Batson v. State Ex Rel. Pond

In January, 1917, respondent Batson was by Hon. S. L. Brewer, then just beginning a term of six years as judge of the Fifth judicial circuit, appointed register of the circuit court of Coosa county under authority of the Act of September 25, 1915, infra. By the Act of September 30, 1919 (Acts 1919, p. 858), the county of Coosa was taken without the Fifth circuit and attached to the Eighteenth, a new circuit. Hon. E. J. Garrison was appointed judge of the new circuit, and held office until the next election, in November, 1920, at which time Hon. W. L. Longshore was elected to fill the unexpired term. In the meantime, by the Act of August 16, 1915 (Acts 1915, p. 279), which took effect on the first Monday after the second Tuesday in January, 1917, all the jurisdiction and powers of the chancery court were conferred upon the circuit court, and the former was consolidated into the latter. Section 12 of the Act of September 25, 1915 (Acts 1915, p. 809 et seq.), provided that a register of the circuit court of each county should be appointed by the judge of the circuit, or, where there are more than one judge, by the presiding judge, sitting in equity division, as of course (section 3A, Id.). It was there (section 12) further provided that the register so appointed should perform "all the duties heretofore required of registers in chancery by law," and should "hold office for the term of the judge appointing him, but subject to removal at the pleasure of the judge by order entered on the minutes of the court." Proceeding, evidently, either upon the theory that the respondent's term of office had expired, or upon the authority of the last-quoted provision of the Act of September 25, 1915, one or both, Judge Longshore, on January 25 of the current year appointed petitioner, appellee Pond, register of the circuit court of Coosa county, and, respondent refusing to vacate the office, did on the next day spread upon the minutes an order removing respondent, no cause therefor being stated. By his application for the writ of quo warranto petitioner, appellee, sought the judgment of the court excluding respondent from office, and, as provided by section 5462 of the Code, a judgment upon petitioner's right.

As for respondent's term of office, whether that term is affected by section 163 of the Constitution, or by section 12 of the Act of September 25, 1915, alone, it was and is coextensive with the term of the judge making the appointment. That term was six years, and we apprehend that the fact that the county of Coosa has been detached from the circuit presided over by the judge who made the appointment has not affected the right of respondent to his office. The judge could not be detached from his term except by impeachment, and under the plain letter of the Constitution and statute respondent took office for a term of six years, for that was then the term of the appointing judge, and that term is as yet unexpired.

Now as to the last-quoted provision of the Act of September 25, 1915: Respondent contends that so much thereof as makes the register of the circuit court "subject to removal at the pleasure of the judge by order entered upon the minutes of the court" is *Page 319 void, as opposed to section 175 of the Constitution. Under the terms of the section just referred to "the clerks of the circuit courts, or courts of like jurisdiction," and other named county officers, "and all other county officers * * * may be removed from office for any of the causes specified in section 173 of the Constitution" — that is, impeachment before a jury, and not otherwise. Touart v. Callaghan, 173 Ala. 453,56 So. 211. We are not of the opinion that the register in chancery was, prior to the act of consolidation, a county officer within the meaning of section 175. Registers in chancery performed no service in which the counties as such had any interest. The Constitution required, not that they should reside in any county, but only that they should be "resident citizens of the district for which they are appointed" (section 163), and from an early period in the judicial history of the state down to the passage of the Act of September 25, 1915, there had been chancery divisions comprising more than one county. If, then, he was a county officer, of which county was he an officer in such case? And where was the venue of an impeachment proceeding against him? The section of the Constitution quoted last above further provided that registers in chancery should be appointed by the chancellors of their respective chancery divisions and should hold office for the term for which the chancellor making the appointment was elected or appointed. Under section 166 "registers in chancery may be removed from office * * * for cause, to be entered at length upon the minutes of the court." It must be inferred that the framers of the Constitution considered that the power of removal vested in the chancellors afforded a sufficient guaranty against the continuance in office of registers in chancery who might be guilty of the offenses denounced by section 173 as proper grounds for impeachment. Otherwise, even though it be assumed that registers in chancery were in some sort county officers (Osborn v. Henry, 200 Ala. 353, 76 So. 119), it will be hard to find any satisfactory reason for the fact that the framers of the Constitution omitted registers in chancery from the extended catalogue of county officers in section 175, where officers of far less dignity and consequence are named. "Specialia generalibus derogant," but "generalia specialibus non derogant." Now, the chancery jurisdiction in this state was not in the least impaired by the act of consolidation, and in every particular, save only in the name of the officer and in the official designation of the appointing power, the register of the circuit court is the same officer as was the register in chancery, and the Act of September 25, 1915, abundantly recognizes the fact. It is of no consequence that he is styled register of the circuit court. He is in truth and in fact register in chancery under another name. He discharges all the duties and bears all the responsibilities of a register in Chancery without change or abatement — precisely the duties and responsibilities discharged and borne by the register in chancery when the framers of the Constitution thought it well that the latter might be removed from office by the chancellor "for cause, to be entered at length upon the minutes of the court," and not otherwise. The registers of the circuit court might as well be called registers in chancery — perhaps more appropriately so, for they function only as arms and intimate parts of the court in the exercise of equity jurisdiction — a jurisdiction which the act of consolidation has preserved intact in all the principles and practice of its administration. Kimball v. Cunningham, 201 Ala. 409, 78 So. 787.

However, while we hold that registers of the circuit court are not county officers, within the meaning of section 175 of the Constitution, our judgment, based upon the considerations to which we have adverted, is that they hold office under the protection of section 166 of the Constitution, quoted above, and that so much of section 12 of the Act of September 25, 1915, as purports to make them "subject to removal at the pleasure of the judge by order entered on the minutes of the court," is too broadly expressed. It results that the order purporting to remove respondent from office was made without authority of law, in that no cause for his removal was entered at length — or at all — upon the minutes of the court.

The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and appellee's petition will be dismissed out of court.

Reversed and rendered.

All the Justices concur.

On Rehearing.