State ex rel. Atkins v. Fortner

EbviN, J.

The contention of the appellees that this appeal cannot be heard because the appellants have not brought to this Court a case on appeal is untenable. The record proper is before us. It contains the case agreed, which is equivalent to a special verdict. McIntosh: North Carolina Practice and Procedure in Civil Cases, sections 518 and 679. The exception to the judgment suffices to raise the legal question whether the facts embodied in the case agreed support the adjudication that Fortner and Buchanan rather than Wray and Powell are entitled to occupy the posts on the Board of Education of Yancey County until the regular meeting of the General Assembly in 1953. Bond v. Bond, 235 N.C. 754, 71 S.E. 2d 53; In re Hall, 235 N.C. 697, 71 S.E. 2d 140; Development Co. v. Parmele, 235 N.C. 689, 71 S.E. 2d 474.

The two sets of rival claimants base their respective claims to the offices at issue upon the statute codified as G.S. 115-42, which reads as follows: “All vacancies in the membership of the board of education in such counties by death, resignation, or otherwise shall be filled by the action of the county executive committee of the political party of the member causing such vacancy until the meeting of the next regular session of the General Assembly, and then for the residue of the unexpired term by that body. If the vacancy to be filled by the General Assembly in such eases shall *268have occurred before tbe primary or convention held in such county, then in tbat event nominations for sucb vacancies shall be made in tbe manner hereinbefore set out, and sucb vacancy shall be filled from tbe candidates nominated to fill sucb vacancy by tbe party primaries or convention of sucb county. All vacancies tbat are not filled by tbe county executive committee under tbe authority herein contained within thirty days from tbe occurrence of sucb vacancies shall be filled by appointment by tbe State Board of Education.”

It may be argued with much reason tbat tbe Constitution does not permit tbe Legislature to vest tbe power to appoint public officers in nongovernmental bodies or persons, and tbat in consequence tbe provision of this statute which purports to authorize tbe county executive committee of a political party to fill a vacancy in tbe membership of a county board of education is invalid. See in this connection: 67 C.J.S., Officers, section 30, and eases cited. We by-pass this interesting question without discussion or decision, and take it for granted without so adjudging for tbe purpose of this particular appeal only tbat tbe statute codified as G.S. 115-12 is valid in all respects.

This course imposes upon us tbe task of construing G.S. 115-42 in conjunction with G.S. 115-37 and G.S. 115-38. When tbe two statutes last cited are read aright, they provide tbat tbe political parties of tbe State shall nominate at their county primaries or conventions in each even numbered year candidates for membership on county boards of education, and tbat tbe General Assembly shall elect from tbe candidates so nominated at its regular session in tbe ensuing odd numbered year members of county boards of education for terms of office beginning on tbe first Monday in April of tbe year in which they are elected and lasting for two years.

When G.S. 115-42 is reduced to simple terms, it specifies tbat whenever a vacancy occurs in tbe membership of a county board of education, tbe resulting unexpired term is divided into two parts; tbat tbe first part begins as soon as tbe vacancy occurs and continues until the meeting of tbe next regular session of tbe General Assembly, and the second part embraces all of the unexpired term thereafter remaining; tbat tbe power to fill tbe vacancy for tbe first part of tbe unexpired term resides in tbe county executive committee of tbe political party of tbe former member whose office is vacant during tbe thirty days next succeeding tbe occurrence of tbe vacancy, but passes to and vests in tbe State Board of Education in case tbe appropriate county executive committee does not fill tbe vacancy for tbe first part of tbe unexpired term within tbe thirty days specified; and tbat tbe power to fill tbe vacancy for tbe second part of tbe unexpired term belongs to tbe General Assembly exclusively.

*269The second sentence of G.S. 115-42 does not undertake to compel the county executive committee or the State Board of Education to fill vacancies in the membership of the county board of education for the first part of the unexpired term from the candidates nominated by the party primaries or conventions of the county. According to its express wording, this sentence applies only to vacancies “to be filled by the General Assembly,” i.e., vacancies for the second parts of unexpired terms. If this plain language should be distorted by construction from its true meaning to cover vacancies for the first parts of unexpired terms, such construction would largely nullify the general policy of the law to fill vacancies in public offices as soon as practicable after they occur in so far as vacancies in the membership of county boards of education are concerned because it would rob county executive committees and the State Board of Education of all power to fill vacancies in county boards of education antedating county primaries or conventions until such primaries or conventions name candidates for such vacancies. In addition, such construction would preclude county executive committees from filling any vacancies in the membership of county boards of education other than those occurring during the thirty days next preceding the holding of county primaries or conventions.

Under the relevant statutory provisions, the determinative fact in this case is the time of the occurrence of the vacancies in the membership of the Board of Education of Yancey County. If the vacancies occurred within thirty days preceding 29 April, 1952, the Democratic Executive Committee of Yancey County was authorized to fill them for the first parts of the unexpired terms, and its appointees, Fortner and Buchanan, are entitled to hold the offices at issue until the meeting of the next regular session of the General Assembly; but if the vacancies occurred more than thirty days before 29 April, 1952, the State Board of Education was empowered to fill them for the first parts of the unexpired terms, and its appointees, "Wray and Powell, are entitled to occupy the offices in dispute until the meeting of the next regular session of the General Assembly.

A public office is vacant when it is without an incumbent who has the legal right to exercise its functions. Board of Education, of Newark v. Civil Service Commission of New Jersey, 98 N.J.L. 417, 119 A. 875. The vacancy in the office occurs at the time of the happening of the event which is the cause of the vacancy. Attorney-General ex rel. O’Hara v. Montgomery, 275 Mich. 504, 267 N.W. 550; State ex rel. Grant v. Eaton, 114 Mont. 199, 133 P. 2d 588; State ex rel. Austin v. Superior Court of Whatcom County, 6 Wash. 2d 61, 106 P. 2d 1077.

The facts revealed by the case agreed show that Bennett and Eadford engaged in double office holding in violation of Article XIV, Section 7, of the North Carolina Constitution, which makes this declaration: “No *270person who stall bold any office or place of trust or profit under tbe United States, or any department thereof, or under this state, or under any other state or government, shall hold or exercise any other office or place of trust or profit under the authority of this State, or be eligible to a seat in either house of the General Assembly: Provided, that nothing herein contained shall extend to officers in the militia, justices of the peace, commissioners of public charities, and commissioners for special purposes.”

When Bennett violated the constitutional prohibition against double office holding by accepting a second office under the State, i.e., the mayoralty of the town of Burnsville, without surrendering his first office under the State, i.e., his membership on the county board of education, he automatically and instantly vacated his office on the county board of education, and he did not thereafter act as either a de jure or a de facto officer in performing functions of a member of the county board of education because he had neither right nor color of right to that office. Edwards v. Board of Education, supra; S. v. Long, 186 N.C. 516, 120 S.E. 87; Whitehead v. Pittman, 165 N.C. 89, 80 S.E. 976.

When Radford violated the constitutional prohibition against double office holding by accepting a second office under the State, i.e., membership on the county board of education, without surrendering his first office under the United States, i.e., the postmastership at Cane River, his attempt to qualify as a member of the county board of education was absolutely void, and he did not act as either a de jure or a de facto officer in performing functions of a member of the county board of education because he had neither right nor color of right to that office. Edwards v. Board of Education, supra.

Since Bennett forfeited the legal right to exercise the functions of the first office in controversy by accepting the mayoralty of the Town of Burnsville, the vacancy in that office occurred on 5 July, 1951, when that event took place; and since Radford never possessed the legal right to exercise the functions of the second office in controversy, the vacancy in that office occurred on 31 August, 1951, when his supposed predecessor, Ayers, resigned.

It necessarily follows that Wray and Powell are lawfully entitled to occupy the two posts on the county board of education until the regular session of the General Assembly in 1953, and that the judgment to the contrary must be reversed.

We have not overlooked the assertion contained in the brief of the appellees Fortner and Buchanan that the members of the Democratic Executive Committee of Yancey County are laymen not well versed in the law; that consequently they had no knowledge of the existence of the vacancies involved in this case until 9 April, 1952, when the decision in *271Edwards v. Bo.ard of Education, supra, was banded down; and tbat tbeir appointments ought to be adjudged valid because they acted with dispatch after they acquired knowledge of the existence of the vacancies.

This is simply a new attack on the old legal principle that ignorance of the law excuses no man. Few laws would be observed if ignorance of the law were an acceptable excuse. The eminent English jurist and statesman John Selden expressed this truth in these words three centuries ago; “Ignorance of the law excuses no man; not that all men know the law, but because ’tis an excuse every man will plead, and no man can tell how to refute him.”

Judgment reversed.