Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

THEATBYORNEYGE~~~~~~ OF TEXAS AUNITINin. TEXANI WILL WILSON ATTORNRW GRNERAL . . . October 23, 1958 Hon. John R. Coffee County Attorney Howard County Re: Date on which a per- Big Spring, Texas son elected to fill an unexpired term In the office of County Attorney Is entitled ,Dear Mr. Coffee: to take office. You have requested an opinion on the following question: “When a candidate for the office of County Attorney 1s elected to fill the unexpired term, 1s he entitled to take office ImedIately upon qualifying after the general election in November or does he take offlce on January lst?” I Article V, Section 21 of the Conetltutlon provides that*ln cam of vacancy In the office of County Attorney, the Comla~ionera Court of the county ahall have the power to ap- . point a County Attorney “until the next general election.” A blmllar provision Is contained in Article 2355, ~Revlsed Civil I Statutes. Attorney General’s Opinion No. WW-426 (1958) held, uiider slailar conetltutlonal and etatutory provisions, that a pereon elected to an unexpired term In the office of Sheriff la entitled to qualify and assume the office as soon as the results of the election have been officially canvassed by the Coraisalonars Court under Article 8.34 of the Election Code. This holding al%o applies to the office of County Attorney. In reaching the foregoing conclusion, both in Opla- iolp HW-426and the present oplnlon, we have given consideration to Article 17 of the Revised Clvll~Statutes, which reads In i part as followa: “Art. 17. Date to qualify.--After each general election, those who are elected to the various county and precinct offices shall quall- fy by taklng the official oath, and entering upon _. i Non. John R. Coffee, page 2 (VW-516) rad usumlng the dutlea of their P8BVoCtlV8 offices on the flret day of Januarsr followl!%z tie last gethera elective, or as s&on thora-- after 8s posrlblo. l * + Ue are of the opinion that thla statute applier only to the cOmmen0ementof regular term6 of office and does not apply to the date on uhloh persona llbcted to fill unexpired terms may aommb offloe. Article 17.1s a codification of an adt of the Legi818ture pasled in 1921 (Acts 1921, p. g6), which uas a m-enactment of a prior act passed in 1917 (Acts 1917, p. 351) with a change In the date on which the electees wer4 to take offloe. While the 1921 act does not expressly refer to the 1917 act, It is In Identical language except for changing th4 dat4 from the first day of becember to the first day of and laaking one or two minor changes in wording. Both In JY 191 and 1921, as well a8 In 1925 when Art1010 17 vaf4 en- acted a8 a part of the Revised Civil Statutes, the regular tens of elective county and precinct offices was two yearo. Prior to 1917 there had been no constitutional or statutory provision ?ixing the date on which the regular term wae to comaenoo. The absence of any provlslon fixing the oossnemce- ment of the term was discussed In Tom v. ?3e 721 (Tei.Clv.App. 1915, error raf. 7TIni&% 2: :I% noted Into possible dates which might be taken as the time at vlrjch the regular term comenced, one being the date of the l offloer80 qualification and the other being at the time the return4 of the election iere osnvassed. The court stated that It belimed~the better rule to b0 the date of canvassing the retarnl but did not Wd’a flrmholdlng on the ques,tion. .’ Neither of these twb dates was corpletalp eatlb- faotory for the beglnnlhg of a regular term. If the date of qualif%oation was to be taken be the comnencemqnt of the torn, the commencementand tenlnatlon of succeeding term could be defemed b$ the nerly elected officer~s delaying to qualify a8 soon a0 he was entitled to do so, thereby ruccesslvely and cumulatively deforrlng the cosmncbment of rabobquent t4v. On the other hand, adoption of the fiat4 of completing the’ election as the beglnalng of the term would result In in- creasing or decreasing the .two-year term by a few da@, de- * e pending on the date of the alectlon, which could range from November 2 through November 8, and the corresponding date of canvass. Thls.was the state of the law when the Legislature passed the 1917 act. There was a need for a~statute fixing the beginning of regular terms on a definitely stated day not only Hon. John R. Coffee, page 3 (~-516) to eliminate the confusion as to which of the possible dates mentioned In Tom v. Klepper was the correct one but also to avoid the defects Inherent In each of those dates.%‘here was not In 1917, nor is there now, any such need with respect to unexpired terms. The data on which a person elected to fill an unexpired term takes office cannot affect the duration either of that term or of the succeeding full term. Where the date of aommencementof the full term Is fixed at a sPOClf- I~calendar date, the unexpired term ends on the date the suc- ceeding full term begins. In the absence of a provlslon fixing a speolflc date for commencementof regular terms, the unexplrad term would be only for the remainder of the full term of the elected predecessor and would not be affected by the date on which the person elected to the unexpired term wan entitled to take.offlce or did in fact aesume the office. Statutes should be construed In the light of the circumstances existing at the time of their enactment and the evil sought to be corrected. Wortham v. walker, 33 Tex. 255, 128 S.W.2d 1138 (19 7); Texas & 1. 0. R. Co. V. Ra;;road COW ml8slon, 145 Tex. 52 253 SW 2dfs6 m 34 T Dl t -4, 8 164. The. intent of’the.Leg&latuie In en~ctl~*t~e statute should be given effect even though to do so necessl- tates a departure from the literal purport of Its tarms. See 39 Tex.Jur., Statutes, 8 95 and caues cited thereunder. In the light of the foregoing discussion, we are of the opinion that the Le&ikllature had In mind the beginning of the full terms only when It enacted this statute and did not Intend for It to apply to unexpired terms. There Is another reason for concluding that the Legislature dld’not have unex- pired terms In mind when the 1917 act was passed. Prior to that act, unexpired terms in oountg and preclnct.offlces after. the general election were either nonexistent or of such short duration 48 not to warrant the attention of the Legislature. Since the terms were for only two yeara, a new set of officers was elected to the eucceedlng full terms at each general elec- tion. IS the term of the newly elected officers commenced as soon as their election was completed, there was no unexpired term then remaining in an off160 In which a vaoancf had occurred. If the full term’dld not begin untll.two years after the date on which the elected predecesror had quallflad, there could have been an qe%pind term of ~a few days still remaining after the electlOn, results were declared, but In view of the well-known fact that persons rarely lf ever aeek slection to terms of such short duration It would be unreasonablr to assumo that the Legislature had unexpired terms In mind when this statute *a8 enacted. After the 1917 act and until the time when the terpls of county sad prscinct officers were Increased to four ‘ ‘. Hon. John R. Coffee, page 4 (WU-516) years, there wae a brief unexpired ten after the general election following a vacancy in the office--the Interval bbtwoen the election and the first day of Deoomber, ex- tende4 by the 1921 act to the first day of January. It would have Won poerrlble for persons to run for and be elected to those brie? unexpired terms. State ex rdl. Heck v. Ahlere 1 N&2& 531 L 3 (laont.sup. 215 S .U.2d ~325 that Inactual uptrlence these terms were seldom If ever filled by eleotion -&ndconsequently there was no real need for fixing a tiPlo fo r lleoteo8 to take offlce.~Thls circumstance polnte to the conclusion that the LegUlature In 1921 also did not ,havo unexpired texms In mind. Assuming that the Legislature in 1921 did take cognleance of theee unexpired term8 and Intended to make the etatute apply to them, the result which the Legle- ‘~ lature Intended to acconplieh would have been to deprive the person hlected to an unexpired term of the right to occupy the office and to deny him any term at all, beoauee .the etat- ute would not have permitted him to assume the offfce until the date on vhioh the unexpired term ended and the new full term began. Ye think It Is unreasonable to assume that the Leglelatur4 Intended any such result, and If It had so ln- $onded we think It would have expressed that Intent In mdre explicit language than that used in the statute. Noreover, we are of the opinion that an attempt to make thl8 statute .applP to unaxplred terms’would have rendered It unconatltutlonal ineofar as It related to unex- pirod terms In office8 wherein the Constitution provided that appointment8 to fill vacancies were to be made until the next general election or the next general election for the office. See, e.g., Art. V, Sets. 20, 21, 23 and 28 of the Constitution. We think the clear Import of these constitutional provislone Is that the appointment 18 to be made only until the general eleotlon and that the euccessor electsd to the unexpireil tez% Is eMitled to take offlce as eoon as his electlon 18 complrted. Thle i@ %n keeping with a policy to roturn elective office8 to perrgie ohoe4n by,the people a8 Boon aa practicable. By de- ferrlng the date tin whiuh the elected 8u~c4880~ could take of- fib& to e&e later date, the Lsglelature would b0 attempting to deprive the elected eucoeeoor of a portion of his term in vlb;trtlon of the Conrtltution. Cate v. Rose, 63 Ky. (2 Dav.) 243 (1865). Where a 8tatut4 Ia eueooptSITof two different ooaetmotlone, one of uh%eh would eultaln It8 vrllditf and the oflur of uhleh Gould render It unconetltutlonal, that ;x$a.t&y~oa whloh uould.uphold Lt.8 vblldlty should be adopt.& . ., StatMOe, I 111 and oaeee olted thereunder. The forego1 oonolu8ion is not in ctinfliot wit& Andereon v. Pareley, 37?.Y.26 39 (Tbx.Clv.Anp. 1931, error . Hon. John R. Coifee, page 5 (WW-516) ref.), In which the constltutlonallty of irtlcle 17 was su6- talned. That case Involved the date on which a full term In the otfloe of County Commissioner began, and there Is nothing In the opinion to Indicate that the’ court was passing on the appllcabllity or validity of the statute with respect to un- expired terms. Having concluded that Article 17 doee not apply to unexpired.tems, we come next to the question of the time when a person elected to an unexpired term slay take Office. We are of the opinion that the provisions 3n the Constitution and Article 2355, R.C.S., llmltlng appointments until the next general election by necessary implication give the person elected to fill the remainder of the unexpired term the right to take office aa soon ae he Is elected. However, a peraonls election Is not ~corpleted until the returns of the election have been official1 canvassed. Ex parte Sanders, 147 Tex. 248, 215 S.W.2d 325 (19487. In that case th S Court construed Article 29298-1, V.&S. (now Art& l%yernonIs Election Code) as flxlng the date for the commencementof the regular terns In certain state and dletrlat offices without passing on Its ap- pllaabllltg or aonetltutlonallty with respect to unexpired tern8 or dealdlng when a person elected .to an unexpired term would be entitled to take ofilce. We are of the opinion that this rtatute wee Intended to flx the commencementof regular temo only and that It would be unoonstltutlonal under Article Iv, Soatlon 12 of the Constitution ii it did apply to unex- pired tena. While Rx parte Sanders does not rule on that @es- tlon, ,thr holding that an election 1s not oomplete until the retiarns are aanvassed would apply to all elections, whether Sor a full tern or for an unexpired term. . SUNNARY A person elected to fill an unexpired tern In ‘.. the o?flce of County Attorney IS entitled to receive a certlflaate of electloti and to qualify and take Off100 Immediately aiter the returns o? the general election at which he was elected have been aanvasaed. Your8 very truly, WILL WILSON Attorney General of Texas . Hon. John R. Cotfee, page 6’(ww;516) ‘. APPR(WED: .. 0~0. P’. Eitiaiciurn, dh&an J. C. Davla, Jr. . . . L. P..Lollar C. K. Rlcharde w;v.tippert .’ . . .. . . . .’ ‘. ., :. . . .. : . , . . .