all of these statutes is to give the appointing power the right to at least designate the appointee. Not only so, but the trend is, that the subordinate must be one selected by the acting chief, who has the appointing power. In other words the man serving un*258der a bead of a department mast be one in fall sympathy with the head. There is no closer relationship than the one between the judge and his stenographer. The Legislatare never intended by this statate to foist the stenographer appointed by one jndge apon his successor in office, it matters not how that saccession was occasioned.
This law came ander review in the case of State ex rel. Tilley v. Ford, 41 Mo. App. l. c. 127. Discassing this law, Gina, J., said:
“For the purpose of expediting the business of the courts it is there provided, in section 1 of the act, that, ‘The judges- of the circuit courts of the State of Missouri, for counties having a population of more than forty-five thousand and less than one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants, shall appoint an official stenographer for each court, or each division of said circuit court, who shall be well skilled in the art of stenography, and shall have had at. least three years’ actual practice in court reporting. Such stenographer shall be a sworn official of the court and shall hold his office during the term of the judge appointing him.’ From the reading of this section it seems clearly the intention of the Legislature: First, to create the office of court stenographer, and, secondly, to limit the occasion proper for his appointment to counties, where circuit courts are held, having a population of not less than forty-five thousand or more than one hundred and fifty thousand. It is equally clear that the design was to have as many of these officers as there were, or should be, circuit courts, or divisions thereof, in said counties, and, further, in each case that such court stenographer be commissioned by the individual judge who may at the time preside over such court, or over such division thereof.”
It is the last clause of the quotation that has special significance here — i. e. “in each case that such court stenographer be commissioned by the individual *259judge who may at the time preside over such court, or over such division thereof. ’ ’ It is true that the question of the stenographer’s term of office was not directly at issue in this case, hut the opinion shows the mental attitude of- that court as to the construction which should be given the statute. The idea expressed is that the stenographer should be an appointee of the judge at the time presiding over the court. Case law upon the question is sparse, because of the peculiar and ambiguous wording of our statute. We are thoroughly impressed with the idea that the clause of the statute “shall hold his office during the term of the judge appointing him” means the term actually served by such appointing judge, rather than the term of six years for which he may have been elected.
Some sidelights may be found in the impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson. At that time the law relating to Cabinet officers provided that they ‘ ‘ shall hold their office respectively for and during the term of the President by whom they have been appointed, and for one month thereafter.” Edwin M. Stanton was appointed Secretary of War by President Lincoln during Lincoln’s first term. No reappointment was made for the second term of President Lincoln, and, as we know, he was murdered shortly after the beginning of his second term. Andrew Johnson under the Constitution succeeded to the Presidency and shortly thereafter removed Stanton and appointed a successor. This act was one charge in the bill of impeachment. In giving his opinion upon the case against Johnson, Senator Fessenden, Vol. 3, pp. 20 and 21, of “Trial of Andrew Johnson” thus clearly states the situation:
“Again, does Mr. Stanton, come within the proviso? What is the term therein fixed and established for the Secretary of War? Specifically, the term of the President by whom he was appointed, and one month thereafter. ITe was appointed by President Lin-*260coin, and the term of President Lincoln existing at the time of his appointment expired on the 4th of March, 1865. Can any one doubt that had a law been in existence on that day similar to that of March 2, 1867, Mr. Stanton would have gone out of office in one month thereafter? The two terms of Mr. Lincoln were as distinct as if held by different persons. Had he been then reappointed by Mr. Lincoln, and confirmed, and a law similar to that of March 2, 1867, been then in existence, is it not equally clear that he would have again gone out of office in one month after the expiration of Mr. Lincoln’s second term? If so, the only question would have been whether Mr. Lincoln’s term expired with him, or continued notwithstanding his death, until the 4th day of March, 1869, although he could no longer hold and execute the office, and although his successor, elected and qualified according to all of the forms of the Constitution, was, in fact and in law, President of the United States. How could all that be, and yet that successor be held to have no term at all? To my apprehension, such a construction of the law is moré and worse than untenable.
“The word ‘term” as used in the proviso, when considered in connection with the obvious design to allow to each person holding the presidential office the choice of his own confidential advisers, must, I think, refer to the period of actual service. Any other construction might lead to strange conclusions. For instance, suppose a President and Vice President should both die within the first year of the term for which they were elected. As the law now stands, a new election must be held within thirty-four days preceding the first Wednesday of December then next ensuing. A new term of four years would commence with the inauguration of the new President before the term for which the preceding President was elected had expired. Do the heads of departments appointed by that preceding President hold their offices for three years of the *261term of the new President and until one month after the expiration of the term for which such preceding president was elected? Such would he the consequence of giving to the word ‘term’ any other meaning than the term of actual service. It must he evident, therefore, that the word ‘term’ of the President, as used in the proviso, is inseparable from the individual, and dies with him. ”
In the same volume, p. 322, Senator Trumbull, among other things said:
"The clause of the Constitution which declares that the President shall hold his office during the term of four years does not mean that the person holding the office shall not die, resign, or be removed during that period, but to fix a term or limit during which he may, but beyond which he cannot, hold the office. If he die, resign, or be removed in the meantime, manifestly the term, so far as he is concerned, has come to an end. The term of the presidential office is four years, but the Constitution expressly provides that different persons may fill the office during that period, and in popular language it is called the term of the person who happens for the time being to be in the office. It is just as impossible for Mr. Stanton to now serve as Secretary of War.for the term of the President by whom he was appointed as it is for Mr. Lincoln to serve out the second term for which he was elected. Both the presidential term of the President who appointed Mr. Stanton and the person who made the appointment have passed away, never to return; but the presidential office remains, filled however, by another person and not Mr. Lincoln.”
So we say in this case that the law of Missouri contemplates, an elective term of six years for a circuit judge, but such term for different reasons may be filled by one or more persons. We also say that the official term of the stenographer for such judge is the term of actual service of the appointing judge, *262and not the elective term of six years. Such construction to my mind comports with the general spirit of all our statutes bearing upon similar appointments and is founded in good reason. Under these views, the writ should he denied. It is so ordered.
Woodson, Bond and Paris, JJ., concur; Lamm, G. J., Brown and Walker, JJ., dissent in an opinion by Brown, J.