Wilson v. Shaw

De Geaee, J.

This is an action in mandamus. The defendant Frank S. Shaw at the time of the commencement of the suit was the duly elected and qualified auditor of state of the state of Iowa and among other things is charged by law to issue warrants of the state of Iowa upon the treasurer of said state for sums due as salaries to the several district judges of the state. Plaintiff alleges “that on or about the 19th 'day of December 1917 he was duly appointed judge of the district court for the ninth judicial district of Iowa by the Hon. W. L. Harding, governor of the state of Iowa, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge C. A. Dudley * * * who had been regularly elected as judge of said judicial district for'the term of four years beginning January 1, 1915 and ending December 31, 1918.” Plaintiff was duly commissioned as district judge and took the required oath of office. Following the appointment, plaintiff was duly'eleeted at the next general election (November *305, 1918) as judge of tbe said distriet court for the remainder of the unexpired term for which he was appointed.

On the 12th day of April 1917 the thirty-seventh general assembly of the state of Iowa enacted Chapter 235 amending Section 253 of the Supplement of the Code 1913 relating to the compensation of district jrxdges by striking therefrom, the words “thirty-five hundred” and inserting in lieu thereof the words “four thousand.” This act was duly approved by the governor of the state and became effective by constitutional provision July 4, 1917.

Plaintiff further alleges'that under and by virtue of this legislative enactment that he, as judge of the district court of Iowa, became entitled to compensation at the rate of $4,000 per year and that the defendant auditor of state is legally obligated to issue and deliver to him as said judge the proper warrant drawn on the treasurer of the state for the increased salary due plaintiff from and after the 19th day of December 1917, on which date plaintiff assumed the duties of office as district judge.

The record further discloses that plaintiff holds by assignment a similar claim of Joseph E. Meyer who was duly appointed a judge of the distriet court for the ninth judicial district of Iowa by the governor on or about January 19, 1918 to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Judge Chas. Hutchinson who had been appointed within the same term by the governor of the state to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of Judge W. H. McHenry. It appears from the stipulation olfacts filed by the parties hereto that W.' H. McHenry was af duly elected judge of the district court as aforesaid for the term of four years beginning January 1, 1915 and ending’ December 31, 1918. Following the appointment of Judge Meyer he was duly elected at the next general election for the remainder of the unexpired term.

Defendant for answer admits that the defendant auditor has refused to issue the warrants to plaintiff as said judge for said salary for the periods of time set forth in plaintiff’s petition at any other rate or in any other or greater sum than at the rate of $3,500 per annum, and further alleges that at the time of the succession of plaintiff and his assignor Joseph E. Meyer that *31tbe term of office of tbeir said predecessors bad not expired and that plaintiff and bis assignor “continued to bold over in office upon unexpired terms — neither incumbent entering upon a new term and bence not entitled to tbe increase of salary'provided for by Chapter 235 of tbe Acts of tbe Thirty-seventh General Assembly because of tbe constitutional provision forbidding the increase of tbe compensation of a judge ‘during tbe term for which be shall have been elected.’ ” '

It must be conceded that the appellant George A. Wilson was filling a vacancy in a judicial office during tbe time in question. Chas. A. Dudley was elected district judge at tbe general election in November 1914 and was elected for the full constitutional term of four years. By virtue of bis oath of office be entered upon tbe discharge of Ms duties January 1st, 1915 and bis certificate of election was for tbe constitutional term of four years from said date. Judge Dudley died October 18, 1917 and bis death ipso facto created a vacancy in office. On July 4, 1917 the new salary act became effective. On December 19, 1917 tbe appellant was appointéd to fill tbe vacancy caused by Judge Dudley’s death. He was appointed by tbe governor of this state until the next general election and bis certificate of appointment so read. He was then elected to fill out tbe remainder of tbe unexpired term of Judge Dudley which ended December 31, 1918.

Tbe Constitution of Iowa provides that a district judge “shall be elected by tbe qualified electors of tbe district in which be resides” and that be “shall bold bis office for tbe term of four years, and until bis successor shall have been elected and qualified.” Constitution Article 5 Section 5.

Tbe Constitution of this state further provides that “tbe term of office of each judge shall commence on the first day of January next after bis election,” (Article 5 Section 11) and that he shall bold it “for tbe term of four years.” Article 5 Section 5. These are mandatory provisions and the Constitution fixes both tbe initial and the terminal points of tbe office so created. Tbe office of district judge is a constitutional office. Tbe legislature cannot change it, nor can a court by judicial interpretation give it a meaning other than prescribed by tbe *32fundamental/ law. There is but one term constitutional in character and that term is defined by the Constitution to be four years from a specified date. The Constitution intends and contemplates but one term regardless of the tenures of the various incumbents who might serve in the office during the prescribed term. A district judge has no successor within the term for which he is duly elected. His only successor within the constitutional meaning of the word term is the next incumbent chosen at the election by the people upon the termination of his" constitutional term of four years for which he was elected. He may be his own successor.

The state Constitution does provide for the temporary filling of a vacancy by appointment or by election, but this does not constitute or create a new term in a legal or constitutional sense. A person so appointed or elected is a mere holder of a tenure within the term. The constitutional provisions have no relation to the particular person or persons who may perform the functions of a district judge within the term defined and prescribed by the Constitution. This is evident from the language of the Constitution which provides in ease of “elections to fill vacancies in office occurring before the expiration of a full term, the person so elected shall hold for the residue of the unexpired term;” and those appointed to fill vacancies “shall hold until the next general election, and until their successors are elected and qualified.” Constitution Article 11 Section 6.

Therefore whoever is appointed or elected is appointed or elected for an unexpired portion of a prescribed term. The term prescribed is a unit of time. A new term is not created. The appointee simply steps into the shoes, so to speak, of him who was elected for the constitutional term of four-years and is entitled to perform the duties and receive the emoluments of the office until the end of that term or until a successor shall have been elected. The only term which is recognized by the Constitution is the term of four years. In popular language we speak of a “long term” and a “short term,” but these words are not •found in the Constitution, and although perhaps happily chosen to convey an idea, they have no constitutional meaning or definition.

*33The constitutional term of a district judge is a distinct thing or entity. An unexpired term can be predicated only on a pre-existent term of which it is a part. The term lives on even though the incumbent resigns, is impeached or dies. Personality has nothing to do with the question, nor is a term within the meaning of the Constitution “the period of a judge’s service.” It is axiomatic that the whole is equal to the sum of its parts and that the part is never equal to or greater than the whole. This is a postulate of logic as well as of mathematics.

The Constitution of this state originally fixed the compensation or salary of a district judge and it is specifically provided ‘ ‘ which compensation shall not be increased or diminished during the term for which they shall have been elected.” Article 5 Section 9. As indicated heretofore' a judge of the district court is elected for the term of four years and until “his successor shall have been elected and qualified.” This contemplates that a successor after the termination of the four years may not have been elected, or if elected, failed to qualify and in such event the judge in office remains as district judge, but his term has ended and he is then serving a part or portion of the subsequent term, and it is possible that he would serve an additional term of four years by reason of a failure in having a successor. In this event, however, he would have served two terms of four years each.

The case of Schaffner v. Shaw, 191 Iowa 1047 does not rule this case. It is based on an entirely different state of facts. The period of time or term in the Schaffner case had reference tó a newly created judgeship, and it is said: “Such period was not the filling out of an unexpired term, and for this reason they [newly appointed judges] could not be within the rule of decisions declaring the term a unit, and holding that, where the incumbent resigns or dies, the appointee for the remainder of the term comes within the prohibition of any increase or diminution of salary.”

Article 5 of the Constitution of Iowa is an exposition of the supreme law of this state with reference to the judicial department. It establishes the Supreme and district courts of this state, defines the jurisdiction of each court, and fixes the salary *34of a judge of each court respectively. Clearly the framers of the original Constitution had in mind the term just established and defined therein.

* The fixing of the salary was contemporaneous with the fixing of the term, and having the four-year term in mind, it fixed the salary at a per annum compensation. This also conclusively shows that it was the office and not the incumbent that the framers had in mind. Canons of constitutional construction take into consideration contemporaneous events. When Section 9 was written the only question under consideration was salary. The term of judicial office had been settled. The framers and fathers of the Constitution in convention assembled had determined that “the Supreme Court shall consist of three judges” and after this point is settled they determined that “each” one of them shall have a salary of $2,000 per annum. The state had been divided into eleven judicial districts and each district necessarily had a district judge. It was then determined that “each” one of them shall be paid a salary of $1,600 per annum. This was in 1857 and the convention had in mind the salary and the number of district judges up to “ the year 1860, ’ ’ and ‘ ‘ after which time they shall severally” etc.

What is the antecedent of “they?” What does the word “severally” mean? With reference to what or to whom is the word “severally” used? Clearly the framers had in mind the two courts and the judges thereof. This is what they had just created. There were two classes of courts created and “they” meaning the two classes, were “severally,” that is, separately, distinctly, after the year 1860, to “receive such compensation as the general assembly shall by law prescribe.” The convention probably thought that economic and industrial conditions might change, that society would become more complex, that litigation would increase, that our population would grow, and with these things in mind it was deemed wise and expedient that the number of judges needed in either court or the salary they should be paid should be left to the wisdom of future legislatures. This convention was not providing in these particulars for vacancies in judicial office. There is not an intimation that *35such contingency was within the purview of the framers when they wrote the sentences to which we now refer.

Giving the construction to the language contended for by appellant, we would have a “Meyer term,” a “Wilson term,” a “Hutchinson term,” varying from one year to three years. Is a district judge elected by the people to serve until he might elect to voluntarily quit, or until he died within the term? If this is true then a fixed judicial term does not exist except by way of legal fiction.

May a district judge after his election and qualification fix his.own term? Clearly not. There is but one ierm within the constitutional sense and that is for a period of four years. One term cannot follow another term through death or resignation of the first incumbent of the term. One term follows another term with far more certainty than day follows night in the division of time that marks the luminous line of demarcation.

No other construction is tenable, logical or within the meaning of our state Constitution. We cannot fritter away the Constitution by judicial interpretation. If any doubt exists it must be resolved in favor of the Constitution and the people who are governed thereunder. A judge does not have a term without reference to the language and the meaning of the language of the Constitution.

It is unnecessary to search for the purpose and the reason for the use of the language adopted by the makers of the original Constitution. The language carries its own intent. It may be that they had in mind that the fountain head of justice should not be polluted, and that the judicial branch and the legislative branch should be and remain distinct and that the influence of the judge in salary matters should not be brought to play on the members of our legislature.

The makers of the Constitution forbade a change of salary except at the end of four-year periods in order to maintain a capable, clean, and uncorrupted judiciary. It has been suggested, however, that it might prove a simple matter, if after judicial salary had been increased, for an incumbent to resign and be reappointed to fill the vacancy and thereby receive the increased emoluments if appellant’s theory is correct. It will *36not be presumed that a judicial officer could or would combine with legislators or executive and be willing to compass the rape of the Constitution in this manner. It is unnecessary for a court in determining the proposition involved to speculate on such' contingencies.

' It is quite generally held that, a vacancy in office is within the term and not in the office. It is the term which survives. The Constitution of this state fixes that term, and its beginning and ending. This is an expressed definition of the word term, and no implied limitation can exist. Furthermore our statutes contain the same language and refer to a full term and four-year term and fixed term. Code Section 1069; Code Supplement .Section 1060; Code Section 1265.

The time which a person holds over beyond his term of office is so much of an encroachment on the term of his successor. State v. Galusha, 74 Neb. 188 (104 N. W. 197); State v. Breidenthal, 55 Kan. 308 (40 Pac. 651); In re Advisory Opinion, 65 Fla. 434 (62 So. 363, 50 L. R. A. [N. S.] 365). The word term in a legal sense means the fixed and definite period of time which the law describes that an officer may hold office, and a holder’ over does not change the length of a term but results in shortening the period served by his successor. State v. Tallman, 25 Wash. 295 (64 Pac. 759). “The term of office is * * * four years. This, being a constitutional provision, is beyond legislative change. It is a fixed quantity.” State v. Thoman, 10 Kan. 191 cited in State v. Galusha, 74 Neb. 188 (104 N. W. 197, at 202).

When a person is appointed to fill a vacancy for an unexpired term the unambiguous meaning is that he is to hold for the same term as the person whose place he takes. Pruitt v. Squires, 64 Kan. 855 (68 Pac. 643); Ash v. McVey, 85 Md. 119 (36 Atl. 440); State v. Howell, 59 Wash. 492 (110 Pac. 386, 50 L. R. A. [N. S.] 336 and note).

Under a Kentucky statute prohibiting a change of a county officer’s salary during his term of office the Supreme Court held that “the appointee” had no term of office apart from the term of him for whose unexpired term he was appointed. Bosworth v. Ellison 148 Ky. 708. It would not seem that argument is *37required to affirm that the reference to compensation which shall not be increased or diminished during the term for which the judge shall have been elected, as provided by our state Constitution, is a reference to the term and not to the occupant or incumbent. See Foreman v. People, 209 Ill. 567 (71 N. E. 35, 50 . L. R. A. [N. S.] 35); Harrison v. Colgan, 148 Cal. 69; Larew v. Neiuman 81 Cal. 588 (23 Pac. 227) Somers v. State 5 S. D. 584; Parmater v. State 102 Ind. 90.

In the Neiuman case it was held that the person who is appointed to fill a vacancy in office, the salary of which was increased after the election of his predecessor but before the happening of the vacancy, is not entitled to an increase.

The decided cases are in apparent conflict, but in the attempt to reconcile them the language of the Constitution construed by the court in each case must be distinguished and differentiated. See Carter v. State, 77 Okla. 31 (186 Pac. 464); Gaines v. Horrigan, 72 Tenn. (4 Lea) 608; Storke v. Goux, 129 Cal. 526.

The case of State v. Frear, 138 Wis. 536 (120 N. W. 216) turns on the question whether the language of the Wisconsin Constitution increasing or decreasing any public officer’s compensation “during his term of office” (Article 4 Section 26) has the same meaning as though it read ‘ ‘ during the term for which they were severally elected.” This is the recognized ambiguity, and in passing on cited eases in the light of the language of constitutions similar to Iowa it is said: “The petitioner cites Barnum v. Gilman, 27 Minn. 466 (8 N. W. 375, 38 Am. Rep.. 304), as holding contrary to the foregoing, and that the words ‘ term of office for which he is elected, ’ in the .Minnesota- constitutional prohibition against a senator or representative holding any office under the authority of the United States or the state, with certain exceptions, ‘during the term for which he was elected’ mean during the term of his incumbency; that the term for which he was elected is synonymous with ‘his term of office,’ which means during his incumbency of the office; that during one full term of office there may be several successive' incumbents, each having a fraction of a full term, and in that *38situation have a term of office which, as to Mm is Ms term of office.

That logic is diametrically opposed to the other cases cited, and would go far-to sustain the petitioner’s petition, if the court which adopted it had adhered to its decision. It had the support of a long line of opinions of the state’s highest legal adviser, but when the court came to face the situation created by such decision, reinforced by such legal opinions, fifteen years later, it overruled it, adopting, without qualification, the same logic and arriving at the same conclusion as courts had before and have since, to which we have referred.”

In solving the problem presented it is further said: “Its solution rests on the limitation of legislative power, disassociated entirely from the provision as to the office, term of office,' and salary where the term doubtless is disassociated from the incumbent.” Under the provisions of the Constitution of Iowa no such difficulty is presented, and it is strongly intimated by the Wisconsin court, if it were not for the ambiguity noted, the petitioner would have little, if any, ground to predicate Ms right-of recovery.

State v. Porter, 57 Mont. 343 (188 Pac. 375) is in the same category as the Wisconsin case for the reason that the Constitution of Montana in relation to a public officer provides that “No law shall * * * increase or diminish his salary or emolument after his election or appointment.” The case at bar is not controlled by the interpretation of constitutions similar to Wisconsin and Montana.

The word term when applied to an office means the definite time as prescribed for its beginning and ending. Under the Constitution of Iowa the term does not revert to the people because the limitation exists. Under common law principles the term does not survive but it is said “to revert to the people.” The intent of the framers of our state Constitution is clearly to the contrary. Unexpired terms have no constitutional meaning. It is a legal misnomer. The duration of the judicial term being fixed, the vacancy is- in the term as distinct from the office itself. The judicial term of four years as applied to district judges is a unit and is not susceptible of division into terms.

*39The appellant Wilson was simply supplying a vacancy in a term and is not entitled to more pay than Judge Dudley would have been legally entitled had Providence permitted him to serve his constitutional term of four years.

There is another provision of our state Constitution which constitutes a limitation upon judges, and it sheds some light on the proposition involved herein and sustains the view expressed. The same Article 5 Section 5 provides that the judge of the district court “shall be ineligible to any other office, except that of judge of the Supreme Court, during .the term for which he was elected.”

Our Constitution cannot be stretched until it cracks or be construed contrary to the intent of its language or its framers to meet any exigency. The judgment entered by the trial court is clearly correct and consistent with sound constitutional construction. Wherefore the judgment entered is — Affirmed.

Stevens, C. J., ArthuR and Faville, JJ., concur.