I concur with the result reached
by my brothers Justices Williams and Kavanagh. I write separately to help clarify the meaning of § 23, which is at the heart of this controversy.
Section 23, as amended, states in pertinent part:
"A vacancy shall occur in the office of judge of any court of record or in the district court by death, removal, resignation or vacating of the office, and such vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the governor. The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy *167occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term.” (Emphasis added.)
Plaintiff argues that the words "unexpired term” refer to the term of office which is in existence at the time the vacancy arises. In other words, § 23 contemplates the situation in which a vacancy occurs in a term of office, the Governor appoints an individual to fill that vacancy, and an election is scheduled to take place after the vacancy occurs and before the end of the term. In such a case, the appointed justice would serve in office until the election, at which point the elected successor would assume the office for the remainder of the unexpired term. Thus, if Justice Moody had died in November of 1979 and defendant had been appointed to the vacancy created by his death, defendant would have served in office until January 1, 1981, which is the first day of January following the 1980 election. The elected successor would then have assumed the office of justice on January 1, 1981, and served until January 1, 1983, at which point Justice Moody’s term expired. The elected justice would thus have served "for the remainder of the unexpired term”.
However, plaintiff argues that when a vacancy occurs in one term, and the next election is not scheduled to take place until the next term, the second sentence of § 23 does not give the appointed justice the right to hold over in office until the next election. This interpretation is necessary, plaintiff argues, because § 23 requires that the elected successor serve in office for the remainder of the unexpired term in which the appointment was made — an impossible situation if the unexpired term has ended before the election. Thus, if defendant remains in office until the first day of *168January following the 1984 election, her successor would be elected to fulfill a nonexistent term, one which ended January 1, 1983.
On the other hand, on behalf of the defendant, my colleagues Justices Ryan and Brickley argue that the words "unexpired term” refer to the remainder of the term in existence at the time the election is held. In the instant case, this would mean that defendant’s elected successor would serve in office from January 1, 1985 (which is "the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs”) until January 1, 1991, which marks the end of the eight-year term which Justice Moody was due to begin on January 1, 1983. Under this theory, the fact that the vacancy occurred in one term and the election is not held until the next term has no significance regarding the interpretation of the words "the unexpired term” found in § 23.
Our task in interpreting § 23 is to divine the intention of the people when they amended the section to its present form and to determine their common understanding of the effect of the amendment.
It is clear that the people of this state want an elected judiciary; they have consistently rejected any opportunity to adopt an appointed judiciary system. It is also clear that the people, by their adoption of art 6, § 2 of the 1963 Constitution, desired that an incumbent justice would not be permitted to remain in office beyond the expiration of his or her term without a renewed popular mandate. There is no holdover language in § 2; the term of office is stated to be eight years, not eight years and "until a successor is elected and qualified”, as provided by the Legislature under the 1908 Constitution. MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399.
*169In light of the express desire of the people to choose their justices by election to serve eight-year non-holdover terms, I join with Justices Williams and Kavanagh in holding that an appointed justice may not hold over into a new term of office. The appointed justice may serve not more than two years, i.e., until the next general election, or to the end of the term to which the appointment was made, whichever occurs ñrst. This result is consistent with a reading of § 23, which concerns filling vacancies in office, in context with § 2, which concerns the length of a term of office. I am firmly convinced that the people did not contemplate, when adopting § 23, that an appointed replacement for an incumbent justice would serve beyond the end of the term of his or her predecessor in office. The rights of the substitute cannot be greater than the rights of the person being replaced; the substitute stands in the shoes of the predecessor. Thus, the common understanding of the people when adopting § 23 is that the elected successor to the appointed justice would serve in office for the remainder of the unexpired term, i.e., the term of office in existence at the time the vacancy occurred and the appointment was made. If the term of office ends before an election can be held, the appointed justice’s right to serve in office terminates, absent a new appointment.
To hold otherwise could lead to an impossible and unjust result, i.e., the possibility of an appointed justice claiming the right to hold over into a new term when an elected successor is ready, willing and able to occupy the office. This would clearly be contrary to the people’s express preference for an elected judiciary.
My brothers Justices Ryan and Brickley summarily discard this possible occurrence by stating *170that it "is so unlikely to occur that we need not ignore the plain constitutional language in this case”. However, they do admit that § 23 could not be utilized to extend the tenure of the appointee beyond the original term when a successor is already elected and qualified. This conclusion provides for an appointed justice to remain in office until the first day of January following the next election. What they are really saying is that § 23 allows the appointee to remain in office until the first day of January following the next election after the vacancy occurs, providing there is no elected successor qualified and ready to take office. This is not the clear language of § 23; to arrive at this result, one must read a meaning into § 23 which is not present in its specific language.
I believe that this Court’s interpretation of § 23 must be consistent; it must be applicable to the situation in which there is no elected successor qualified to hold the appointee’s office as well as to the situation in which there is an elected successor to the appointee’s office.
However, if an appointed justice may not hold over into a new term of office, this results in the conclusion that a new vacancy arises in the new term when no elected successor is ready and qualified to fill the office. Defendant argues that under § 23 a vacancy occurs in the office of a justice only "by death, removal, resignation or vacating of the office” and not by the completion of the term to which the appointment was made. Defendant claims that only one vacancy occurred when Justice Moody died in November, 1982, only one power of appointment arose from that occurrence, and Governor Milliken, then in office, exercised a valid power of appointment by appointing defendant to the vacancy. Since there was no death, *171removal, resignation, or vacating of the office on January 1, 1983, defendant concludes that no new vacancy arose on that date and thus she still rightfully holds title to the office. Like my brothers Justices Williams and Kavanagh, I disagree.
I believe that a vacancy arose on January 1, 1983, by reason of the death of Justice Moody. He had been elected in November, 1982, to the term of office beginning January 1, 1983, and he was unable to fill the office on that date due to his death. The fact that his death did not actually occur in the new term is not inimical to this interpretation — there was still a vacancy created by his death because he was unable to fill the office to which he had been re-elected.
I prefer the foregoing analysis to Justice Williams’ conclusion that there was a vacating of the office during the new term because Justice Moody failed to qualify and assume the office. I do not believe one "vacates” an office one has never assumed.
However, Const 1963, art 4, § 38 provides that:
"The legislature may provide by law the cases in which any office shall be vacant and the manner of filling vacancies where no provision is made in this constitution.”
Pursuant to this power, the Legislature declared that a vacancy in the office of a justice of the Supreme Court can occur when the person elected or appointed to fill the office "neglect[s] or refus[es] to take and subscribe to the constitutional oath of office and deposit the same in the manner and within the time prescribed by law”. MCL 168.402; MSA 6.1402. Thus, when Justice Moody failed to take the oath of office for the term commencing at noon on January 1, 1983, as required by Const *1721963, art 11, § 1, a vacancy arose in that term of office.
I do not find the conclusion that Justice Moody’s death created two- vacancies, one in the term he was serving and one in the new term, and that defendant, as a justice appointed to one vacancy, may not hold over to fill the second vacancy, to be repugnant to any constitutional or statutory language of which we are aware. Indeed, I believe this result logically flows from our interpretation of § 2 and § 23, rendered in light of the known desires of the people who enacted these sections, and best reflects the common understanding of the people with respect to tenure in office of an appointed justice.
This case has been an unusually difficult one for us. By its very nature, it has embroiled this Court in a partisan controversy regarding whether an appointee of an outgoing Republican Governor or one of the now-incumbent Democratic Governor has the right to sit on this Court and be designated an incumbent justice on the ballot for November, 1984, a designation which has the tendency to insure the election of' such a justice.1 Furthermore, this case is not only of constitutional significance to our state, but it is also of personal significance to us, as we have been faced with the difficult task of making a legal judgment involving one of our own colleagues. Certainly no one has disputed defendant’s personal qualifications to hold office. However, we were called upon to legally interpret a section of our constitution, and, with our best efforts and good faith, this we have done.
Ryan, J.This is a quo warranto action in which *173the Attorney General seeks to oust Justice Dorothy Comstock Riley from the Michigan Supreme Court.
The facts are simple and undisputed.
Our late brother, Blair Moody, Jr., held the office of Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court for a term expiring at 12 noon, January 1, 1983. At the election held in November of 1982, Justice Moody was re-elected to a new eight-year term, scheduled to commence at 12 noon, January 1, 1983. On November 26, 1982, before taking the oath of office for the new term, Justice Moody died. On December 9, 1982, then-Governor William G. Milliken appointed Dorothy Comstock Riley, then a judge of the Court of Appeals, to the Michigan Supreme Court in a letter of appointment which declared that she was appointed "as Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, to serve until 12:00 noon of the first day of January, 1985. (To fill the vacancy created by the death of the Honorable Blair Moody, Jr.)”
After filing the oath of office as Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, Justice Riley took her seat on the Court. The Attorney General admits that Justice Riley was properly qualified and able to serve on the Supreme Court at that time.
At noon on January 1, 1983, the term of William G. Milliken as Governor expired and the term of office of Governor James J. Blanchard commenced. On January 3, 1983, the Attorney General filed a complaint for quo warranto in the Court of Appeals, naming Justice Riley as "defendant”. On the same date, an application for leave to appeal prior to decision by the Court of Appeals was filed in this Court questioning Justice Riley’s authority to hold title to the office of Justice of the Supreme Court after noon of January 1, 1983. An *174order restraining the Court of Appeals from exercising further jurisdiction was entered on January 4, 1983. After briefs were filed and oral argument was heard, an order assuming jurisdiction of the complaint for quo warranto prior to decision by the Court of Appeals entered on January 8, 1983. Supplemental briefs were then filed, and oral argument on the merits was held on January 24, 1983.
We hold that Dorothy Comstock Riley properly holds the office of Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court under the authority of Const 1963, art 6, § 23, and, in the alternative, under the authority of MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399.
I
Justice Riley is entitled to the office to which she has been appointed because of the provisions of Const 1963, art 6, § 23 as amended. That section provides:
"A vacancy shall occur in the office of judge of any court of record or in the district court by death, removal, resignation or vacating of the office, and such vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the governor. The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term. Whenever a new office of judge in a court of record, or the district court, is created by law, it shall be filled by election as provided by law. The supreme court may authorize persons who have been elected and served as judges to perform judicial duties for limited periods or specific assignments.”
The Attorney General argues, however, that the second sentence of § 23 "cannot be given an inter*175pretation which would permit an appointee to hold office beyond the expiration of the current term”; that is, the term in which Justice Moody was serving at the time of his death and which expired on January 1, 1983. The essence of the Attorney General’s position, and indeed that adopted by Justices Williams, Kavanagh, and Cavanagh, is that §23 does not permit Justice Riley to "hold over” into the eight-year term which began on January 1, 1983.
We disagree.
A
The text of art 6, § 23 includes "holdover” language.
A plainer, simpler, or more direct statement of the duration of the Supreme Court appointee’s tenure would be difficult to imagine or compose than that which appears in the second sentence of §23:
"The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term.”
That language explicitly authorizes an appointee to "hold over”, and the general language of Const 1963, art 6, § 2, which fixes the term of Supreme Court justices at eight years, cannot and does not prohibit appointee "holdover” which is specifically authorized by § 23.
There is no question that a vacancy occurred upon the death of Blair Moody, Jr., and that then-Governor Milliken had the authority to fill that vacancy. The second sentence of § 23 specifies how *176long the appointee shall serve and when the election of a successor shall take place. Under that language, if the words used mean what they say, since the first general election which can be held after the vacancy occasioned by Justice Moody’s death will be in November of 1984, Justice Riley is entitled to serve until "12 noon of the first day of January” of 1985. The Attorney General and our colleagues for ouster have agreed, in effect, that the words used in the second sentence of § 23 do not mean what they say and that the sentence should be read as though it said that an appointee may serve until January 1 following the next general election "only if it is possible to hold a general election before the term during which the appointee is appointed expires”. Manifestly, the Attorney General’s position is not based on any language found anywhere in the constitution. The second sentence of § 23 contains no provision to the effect that the appointee shall hold office until after the next general election "or until the original term would have expired, whichever comes first”. Nor is such a proviso found in the second sentence of art 6, § 2 which merely states that the "term of office shall be eight years” and does not prohibit an appointee from serving either a special "interim” term or portions of two different terms.1
*177A remarkably comparable situation was addressed by this Court in People ex rel Andrews v Lord, 9 Mich 227 (1861). In that case the incumbent probate judge died after winning re-election but before beginning his new term of service. On November 26, 1860, Governor Wisner appointed Jacob Van Valkenburgh to fill the vacancy. On January 1, 1861, the newly elected Governor, Governor Blair, appointed a different person. In resolving the dispute as to who was entitled to the office, this Court looked to Const 1850, art 6, § 14 which provided:
"When a vacancy occurs in the office of judge of the supreme, circuit or probate court, it shall be filled by appointment of the governor, which shall continue until a successor is elected and qualified. When elected, such successor shall hold his office the residue of the unexpired term.”
In determining that the first appointee, Van Valkenburgh, was entitled to the office as against the new Governor’s appointee, the Court, referring to § 14, stated:
"These provisions are so free from ambiguity that there is no room left for construction. A person appointed to fill a vacancy can only be superseded by one who is duly elected, and holds in the same manner as if originally the incumbent until thus superseded. His term of office did not expire on the first day of January, 1861, unless someone elected and qualified was then ready to take the office.”
Plainly, the language of Const 1850, art 6, § 14, and the 1968 amendment to Const 1963, art 6, § 23, are not identical. The difference, in relevant part, is in the "holdover” language. The 1850 version provides that the appointee serves "until a *178successor is elected and qualified”, whereas the present version declares that the appointee "shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term”.
The Attorney General would distinguish the Lord case on the theory that the 1850 constitutional provision contained "holdover” language, and the 1968 amendment does not. We think that conclusion is unsound and that no valid distinction can be made. Both provisions contain "holdover” language. The "holdover” language of the 1968 amendment to art 6, § 23, which fixes the very date and hour of the expiration of the appointee’s tenure is simply more specific and certain than the more flexible "holdover” language of the 1850 Constitution which terminated the appointee’s tenure at the time a "successor is elected and qualified”.
For purposes of authorizing an appointee to "hold over” the expiration of one term and the beginning of another, the "holdover” language of the 1850 Constitution, authorizing an appointee to serve "until the successor is elected and qualified”, is indistinguishable in law from the 1968 holdover provision which authorizes the appointee to serve until noon of January 1 following the election at which the appointee’s successor is chosen. In fact, the original version of Const 1963, art 6, § 23, contained the same "until the successor is elected and qualified” holdover language as appeared in Const 1850, art 6, § 14. The 1968 amendment to Const 1963, art 6, § 23, simply substituted new holdover language authorizing an appointee to serve until a specific hour and date following the *179general election held after the vacancy occurs. Both the new and the old holdover language provide that an appointee may serve until the happening of an ascertainable event — an event that may occur before, at, or after the end of the term in which the vacancy occurred which occasioned the appointment. The Attorney General, and my colleagues who would oust Justice Riley, appear to accept the proposition that if the designated event which terminates the tenure of the appointee is the election and qualification of a successor, the appointee may hold over into a new term while awaiting the arrival of that event. What would possibly justify a different result if the designated event is the arrival of the first day of January after the next general election?
B
The "unexpired term ” language of § 23 is consistent with an appointee holding over into a new term.
My colleagues for ouster also accept the Attorney General’s argument that the following language of § 23 is somehow inconsistent with an appointee serving until after the next general election:
"The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term.” (Emphasis added.)
It is argued that the emphasized language nullifies the plain English of the clause which goes before it, if the "term” in which the appointee’s predeces*180sor was serving expires before the next general election will be held.
That argument is unsound on two grounds:
The first is that the provision simply does not say what the Attorney General claims it means. It does not say that the person appointed shall hold office until January 1 next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, or until the expiration of the current term, whichever fírst occurs. It might have said that, and, if the framers of § 23 intended that result, they undoubtedly would have said that or something like it. Certainly, had they intended § 23 to mean what the Attorney General and my colleagues say it means, they could not have obfuscated such meaning behind more abstruse or opaque language. A common-sense reading of § 23 simply does not produce from the words which appear there the strained and imaginative meaning suggested.
One of the most fundamental canons of constitutional construction is found in Judge Cooley’s injunction that:
"A Constitution is made for the people and by the people. The interpretation that should be given it is that which reasonable minds, the great mass of the people themselves, would give it. 'For as the Constitution does not derive its force from the convention which framed, but from the people who ratified it, the intent to be arrived at is that of the people, and it is not to be supposed that they have looked for any dark or abstruse meaning in the words employed, but rather that they have accepted them in the sense most obvious to the common understanding, and ratified the instrument in the belief that that was the sense designed to be conveyed.’ ” Cooley, Constitutional Limitations (6th ed), p 81, as quoted in May v Topping, 65 W Va 656, 660; 64 SE 848 (1909).
*181Can it be fairly said that, in ratifying § 23, the "great mass of the people” had in mind the strained meaning suggested by the Attorney General, including the conditioning and qualifying clause he must necessarily read into it, and that such meaning is "most obvious to the common understanding of the people”? To ask the question is to answer it. A meaning of § 23 more "dark [and] abstruse” than that suggested would be difficult to conjure.
A second reason for rejecting the idea that § 23 should be construed by reading into it the language of contingency my colleagues’ interpretation requires is that such a construction misconceives the meaning of the "term” to which "the remainder of the unexpired term” language of § 23 refers. My colleagues conclude that the reference is to Justice Moody’s term which expired at noon on January 1, 1983. We do not agree.
The sentence, repeated here for ease of reference, is:
"The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term.”
The phrase, "unexpired term”, refers to the regular eight-year cycle or "term” in which an appointee under § 23 is serving at the time his or her "successor shall be elected”. Both a commonsense understanding of the whole of § 23, and traditional rules of grammatical construction, demonstrate that the prepositional phrase "for the remainder of the unexpired term” modifies and defines the immediately antecedent phrase, "a successor shall be elected” and, in doing so, de*182scribes the duration for which the successor is elected.
The term of office of justice of the Supreme Court is eight years and runs in a continuous and uninterrupted cycle. Const 1963, art 6, § 2. The term exists independently of any office holder or of a vacancy in the office. If a vacancy occurred in the office of Supreme Court justice and for some reason a Governor made no appointment to fill the vacancy, the eight-year term would continue to exist and continue to run. Similarly, if, at the expiration of an eight-year term no one chose to stand for election to the office and the incumbent chose not to stand for re-election, that would not affect the existence of the term or its length. An appointee, under § 23, is appointed to the "office” of Supreme Court justice to fill a vacancy. He or she is not appointed to a "term”. Although the appointment is with reference to a term, the term does not define the vacancy or its duration. The plain and simple language of the vacancy-filling provision, § 23, does so.
When a vacancy occurs in the office of Supreme Court justice, one and only one of the following situations will exist on "the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs”. Art 6, § 23. (1) Two, four, or six years will remain to be served in the term in which the vacancy occurred; or (2) no time will remain to be served in the term in which the vacancy occurred and eight years will remain in the next ensuing term; or (3) six years will remain to be served in the term following that in which the vacancy occurred. The Attorney General argues, and my colleagues for ouster agree, that § 23 means what it says only in the first situation. They conclude that, in the second situation it *183would not make sense to elect a justice to an unexpired term of zero years, and in the third situation, the "unexpired term” refers to the term in which the vacancy occurs, not the next ensuing term. Having posited that "the unexpired term” language of § 23 refers only to the term in which the vacancy occurs, § 23 is read out of the constitution for situations (2) and (3), including this case, with the statement that the section is simply "inoperative” in such cases for successor elections. Having concluded that § 23 is "inoperative” for successor elections under those circumstances, they reason § 23 is also "inoperative” as to the length of time an appointee shall serve in situations (2) and (3).
We note, initially, that the foregoing analogy by the Attorney General is not at all persuasive. Even if § 23 was "inoperative” for successor elections in situations (2) and (3), it does not follow that § 23 is "inoperative” for determining the tenure of an appointed justice. If the appropriate constitutional interpretation "is that which reasonable minds, the great mass of the people themselves, would give it”, it is impossible to conclude that type (1) vacancies are to be covered by the specific "vacancy” provision of § 23, but that the other two types of vacancies are not to be resolved by the vacancy section at all but, instead, by turning back to an earlier and more general provision, § 2, that says nothing about filling vacancies at all.
More importantly, the successor election provisions of § 23 are operative in all three situations; if anything, this supports the view that the appointee tenure provisions are operative in the "holdover” situation. The correct interpretation of the phrase "the remainder of the unexpired term” *184includes the so-called "second” term in situations (2) and (3), supra. In situation (2), the "unexpired term” is the new term, the "remainder” of which is a full eight years, while in situation (3), as in this case, "the unexpired term” is also the "second” term, in which only six years will remain.
The unsupported assertion that "the unexpired term” can refer only to the "first” term is directly contrary to this Court’s decision in the Lord case which held that "the unexpired term” refers to the second term if the first term has expired. My brothers fail to recognize that Lord not only held that the appointee Judge Van Valkenburgh was entitled to "hold over” into a second term, but that the relator Henry Andrews was then properly elected to serve "the residue of the unexpired term”. Mich Const 1850, art 6, § 14. The appointment and election provisions were not declared "inoperative” by the fact that "the unexpired term” to which Andrews was elected was the "new” term rather than the "old” term. If my colleagues’ analysis had been followed in the Lord case, art 6, § 14 would have been declared "inoperative”. Recourse would then have been had to art 6, § 13, which set the term of probate judge at "four years, and until his successor is elected and qualified”; since § 13 had no provision for the election of a successor to "hold his office the residue of the unexpired term”, compare Const 1850, art 6, § 14, Andrews could not have been elected for "the residue of the unexpired [second] term”, and Van Valkenburgh would have remained in office until his successor was elected and qualified at the end of the next four-year term. The Lord case is simply not distinguishable on this point, since the relevant 1850 constitutional language, "the residue of the unexpired term”, and "the *185remainder of the unexpired term” language of the present constitution are virtually identical.
In this case, if Justice Riley serves until January 1, 1985, a "successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term” in November of 1984. The "remainder” of the unexpired second term will be six years, until January 1, 1991. Section 23 covers this situation perfectly and completely, unless the Lord case is to be overruled. This interpretation is entirely consistent with art 6, § 2. If the language limiting the elected successor to the remainder of the eight-year term were not present, the successor might claim that his election marked the beginning of a new eight-year term, even if the term had only six, four, or two years left. The last sentence of § 23 does not render it "inoperative”; it merely harmonizes § 23 with the general rule that the "term of office shall be eight years”. Article 6, § 2.
C
The "Justice Fitzgerald” hypothetical does not justify ignoring the plain language of § 23 in this case.
The primary reason being advanced for ignoring the plain language of § 23 appears to be based on the principle that a literal reading should be avoided if it would produce an "absurd and unjust result”.2 The possibility of an appointed justice serving until January following the next general election is plainly not unjust or absurd under the facts and circumstances of this case; indeed, it is specifically authorized by § 23. However, in a hypo*186thet raised by the Attorney General in his brief and in oral argument, a case is posited in which a candidate is elected to a new term and his or her predecessor vacates the office after the election, but before the commencement of the new term. In such a case, it is argued, if §23 is applied as written, an appointee might claim the right to remain on this Court for the first two years of the new term, despite the fact that the successful candidate is available and waiting at the door to begin the term.3 It would be manifestly absurd and unjust, and contrary to the will of the people, to deprive a rightfully elected justice of his term by an unreasonable and excessively literal reading of § 23. It is suggested that this hypothetical result could be avoided by adopting the Attorney General’s suggested construction of § 23, that an appointee cannot serve beyond the expiration of the term during which she is appointed. We are then asked to apply this construction of § 23, fashioned to avoid an unjust result in a purely hypothetical case, to the facts of this case.4_
*187The short answer to that argument is that the hypothetical case is so unlikely to occur that we need not ignore the plain constitutional language in this case in order to avoid the imaginary dangers it is said to pose. A more complete response recognizes that the hypothetical case is easily distinguished from the present case by the simple fact that no successful candidate stands elected and qualified to take the seat currently held by appointee Justice Riley.
It is a disingenuous suggestion for constitutional construction which requires that the language used in a constitution be stretched and contorted out of its common-sense meaning in order to accommodate every hypothetical factual scenario imaginable en route to applying it to the facts before the Court. A literal reading of § 23 in the hypothetical situation would thwart the will of the electorate and deprive a legitimately elected justice of his or her position on the Court. A literal reading of § 23 in this case does not produce such an "absurd and unjust” result.
The fact that § 23 could not be utilized to extend the tenure of an appointee beyond the original term when a successor is already "elected and qualified” does not justify the conclusion that § 23 can never allow an appointee to serve beyond the date the original term was scheduled to expire. The language of § 23 shortens the time an appointee will serve in those cases where more than two years remain in the unexpired term. We see no reason in law or logic why § 23 may not lengthen the time an appointee serves beyond the expiration date of the original term and until January following the next general election.
*188As has been observed, art 6, § 23, as originally-adopted in the 1963 Constitution, provided that an appointed Supreme Court justice might serve or "hold over” beyond the date the first term was scheduled to expire:5
"A vacancy in the elective office of a judge of any court of record shall be filled at a general or special election as provided by law. The supreme court may authorize persons who have served as judges and who have retired, to perform judicial duties for the limited period of time from the occurrence of the vacancy until the successor is elected and qualified. Such person shall be ineligible for election to fill the vacancy.” (Emphasis added.)
The revised art 6, § 23, approved by the voters in August of 1968, followed the same pattern as its predecessor. The first sentence provides the manner in which a vacancy is to be filled, while the second sentence defines the duration of the appointee’s tenure and creates the possibility that an appointed justice might hold over:
"A vacancy shall occur in the office of judge of any court of record or in the district court by death, removal, resignation or vacating of the office, and such vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the governor. The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term.” (Emphasis added.)_
*189As this Court said in Schwartz v Secretary of State, 393 Mich 42, 47; 222 NW2d 517 (1974), the purpose of the 1968 amendment was to restore the governor’s power to fill vacancies. There is simply no basis on which to conclude that the voting public saw the 1968 amendment as a means of eliminating holdover appointments when, apparently, none of the learned jurists of this Court perceived such a purpose. Schwartz, supra.
The language defining how long an appointee may serve was changed by the 1968 amendment from "until the successor is elected and qualified” to "until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs”. The new language recognized that the vacancy could no longer be filled at a special election, but would have to be filled at the next general election. The new provision simply specified "12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs” as a specific date by which time the appointee’s successor would be "elected and qualified”. Viewed in this light, it appears that the purpose of this language substitution was not to create a radical departure from the historic length of time an appointee was to serve, but merely to identify a specific, uniform date upon which the appointee would leave the bench if he were not his own successor.
Unquestionably, the drafters of the 1968 amendment to § 23 did not consider the possibility that the "first general election held after the vacancy occurs” would not always provide the first opportunity for the election of a successor. When, as in the Attorney General’s hypothetical case, the successor has already been elected before the vacancy occurs, it is unnecessary, unreasonable, and im*190proper for the appointee to serve beyond the expiration date of the term in which he is appointed. In the case before us, the appointee’s successor has not yet been elected and will not be elected until the next general election, to be held in November of 1984. Under these facts, § 23 authorizes Justice Riley to hold office "until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding” the general election at which her successor shall be elected.
Further support for the conclusion that § 23 authorizes Justice Riley to hold office until the January after her successor is elected is found in the constitutional definition of "vacancy”, which includes "death, removal, resignation or vacating of the office”. Art 6, § 23. Since a "vacancy” in the "office of judge” does not arise upon the expiration of the term during which an appointee takes the bench, there is no requirement that Justice Riley vacate her office. We also find noteworthy the use, in § 23, of the phrase "office of judge” rather than "term of office”. Compare art 6, § 2. It is a vacancy in the "office” rather than the completion of a "term” that gives rise to the Governor’s power of appointment. Only one "vacancy” occurred upon the death of Justice Moody; only one power of appointment was created in the Governor. Former Governor Milliken exercised that power by appointing Justice Riley to serve until January 1 after her successor was elected. A second vacancy did not spring into existence on January 1, 1983; the failure of the people to provide for gubernatorial appointment power upon the expiration of the first term is persuasive evidence that the appointee may remain in office beyond the date the first term would have expired.
My brothers’ attempt to subordinate the plain language of art 6, § 23, to their strained interpre*191tation of art 6, § 2, is contrary to two fundamental rules of constitutional construction. "When there is conflict between general and specific provisions in a constitution, the specific provision must control.” Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 1978 PA 426, 403 Mich 631, 639; 272 NW2d 495 (1978). Further, "if conflicting constitutional provisions cannot be harmonized, the provision adopted later in time controls.” Id., p 643. Both of these rules require that, to the extent art 6, § 2, can be construed to conflict with the provisions for filling a vacancy in art 6, § 23, the later-adopted and more specific provisions of § 23 must control.
D
Michigan constitutional and legislative history favors appointee holdover.
Our brother Williams’ opinion strongly suggests that there has existed in Michigan an historical preference that appointees to vacancies in the Michigan Supreme Court not be permitted to hold over in office beyond the expiration of the term during which the appointment was made. Specifically, our brother’s opinion states that in Michigan there is an "historical preference for an elected judiciary and non-holdover Supreme Court terms”,6 indicating, together with other factors, *192"that the more limited appointment was the intent of the people”.
While there can be no question that the people of this state have indeed indicated an historical preference for an elected judiciary,7 it is clear beyond peradventure that the Michigan constitutional and legislative history reveals consistent adherence to a policy favoring the holdover of appointees to judicial vacancies until a successor is elected.
From 1850 until the constitutional convention of 1961, every constitutional and statutory provision which was concerned with the subject of judicial vacancies included provision for the appointee to hold over until a successor is elected. Even the plaintiff concedes that prior to the 1963 Constitution, Michigan law "would permit an appointee to hold over beyond the expiration of a current term and into the commencement of a new term”. Plaintiff’s brief of January 3, 1983, p 17.
Const 1850, art 6, § 14 provided:
"When a vacancy occurs in the office of judge of the supreme, circuit or probate court, it shall be filled by appointment of the governor, which shall continue until a successor is elected and qualified. When elected, such successor shall hold his office the residue of the unexpired term”.
*193An implementing statute, 1851 PA 172, § 3, defined what circumstances created a vacancy, and another statute, 1857 PA 146, § 4, provided both that the appointee to the vacancy could hold over until a successor was elected and fixed the date of such election.
Similarly, the 1908 Constitution provided, in art 7, § 20:
"When a vacancy occurs in the office of judge of any court of record, it shall be filled by appointment of the governor, and the person appointed shall hold the office until a successor is elected and qualified. When elected, such successor shall hold the office the residue of the unexpired term.”
A statute, 1954 PA 116, § 404, enacted as part of the 1954 Elections Code, preserved the constitutional right of an appointee to serve "until his successor is elected and qualified”. When the statute was amended in 1955, and again in 1963, the provision for the appointee to a vacancy to hold over until the election of a successor was preserved. Other statutory provisions, while not specifically implementing the holdover provision of Const 1908, art 7, § 20, cannot be interpreted as prohibiting holdover. See 1915 PA 314, ch 1, §4, part of the Judicature Act of 1915, which became 1948 CL 601.4, and continued in substantially the same form as RJA § 204 until its repeal in 1963. MCL 600.204; MSA 27A.204.
Therefore, before the ratification of the 1963 Constitution, Michigan had an uninterrupted history of constitutional provision for the appointee to a Supreme Court vacancy to hold over until a successor was elected and qualified, with statutory implementation declaring when such election would occur.
*194The 1963 Constitution, while doing away entirely with gubernatorial appointment to the Supreme Court, continued the historical tradition of. allowing a Supreme Court appointee to hold over "until the successor is elected and qualified”. Const 1963, art 6, § 23, as enacted. Within five years, however, the "mistake”, as this Court characterized it, of doing away with gubernatorial appointment was rectified with the adoption, by the people, of present art 6, § 23. That provision perpetuated Michigan’s historical, preference for the holdover by an appointee to a Supreme Court vacancy and incorporated in the same provision what had historically been a legislative provision, fixing, with specificity, the time at which the election of a successor would be held.
The history, therefore, is one of continuous constitutional approval for an appointee to a Supreme Court vacancy to hold over until a successor is elected and not, as our colleagues’ opinion suggests, a history of non-holdover indicating "that the more limited appointment was the intent of the people”.
We conclude that Const 1963, art 6, § 23, standing alone, provides sufficient authority to sustain Dorothy Comstock Riley’s claim to the office of Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court. However, since some of our colleagues disagree, we will discuss whether MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399 provides an additional, independent basis for Justice Riley’s position.
II
Justice Riley’s authority to remain on this Court is legislatively assured because of the "holdover” language of MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399 which provides:
*195"The term of office of justice of the supreme court shall be 8 years, beginning on the first day of January next following the election and shall continue until a successor is elected and qualified.”
The Attorney General admits that if this statute is constitutional, Justice Riley’s situation is covered by its provisions and that she is thereby authorized to remain in office until her successor is elected and qualified. However, he argues that the above-quoted statute is "clearly repugnant” to Const 1963, art 6, § 2, which provides:
"The supreme court shall consist of seven justices elected at non-partisan elections as provided by law. The term of office shall be eight years and not more than two terms of office shall expire at the same time.”
The Attorney General finds that clear repugnancy by drawing a negative inference from language which is not to be found in § 2, but is found in comparable sections of the judicial article concerning other courts of record.
The Attorney General and our colleagues contrast § 2 with the language of earlier constitutions8 as well as the terms of judges of the Court of Appeals,9 circuit judges,10 and probate judges,11 all of which provide for terms of a certain number of years "and until their successors are elected and qualified”. The gist of the argument is that the drafters of the 1963 Constitution must have made a purposeful decision to delete the holdover clause from art 6, § 2, so as to prevent Supreme Court *196justices from holding over. The argument, however, does not bear close scrutiny.
An examination of the Official Record of the Constitutional Convention of 1961 reveals that the deletion of the holdover clause was simply inadvertent. The constitutional provisions setting the length of judicial terms for various courts were introduced on a piecemeal basis, not as a unified package. Const 1963, art 6, § 9, concerning Court of Appeals judges, was introduced as Committee Proposal 92b, and did not originally contain a holdover clause. The holdover clause was added without debate by the committee on style and drafting, which did not have the authority to make substantive changes. Const 1963, art 6, § 12, concerning circuit judges, was introduced as Committee Proposal 93b, which did not originally contain a holdover clause. The holdover clause was added during the debate because it was "left out”. 1 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, p 1361. Const 1963, art 6, § 16, concerning probate judges, was originally Committee Proposal 94b which did happen to contain a holdover clause. No comment appears in the constitutional debate about that clause. Const 1963, art 6, § 2, was introduced as Committee Proposal 91a without a holdover clause. Not a single word of debate centered on the absence of a holdover clause, and no such clause was added to that provision. The Attorney General’s conclusion that the "overwhelming sentiment” of the convention was to change the holdover clause is simply without support in the record.12_
*197In any event, interpretation of a constitution is governed by the common understanding of the people who adopted it, not the unrevealed intentions of the drafters. Traverse City School Dist v Attorney General, 384 Mich 390, 405; 185 NW2d 9 (1971); see also Schwartz v Secretary of State, 393 Mich 42, 47; 222 NW2d 517 (1974). It is impossible to conclude that the voters would have read art 6, §§ 2 and 23, as affirmatively prohibiting a holdover statute in the absence of language of prohibition and in view of a record of convention comments which includes no expression whatever of any intention to bring about a change from the 1908 Constitution on the holdover question. Similarly, the 1968 amendment to art 6, § 23, which originated in 1967 as Senate Joint Resolution A and House Joint Resolution F, purported only to change the method by which vacancies were filled and not the holdover result by which vacancies at the expiration of terms are avoided.
Even if the omission of the holdover language from art 6, § 2 of the Michigan Constitution was intentional, and there is no evidence to that effect, that does not render the holdover statute unconstitutional. Unlike the federal constitution, which grants only those powers specifically enumerated, the Michigan Constitution serves as a limitation on the plenary power of the Legislature. Advisory Opinion on Constitutionality of 1976 PA 240, 400 Mich 311, 317-318; 254 NW2d 544 (1977). The *198absence of constitutional holdover language neither requires nor forbids justices of the Supreme Court from holding over. The absence of any language affirmatively limiting the Legislature’s power to provide for holdover means that the Legislature was free to provide for holdover by statute in MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399. Similar language was first adopted in 185113 and has remained in effect up to the present day. We would not create a right of holdover where none existed, even if the failure to so provide in the constitution was purely adventitious. Cf. Toy ex rel Elliott v Voelker, 273 Mich 205; 262 NW 881 (1935) (dictum). But we will not create a constitutional prohibition against a statutory holdover when neither the language nor the intent of the drafters supports such a result.
Of course, one might argue, as our colleague does, that the phrase "a term of eight years” in § 2 is manifestly inconsistent with the phrase "until a successor is elected and qualified” in MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399. If so, Michigan legislatures and constitutional conventions have been writing both inconsistent phrases into constitutional and statutory sections since 1850. Instead of attempting to invalidate the statute by seizing upon an arguable inconsistency, we should recognize that every statute comes to us clothed in a presumption of constitutionality, and that every attempt should be made to harmonize the statute with the constitution so that both might be upheld. People v McQuillan,, 392 Mich 511, 536; 221 NW2d 569 (1974), citing Cady v Detroit, 289 Mich 499, 505; 286 NW 805 (1939); Sullivan v Michigan State Board of *199Dentistry, 268 Mich 427, 429-430; 256 NW 471 (1934): "However, it is the duty of the Court to give the presumption of constitutionality to a statute and construe it as constitutional unless the contrary clearly appears.”
It is noteworthy that clear support for the validity of a comparable holdover statute is found in an opinion by the same Attorney General now challenging the constitutionality of such statutes. In OAG 1965-1966, No 4390, p 17 (February 2, 1965), the Attorney General considered the problem arising when the newly elected treasurer of Mason County died on November 9, 1964. The incumbent treasurer had not run for re-election. The question presented was whether the incumbent treasurer could hold over until his successor was elected and qualified, or whether the death created a vacancy at the end of the first term. Neither Const 1908, art 8, § 3 or Const 1963, art 7, § 4 provided a right of holdover for the county treasurer; however, neither constitution affirmatively prohibited the Legislature from enacting a holdover statute. The Attorney General concluded that MCL 168.203; MSA 6.1203 allowed the county treasurer to hold over. That statute is similar to the holdover statute challenged here. In fact, the two sections were enacted at the same time and signed into law as part of the same bill by then-Governor G. Mennen Williams. If the county treasurer holdover statute is valid in the face of a "fixed” constitutional term, then the Supreme Court justice holdover statute likewise passes constitutional muster.14
We hold that MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399 is not *200repugnant to Const 1963, art 6, § 2. Accordingly, that statute remained in force after the adoption of the 1963 Constitution, Const 1963, art 3, § 7. Justice Riley may "hold over” under the statute until her successor is elected and qualified, even if Const 1963, art 6, § 23, did not authorize the same result on constitutional grounds.
Accordingly, the Attorney General’s complaint for quo warranto is dismissed.
Brickley, J., concurred with Ryan, J. Levin, J.The 1963 Constitution eliminated the power of the Governor under the 1850 and 1908 Constitutions to fill vacancies in judicial office,1 and provided that such vacancies shall be filled by vote of the people at a special or general election.2
*201The 1963 Constitution was amended in 1968 to authorize the Governor to fill a vacancy in judicial office until January 1 after the next general election following the vacancy at which, by vote of the people, a successor would be elected.
The constitution, as amended, thus contemplates that the voters will ultimately decide who shall occupy the seat vacated by the death of Justice Moody, and that the Governor makes an interim or temporary appointment.
The present inquiry, whether the Moody seat shall be occupied from and after January 1, 1983, until January 1, 1985, by the person, Justice Riley, appointed by former Governor Milliken or by a person appointed by present Governor Blanchard concerns not only the immediate question of who shall exercise the powers of the office of Justice of the Supreme Court during that period but also the question of who shall be designated on the ballot as an incumbent justice in the November, 1984 election.
There is substantial reason to believe that a decision by this Court for or against the claims asserted in this inquiry would, by "bestowing on the appointee” of the former or present Governor "the incumbency designation, [have] an overwhelming tendency to insure the election of the appointee”.3
A decision of this Court in the instant inquiry may affect the outcome of the partisan controversy whether the nominee of a Republican or of a Democratic Governor should remain, or the candidate of the Republican or Democratic party con*202vention should become, a member of this Court from and after January 1, 1985, as a result of the non-partisan election in November, 1984.
It appears from the diverse opinions of my colleagues4 that substantial but inconclusive arguments can be advanced for5 and against the *203claims asserted for and against Justice Riley.
The language of § 23 is flawed and does not clearly answer the question whether § 23 provides that the "vacancy” created by the death of Justice Moody shall be filled by the former Governor or the present Governor.6 The answer, the meaning of *208§ 23, depends on an evaluation of competing policy arguments.7
*211I am of the opinion that it is not appropriate for this Court to decide, upon an assessment of competing policy arguments, which Governor had or has the power of appointment.8 It is not in keeping *212with the spirit of the constitution for this Court to make a policy decision which will decide who sits on this Court.
It would encroach upon the right of the people to decide who sits on this Court or to decide who decides who sits on this Court, for this Court, in *213the guise of construction, to recognize as duly authorized and appointed to this Court with an incumbency designation in the 1984 election an appointee of the former Governor, but not an appointee of the present Governor.
I have searched without avail for a principled basis of deciding between the competing constructions of the constitution set forth in the opinions of my colleagues.
Having found none, I am of the opinion that, in the circumstance that this Court’s decision may affect the outcome of a partisan controversy concerning who shall become or remain our colleague, we should adopt a position of neutrality and that the decisions necessary to enable and permit this Court to function until January 1, 1985, should be posited on that approach and should neither advantage nor disadvantage one side or the other of the electoral controversy concerning a seat on this Court.
I am accordingly of the opinion that no judgment of ouster should be issued at this time by this Court in respect to the appointment of Justice Dorothy C. Riley by the former Governor or in respect to any appointee that shall be named by the present Governor to fill the Moody seat temporarily until January 1 following the November, 1984 general election.9 The quo warranto com*214plaint filed by the Attorney General cannot be decided until four members of this Court vote to grant the relief prayed for therein or to dismiss the complaint.10
If the disposition of this controversy which I believe to be sound were to be adopted by this Court, both appointees would be regarded as justices appointed by a Governor, and, therefore, presumptively entitled to sit, neither taking precedence over the other. Justice Riley would sit as a justice and exercise the powers of the office of justice of the Supreme Court, and an appointee named by the present Governor, having the constitutional qualifications and who takes the oath of office, would so sit and exercise such powers. Justice Riley and such an appointee of the present Governor would both be authorized to file affidavits of candidacy and be designated on the ballot as incumbents in the November, 1984 election for the term ending January 1, 1991.
I acknowledge that if the disposition which I believe to be sound were adopted and the present Governor appoints a person who qualifies, there may appear to be eight justices on the Court while the constitution provides for seven.
This Court has discretion whether to accept for *215decision any controversy.11 There is a need, so that this Court can resume its functioning, to reconcile that discretion with the need not anticipated in the constitution to resolve a conflict concerning who may appoint to temporarily fill a seat on this Court. I believe that the disposition which I think to be sound is consonant with our constitutional obligation to resolve this conflict so that this Court can again address the heavy calendar that confronts it and our obligation to exercise our discretion with regard to the controversies with which it is appropriate that we grapple in a manner such that we do not involve the Court in partisan controversy.
There are no intractable problems in functioning with eight justices, and doing so would not or need not result in the effective casting of more than seven votes during the relatively short period of time between now and January 1, 1985. Until 1968, when Justice Theodore Souris resigned, the Court had for over fifty years been composed of eight persons and was able to function with that number. There would be no difficulty in the Court functioning for a short time with eight:
(i) Applications for leave to appeal could continue to be granted when four agreed unless two of the four were the appointees to the Moody seat in which event the application could be deemed denied. (Parenthetically, the United States Supreme Court grants a petition for certiorari when four, not five of the nine, justices agree);
(ii) Except for the election of a chief justice, votes on administrative matters are rarely decided by votes of four to three; a chief justice is not scheduled to be elected until after the 1984 election;
*216(iii) If the Court were to be divided four to four in a case granted plenary consideration and the appointees to the Moody seat are on the same side, the matter could be deemed to have been decided four to three the other way. On the other hand, if the appointees are on opposite sides, the Court has two options: it can delay the decision until after January 1, 1985, resubmitting the matter in January, 1985, to eliminate the vote of the one who is not elected in November, 1984, or if that may result in undue delay (a matter submitted between March 1, 1983, and say March 1, 1984), the matter could be remanded to the Court of Appeals for plenary consideration by that Court en banc as was done on one occasion when this Court was composed of eight justices at the time, May 13, 1968, when the cause was argued in the Court of Appeals. See Mullins v Wayne County, 16 Mich App 365; 168 NW2d 246 (1969).
There remains the question whether Justice Riley or an appointee of the present Governor is the one entitled to file an affidavit of candidacy and to be designated on the ballot as an incumbent. That, of course, is precisely what is at stake and precisely what this Court should avoid deciding, because such a decision might encroach on the outcome of the election and would involve this Court in partisan controversy.
Because I am of the opinion that no judgment of ouster should be issued at this time, I join in the decision to deny issuance of a judgment of ouster.
Order Entered February 11,1983
This cause having been brought to this Court by complaint for quo warranto and due deliberation having been had of the complaint and of the briefs and oral arguments of the parties, and the Court *217being equally divided upon the question of the right of defendant to hold the office of Justice of the Supreme Court after January 1, 1983, it is hereby ordered that the complaint is dismissed.
Pursuant to GCR 1963, 866.3(c) the Clerk is directed to issue this judgment order forthwith.
Riley, J., not participating.Order Entered February 15, 1983
Upon reconsideration on the Court’s own motion, there now being four justices who vote for ouster, the order of February 11, 1983 in this cause is vacated. This cause having been brought to this Court by complaint for quo warranto and due deliberation having been had of the complaint and of the briefs and oral arguments of the parties, it is hereby ordered and adjudged that defendant, Dorothy Comstock Riley, has, since the first day of January, 1983, claimed to exercise the office of Justice of the Supreme Court, and whereas, upon full consideration we find that claim from that date to be without authority, it is ordered that the said defendant, Dorothy Comstock Riley is hereby ousted and excluded from the office of Justice of the Supreme Court.
Pursuant to GCR 1963, 866.3(c) the Clerk is directed to issue this judgment order, forthwith.
Riley, J., not participating.2 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, p 3388, Address to the People concerning art 6, § 23.
In his excellent brief, amicus curiae argues that § 23 creates a special "interim” term that may terminate earlier, later, or at the same time as the "first” eight-year term. The Attorney General argues that § 2 provides only for eight-year terms. We believe that both arguments miss the point. The question is not whether Justice Riley is attempting to serve parts of two terms or a single "interim” term. These are merely two different ways to conceptualize the same result. If § 23 can be fairly interpreted to allow Justice Riley to serve until January of 1985, then § 2 cannot be read to require the opposite result. As is explained more fully hereafter, we find nothing inconsistent in one provision that provides for eight-year terms for elected justices and another provision allowing an appointed justice to serve the last month of one eight-year term and the first two years of the next eight-year term.
Salas v Clements, 399 Mich 103, 109; 247 NW2d 889 (1976); Aikens v Dep’t of Conservation, 387 Mich 495, 499; 198 NW2d 304 (1972); cf. Owendale-Gagetown School Dist v State Board of Education, 413 Mich 1, 8; 317 NW2d 529 (1982).
For example, to use the Attorney General’s hypothet, former Justice Fitzgerald’s term of office was scheduled to terminate on January 1, 1983. He chose not to run for re-election. At the November 2, 1982 general election, Justice Michael F. Cavanagh won election to a term of office commencing on January 1, 1983. If a vacancy had occurred in Justice Fitzgerald’s office after November 2, 1982j but before January 1, 1983, the Governor could have selected an appointee to fill the vacancy. The appointee might have argued that the plain language of art 6, § 23 allows him to remain in office until January following the next general election, despite the fact that the successor was already elected at the 1982 general election, before the vacancy occurred.
This sort of reasoning was recognized and rejected in Detroit Common Council v Rush, 82 Mich 532; 46 NW 951 (1890). An act designed to prevent election fraud provided that voters must enter concealed voting booths by themselves, and while concealed from view prepare the ballot. It was argued that this requirement was invalid in its entirety, since a literal reading of the statute would deprive blind or crippled persons of their right to vote. Rather than reject the statute in its entirety, this Court held that the statute would be enforceable in the vast majority of the cases, but would not be enforced against voters physically unable to comply.
The original language of § 23 makes crystal clear that art 6, § 2, does not limit an appointee’s tenure to the end of the first eight-year term. If § 2 did not prevent an appointee selected by the Supreme Court from serving for portions óf two terms, assuming it took that long for the successor to be elected and qualified, the identical unamended language of § 2 cannot be used to prevent an appointee selected by the Governor from serving portions of two terms.
In absolute fairness to our colleagues, it is incumbent upon us to note that a very careful, and even sophisticated reading of the precise words used in the opinion claiming an historical preference for non-holdover is technically accurate.
Our colleagues state that there is an "historical preference for * ** * non-holdover Supreme Court terms”. (Emphasis added.) While the text of our colleagues’ introductory language declares that Michigan has had a history of a preference for no holdover, upon a close reading of the body of the opinion it becomes clear that the history cited is one of an absence of language requiring or prohibiting holdover in provisions concerning the terms of the Supreme Court. That, of course, is technically correct. The provision for holdover by *192an appointee to a vacancy logically would, and does, appear not in a constitutional provision defining the term of office of the Supreme Court justice, but in provisions concerning the manner of filling of a vacancy and the duration of an appointee’s tenure.
How our colleagues’ construction of the constitution, requiring two interim appointments instead of a single interim appointment, honors the people’s preference for an elected rather than an appointed Supreme Court judiciary is unclear.
Const 1908, art 7, § 20; Const 1850, art 6, § 14; but see Const 1850, art 6, § 2.
Const 1963, art 6, § 9.
Const 1963, art 6, § 12.
Const 1963, art 6, § 16.
We recognize that, after extensive debate, the convention decided to change the method of filling judicial vacancies from appointment by the Governor, see Const 1908, art 7, § 20, to appointment by the Supreme Court. Const 1963, art 6, § 23, as originally enacted. But this debate over how vacancies should be filled is largely irrelevant to a holdover clause, which prevents some vacancies from occurring by *197authorizing the person holding the office to continue to do so until a successor is elected and qualified. Even so, the original version of Const 1963, art 6, § 23, provided authorization for interim judicial appointments "for the limited period of time from the occurrence of the vacancy until the successor is elected and qualified”. The deletion of that phrase from the version of art 6, § 23, approved by the voters in 1968, appears to have been based on the assumption that the successor would always be elected and qualified no later than January 1 after the first general election after the vacancy occurred.
1851 PA 175, § 95 provided that:
“The person holding any office, at the expiration of the term thereof, shall continue to hold the same until his successor shall be elected or appointed and qualified.”
Of course, the absence of a constitutional provision requiring holdover means that the Legislature is free to modify or repeal the statutory holdover. In response to the Mason County treasurer case, the Legislature chose to modify the holdover statute with respect to county officials. See MCL 168.206a; MSA 6.1206(1), enacted in 1965.
"When a vacancy occurs in the office of judge of the supreme, circuit or probate court, it shall be filled by appointment of the governor, which shall continue until a successor is elected and qualified. When elected, such successor shall hold his office the residue of the unexpired term.” Const 1850, art 6, § 14.
"When a vacancy occurs in the office of judge of any court of record, it shall be filled by appointment of the governor, and the person appointed shall hold the office until a successor is elected and qualified. When elected, such successor shall hold the office the residue of the unexpired term.” Const 1908, art 7, § 20.
"A vacancy in the elective office of a judge of any court of record shall be filled at a general or special election as provided by law. The supreme court may authorize persons who have served as judges and who have retired, to perform judicial duties for the limited period of time from the occurrence of the vacancy until the successor is elected and qualified. Such persons shall be ineligible for election to fill the vacancy.” Const 1963, art 6, § 23, as originally adopted, before amendment in 1968.
"A vacancy shall occur in the office of judge of any court of record or in the district court by death, removal, resignation or vacating of the office, and such vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the governor. The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term. Whenever a new office of judge in a court of record, or the district court, is created by law, it shall be filled by election as provided by law. The supreme court may authorize persons who have been elected and served as *201judges to perform judicial duties for limited periods or specific assignments.” Const 1963, art 6, § 23, as amended in 1968.
2 Official Record, Constitutional Convention 1961, p 3388, Address to the People, concerning art 6, § 23.
The markedly different approaches taken by my colleagues underscore the difficulty of the question. Four of my colleagues believe that the question can be answered by reference to the words and history of the constitution, but reach different conclusions. Another argues that the language of the constitution is inherently ambiguous and that the question can be answered by a consideration of competing policies.
The opinions which support the right of the present Governor to make the appointment argue that because the term of an incumbent justice is fixed (art 6, § 2) at eight years without provision for holdover, § 23 should be construed as not providing that the special term of an appointee holds over. This argument assumes that the drafters, Legislature, and people would not provide holdover for an appointee unless it were provided for an incumbent. An incumbent holdover clause provides' for continuity in office where a non-incumbent is elected and dies or for some other reason does not qualify. An appointee holdover clause provides for continuity in office where the incumbent dies. There is inadequate basis for assuming that the drafters, Legislature, and people would not have envisioned one rule for one situation and a different rule for the other.
The opinions which support the right of the present Governor and of the former Governor to make the appointment make opposing arguments based on assumptions regarding the meaning of the words "remainder of the unexpired term” without stating the bases for their contradictory assumptions. That the opinions adopt such opposing assumptions indicates that there is no clear basis for concluding either that "the unexpired term” referred to is the one in which the vacancy occurs or the one in which the election is held.
The opinions also appear to make contradictory assumptions regarding the length of the vacancy. One opinion assumes that a vacancy must occur within a given term, so that it is self-contradictory to assert that "an appointee 'to fill a vacancy’ could serve in an office beyond the end of the term of that office”. An opposing opinion assumes that an appointee "is appointed to the 'office’ of Supreme Court justice” and not to a term, and thus that the term does not define the duration of the vacancy. I see no basis for making either of these contradictory assumptions.
I agree with the Chief Justice that "[t]he language of § 23 alone does not lead ineluctably to either result”. For the reasons stated in footnotes 7 and 8 infra, I believe that it is not appropriate for this Court to make a policy judgment on this matter.
The claim that the former Governor had the power to make an appointment effective beyond January 1, 1983, is made on constitutional and statutory grounds. The constitutional argument is addressed in fn 6.
*203The statutory argument is based on § 399 of the election law (MCL 168.399; MSA 6.1399), which provides that the term of office of a justice shall be eight years and "shall continue until a successor is elected and qualified”. It is argued that this language, which parallels the holdover language of the 1850 and 1908 Constitutions (fn 1 supra) regarding the filling of vacancies and the language of the present constitution with respect to the terms of judges of the Court of Appeals, circuit court, and probate court, provides for holdover.
The statutory language was enacted in 1954 (1954 PA 116), when the constitution authorized the Legislature to prescribe by law the term of office of justices of this Court, Const 1908, art 7, § 2. The present constitution does not authorize the Legislature to prescribe the term of office, but rather fixes the term at eight years.
The statutory language does not carry forward a holdover concept set forth in the 1850 Constitution. The 1850 Constitution fixed the terms of justices at eight years although it provided for holdover for circuit and probate judges. (Const 1850, art 6, §§ 2, 6, 13.)
The holdover provided for in § 23 differs from the holdover provided for in the 1954 statute in that the term of a justice appointed pursuant to §23 does not "continue until a successor is elected and qualified” but rather until the January 1 following the next general election.
I agree with Justices Williams and Kavanagh that the 1954 statute cannot change or modify the meaning of § 23, as amended in 1968.
Amicus cited cases from other jurisdictions. Many of the cases relied upon express holdover clauses in the provisions establishing the term of office. Others were based on provisions which expressly carved out special terms for appointees, unrelated to, uncontrolled by, and not part of the regular term of office. Still others addressed a factual situation where a newly elected official died rather than the incumbent. Some of the constitutional provisions involved clearly deal with the situation which confronts us, leaving nothing open to construction. None of the cases dealt with language and a factual situation such as is here presented.
The purpose of the 1968 amendment of § 23 was to authorize gubernatorial appointment to fill vacancies but not new positions. The first sentence of § 23 provides that the Governor may fill a "vacancy” by appointment:
“A vacancy shall occur in the office of judge of any court of record or in the district court by death, removal, resignation or vacating of the office, and such vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the governor.”
*204I agree with Justices Williams, Kavanagh, and Cavanagh, that ordinarily a vacancy occurs during a term of office and would not extend beyond the term of the office in which it occurs. As a result a person appointed to fill a vacancy ordinarily serves, by virtue of the appointment, for only the unexpired term of the office, determined as of the time the vacancy occurs.
But for the second sentence of § 23, there would be nothing in the language of § 23 to support an argument that a Governor has the power to appoint for a period of time extending beyond the expiration of the term of a judicial office in which a vacancy occurs.
It is the meaning of the second sentence, and any effect it may have on the meaning of "vacancy” in the first sentence, around which the legal arguments of this controversy revolve. The second sentence reads:
"The person appointed by the governor shall hold office until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs, at which election a successor shall be elected for the remainder of the unexpired term.”
The political compromise expressed in § 23 and the other sections (§§ 20, 22, 24) of art 6 of the 1963 Constitution amended in 1968 (1) restored gubernatorial appointment to fill vacancies, (2) but not new positions, (3) the appointee, however, to be subject to voter approval or disapproval, (4) but not at a special election, rather at the first general election after the vacancy arises, (5) the appointee to serve a special term ending on the January 1 following the next general election, (6) the appointee to appear on the ballot by filing an affidavit of candidacy (§ 22), and (7) to be designated on the ballot as an incumbent (§ 24).
The issue presented concerns the time of commencement in the instant case of the special term ending on the January 1 next succeeding the general election. The Attorney General contends that while generally the special term would commence on the date the Governor’s appointment of a person to fill the judicial vacancy becomes effective, where a new term of the judicial office commences on the January 1 next following the date on which the vacancy arises, the special term in respect to the new term commences on that January 1. It is contended on behalf of Justice Riley that because the second sentence of § 23 provides that the person appointed "shall hold office until” the January 1 "next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs”, the special term always commences on the date the Governor’s appointment becomes effective even though a new term commences during the special term. (Emphasis supplied.)
This case illustrates, once again, the care with which new language amending the constitution must be drafted.
If, when § 23 was amended in 1968 to restore the Governor’s power to fill vacancies, the language of the 1850 and 1908 Constitutions (see fn 1) concerning the Governor’s power to fill judicial vacancies had been used, it would, I think, be our obligation to construe the language as empowering the former Governor to fill the vacancy. Had the 1850 and 1908 language been used, Justice Riley would then hold fhe office of Justice of the Supreme Court "until a successor is elected *205and qualified” (see fn 1), which, this Court declared in 1861, means "unless someone elected and qualified was then ready to take the office”, People ex rel Andrews v Lord, 9 Mich 227, 231 (1861).
Section 23, as amended in 1968, does not say "until a successor is elected and qualified” but rather "until 12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs”. (Emphasis supplied.)
The difference in language vitiates the dictum of Lord to the effect that if "someone” other than the appointee had been elected when the deceased incumbent (Justice Moody) was re-elected for a new term beginning January 1, the term of the appointee would terminate when that someone qualified because an elected successor "was then ready to take office”. The dictum of Lord does not have the force of "precedent” because, while it could readily be said in Lord that "until a successor is elected” includes a successor elected before the death of the incumbent, and accordingly the language is "so free of ambiguity that there is no room left for construction”, that cannot be said of a clause which would extend the term of the appointee until the January 1 following "the first general election after the vacancy occurs” in apparent disregard of whether a successor had been elected beforé the death of the incumbent.
In Lord, the Court said that by reason of the death of the incumbent, "the election had then fallen through. This was not a technical vacancy” (emphasis in original), i.e., the new term, the period beginning January 1, is not a "vacancy”.
People v Lord continued that although "this was not a technical vacancy” (emphasis in original), it was a case provided for in a statute authorizing a special election at which a successor shall be chosen to succeed a person elected but who dies "before the commencement of the term of service for which he shall have been elected”. (1851 PA 175, § 2; 1857 CL 26.)
Starting with the dictum of Lord that this is not a technical vacancy, the question might be stated thus: is "shall hold office” until January 1 after the next general election a holdover clause so that an appointee serves beyond the January 1 expiration of the term in which the re-elected incumbent died?
A persuasive argument can be made that it is a holdover clause. The language of § 23 reads much the same as the language of the 1850 and 1908 Constitutions which clearly were holdover clauses. The opening words in the 1908 Constitution holdover clause, "[t]he person appointed shall hold the office until” reads in § 23, "the person appointed by the governor shall hold office until”. (See fn 1 supra for the 1850 provision, which is parallel.) So far, one would conclude that the drafter, the Legislature, and the people had in mind a continuation of the concepts set forth in the 1850 and 1908 Constitutions.
Arguably the words of the present § 23, "12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs” merely restate the concept embodied in the 1850/ 1908 clause, "a successor is elected and qualified”.
There is, however, an important difference between "until a successor is elected and qualified” and "until January 1 after the next *206election”. The 1850/1908 clause readily covers, as set forth in Lord, the contingency of a person other than the incumbent having been elected to a new term; the 1968 clause does not. One must read into the 1968 clause an exception for the situation where someone other than the incumbent has been elected for a new term which begins on the January 1 two years before the January 1 following the first general election "after” the vacancy occurs.
The second sentence of present § 23 must, therefore, all seem to agree, be deemed modified in some way. Those who contend that the former Governor was empowered to appoint for the disputed period might read in words to the following effect: "Unless a person (who subsequently does not, before taking office, die, resign or remove his domicile) other than the incumbent has been elected for a new term of office which begins on the first day of January next succeeding the day on which the vacancy occurs”. Those who contend that the former Governor could not make an appointment for the period beginning January 1 would excise the words "a person (who subsequently does not, before taking office, die, resign or remove his domicile) other than the incumbent has been elected for” so that the modifying language would read: "Unless a new term of office begins on the first day of January next succeeding the day on which the vacancy occurs”.
It is argued that the intent in saying in present § 23 "12 noon of the first day of January next succeeding the first general election held after the vacancy occurs” instead of “a successor is elected and qualified” was solely to eliminate special elections and that it was not intended to eliminate the concept of holdover that had prevailed for over a hundred years until 1963. It is argued that "the first general election after the vacancy occurs” should be read as if the clause said "until a successor is elected at a general election” without regard to whether the election is before or after the vacancy occurs.
There is, to be sure, on the facts of the instant case no difference in application between "until a successor is elected at a general election” and "the first general election after the vacancy occurs”. A non-incumbent was not elected. Why then not simply conclude that "the first general election after the vacancy occurs” has the meaning of the holdover clause "until a successor is elected”?
Such a construction would fail to take into account the words, "after the vacancy occurs” in the context of a case where a non-incumbent is elected, and would also fail to take into account the failure to use the language of the 1850 and 1908 Constitutions.
The failure to use the language of the 1850/1908 Constitutions, "until a successor is elected”, suggests that
(i) the drafter did not think about a new term intervening and whether the clause should be drafted as a holdover clause, or
(ii) if he did think about it, he either,
(a) was not aware of the judicial vacancy language of the 1850 or 1908 Constitutions, or
(b) if he was, chose not to adopt that language because
(I) he did not intend holdover, or
(II) if he did intend holdover, did not understand *207that by using the language of the 1850/1908 Constitutions, he would incorporate the construction of People v Lord or the importance of doing so to avoid ambiguity.
We do not know why the drafter did not incorporate the construction of Lord by using the 1850/1908 language with the addition of a limiting "at a general election” after "until a successor is elected”. It would be assuming a principal point in issue to conclude that although the drafter did not use the 1850/1908 language, he intended the meaning ascribed by Lord to that language.
The argument that the sole purpose of the drafter in using different language was to eliminate special elections, that he was saying only general and not special elections, cuts both ways. A drafter concerned with eliminating special elections may not have thought of holdover and accordingly of providing that there should be holdover. If he did not think about it, if he was thinking only of the case where on January 1 there was an unexpired term of less than 8 years and was simply saying "general election” not "special election”, then it cannot properly be said that the clause was drafted as a holdover clause.
The holdover concept can be expressed in different ways. I am not saying that if the drafter had intended holdover, he would have used the language of the 1850/1908 Constitutions. Rather I am saying that where the drafter does not use language which has been construed by this Court to constitute a holdover clause and instead uses other language which is flawed, the non-use of the language already construed cannot be ignored by assuming that although different words were used, no different meaning was intended. The use of different words suggests, although it does not necessarily mean, that a different meaning may have been intended.
If the word "shall” in § 23 is read literally, then, if the incumbent, Justice Moody, had been defeated and had then died, or even resigned, the former Governor could have appointed someone to take office instead of the person elected by the voters to succeed Justice Moody.
The second sentence was drafted with the typical case in mind, without regard to the atypical case, leaving, as is often done, the atypical case to the courts as a matter of construction.
The term of judges of the Court of Appeals, circuit court, probate court, and district court are six years and of justices of the Supreme Court eight years. The likelihood is that any vacancy will occur during the first 5-1/2 or 7-1/2 years and not during the last six months or less of a term. The language of the second sentence of § 23 works, in general, for the typical case — where the vacancy occurs during the first 5-1/2 or 7-1/2 years of the term. In such a case there is at least six months of the term left, and the person appointed by the Governor can hold office until the first day of January next succeeding the general election held after the vacancy occurs and at such election a successor can be elected.
But the language is even then flawed. If the vacancy occurs during the last two years, two months of a term, a successor cannot be elected for "the remainder of the unexpired term”. Also, if the vacancy occurs a few weeks or days before a general election, a *208successor could not, as a practical matter, be elected at the "first general election held after the vacancy occurs”.
If the second sentence of § 23 were a well drafted, carefully drawn sentence where everything or almost everything worked and with little or nothing left to construction, the Court might be obliged to proceed on the assumption that the mandatory "shall” in the clause "shall serve until” means exactly what it ordinarily plainly says. There being in such case reason to believe that the language was carefully and thoughtfully drafted to cover all contingencies, there would be no reason to adopt a meaning other than a literal meaning. But that cannot be said of § 23. The language is flawed in the sense that there are substantial questions left to construction.
There is nothing in the structure or purpose of § 23 which would indicate that one construction of § 23 is preferable to another:
—Whether the Court decides the power of appointment was vested in the former Governor or is vested in the present Governor, a person appointed by "the governor” may run for office at the next general election, in November, 1984, by filing a certificate of incumbency with the mantle of the incumbency designation.
—A vacancy for six weeks does not impair the ability of this Court to function.
Justice Thomas E. Brennan resigned December 31, 1973; Justice John W. Fitzgerald was appointed January 7, 1974, a vacancy of seven days. Justice Thomas M. Kavanagh died April 19, 1975; Justice Lawrence B. Lin'demer was appointed June 2, 1975, six weeks, two days. Justice John B. Swainson resigned November 7, 1975; Justice James L. Ryan was appointed December 16, 1975, five weeks, four days.
It is apparent that while a justice might be appointed as promptly as within a week, the Governor might also take as long as six or seven or even eight weeks to fill a vacancy — more time than is likely to remain of the unexpired term, having in mind that it is not likely that the vacancy will occur on the very day of the re-election of an incumbent justice. As a practical matter, because of the time that ordinarily elapses between argument of a case and decision, there is little a Governor’s appointee to this Court can do in the relatively short time between an appointment after a November election and January 1.
The Governor-elect was in an as good a position as the former Governor to make an appointment of a person who could contribute to the work of the Court commencing with the arguments which were scheduled to be heard in January. Both Governors learned of the vacancy at the same time; neither was in a position to move more expeditiously than the other in choosing an appointee who could participate in the work of the Court beginning January 1.
Turning to vacancies in the trial courts, it appears that except in those situations where the Governor apparently had advance notice of an impending resignation, it generally takes two or three and some*209times four months and longer for the Governor to fill a vacancy on the circuit court. (This conclusion is based on a survey of the data' regarding changes in the circuit bench in the last dozen volumes of Michigan Reports.)
If an incumbent Governor can take as long as four months to fill a vacancy, the Governor-elect, apprised of the situation, should be able to effectively appoint someone within a few weeks or at the most a month of the time an incumbent Governor is likely to make an appointment effective.
It is argued that preservation of the independence of the judiciary requires recognition that the power to appoint is in the former Governor. A Governor might, to be sure, not re-appoint someone appointed for a term ending on a January 1 for the full term beginning January 1, for obviously valid reasons such as that the appointee had become seriously ill or had been indicted for a serious offense. A Governor who failed to re-appoint a judge whom he was more or less committed to appoint for a full term, because he was dissatisfied with a decision in a particular case, would most assuredly be subject to a great deal of criticism. Moreover, it is again relevant that it is unlikely that a vacancy will occur so far in advance of January 1 that the judge appointed would be able to perform much in judicial duties between the effective date of his appointment and January 1. It is most unlikely that a person appointed to the Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court would both hear a case and file an opinion in less than two months. As for a circuit, district, or probate judge, it is not likely that the appointee will have the opportunity to do anything in the first few weeks of his or her tenure that would incur gubernatorial wrath.
It appearing that there is no compelling policy reason for conferring an immediate right of appointment for the full new term on the incumbent Governor, I turn to another aspect of the matter. Under our system of government, the term of a Governor or President does not expire on the morning after the date of a general election. There is a carry-over period in which a lame-duck Governor or President and a lame-duck Legislature or Congress exercise power. There is thus no policy against a Governor making an appointment for an unexpired term, whether the vacant office be a judicial or non-judicial office, to fill out the unexpired term albeit for a time extending beyond the term of office of the Governor making an appointment. But there is a dividing line. The incumbent Governor cannot make an appointment for a term which begins on or after the date that a new Governor’s term begins.
Thus approached from a policy standpoint, while there is no impolicy in a Governor making a lame-duck appointment, his power to do so is generally limited to terms which begin during his term of office.
If one asks why the people would distinguish between a new term and an old term on the question whether a Governor could make a continuing appointment, the short answer is that that is the distinction which has always been drawn. There thus is nothing unusual in concluding that the incumbent Governor cannot make an appointment for a term which begins after his term expires.
The response to that might be that appointments to judgeships are *210different. Judgeships are not partisan offices and while the distinction limiting the Governor’s power to terms beginning within his term makes political sense as to a partisan office, there is no need to draw such a distinction as to a non-partisan office. Implicit in that argument is the notion that an appointment to the judiciary is nonpartisan.
While Governors make non-partisan judicial appointments from time to time, judicial appointments are and are expected to be political, and hence may be and often are partisan. While the Governor is supposed to appoint qualified people and Governors have gone to considerable lengths to ascertain the qualifications of and to assure that qualified lawyers are appointed, political- and hence partisan considerations do and are expected to enter into the appointment process. Indeed, the Governor is given the task (rather than a citizens’ group) because he is a representative of the people chosen in a partisan manner and is expected to make a decision which is responsive to political concerns, which inevitably include the concerns of the political party to which he owes allegiance.
The point is not that the justices are partisan but rather that the process by which they come to this Court and are re-elected is a partisan process both at the appointment stage and at the nomination stage of the election and re-election process.
The reason this controversy is important to the parties is because political power is involved. If the office of Justice of the Supreme Court was a purely non-partisan office, it is doubtful whether this controversy would have become as important and would have so preoccupied the attention of the Court and some segments of the populace. The issue is of importance because it is important to both political parties that as many justices as possible emanate from their own appointing and nominating processes.
All justices and judges, those appointed as well as those elected, are products of the political process, including those nominated to the United States Supreme Court, the United States Court of Appeals and the United States District Courts, all of whom come through the political process in one form or another and many of whom reach their offices for partisan and other political considerations as well as because of their other qualifications as men and women and lawyers and judges. Charles Evans Hughes and William Howard Taft, Chief Justices of the United States, were prominent politicians — Hughes, Governor of New York, presidential candidate, Secretary of State; Taft, President of the United States.
One cannot properly conclude then that the judiciary is different, that an appointment to judicial office is supposed to be non-partisan and therefore, because it is of no political importance whether an incumbent or a newly elected Governor makes the appointment, the people might well have decided, or did decide, that a vacancy in judicial office would include the new term where the incumbent is reelected and then dies before the new term begins.
I conclude that no policy argument favors recognizing a power to appoint for,the disputed term in either the former or present Governor. Either Governor can be expected to appoint a qualified person based, at least in part, on political (partisan) considerations. A delay *211in appointment for even two months would not adversely affect the functioning of the Court. A short-term appointment would not impinge on the independence of the judiciary.
There is a difference of opinion whether courts should decide all properly presented "cases and controversies”. Herbert Wechsler argued that courts have a duty to decide all cases, see Wechsler, Toward Neutral Principles of Constitutional Law, 73 Harv L Rev 1 (1959), while Alexander Bickel would recognize a discretion in choosing the cases to decide, see Bickel, The Supreme Court, 1960 Term, Foreword: The Passive Virtues, 75 Harv L Rev 40 (1961).
One of the doctrines employed by courts to decline to decide cases is the "political question” doctrine developed by the United States Supreme Court.
Justice Frankfurter described the "political thicket” a court should avoid:
"Nothing is clearer than that this controversy concerns matters that bring courts into immediate and active relations with party contests. From the determination of such issues this Court has traditionally held aloof. It is hostile to a democratic system to involve the judiciary in the politics of the people. And it is not less pernicious if such judicial intervention in an essentially political contest be dressed up in the abstract phrases of the law.
"Courts ought not to enter this political thicket.” Colegrove v Green, 328 US 549, 553-554, 556; 66 S Ct 1198; 90 L Ed 1432 (1946).
Alexander Bickel said:
"Such is the foundation, in both intellect and instinct, of the political-question doctrine: the Court’s sense of lack of capacity, compounded in unequal parts of (a) the strangeness of the issue and its intractability to principled resolutions; (b) the sheer momentousness of it, which tends to unbalance judicial judgment; (c) the anxiety, not so much that the judicial judgment will be ignored, as that perhaps it should but will not be; (d) finally ('in a mature democracy’), the inner vulnerability, the self-doubt of an institution which is electorally irresponsible and has no earth to draw strength from.” Bickel, The Least Dangerous Branch, 184 (Bobbs-Merrill 1962).
More recently Justice Brennan, speaking for the Court in Baker v Carr, 369 US 186, 217; 82 S Ct 691; 7 L Ed 2d 663 (1962), said:
"It is apparent that several formulations which vary slightly according to the settings in which the questions arise may describe a political question, although each has one or more elements which identify it as essentially a function of the separation of powers. Prominent on the surface of any case held to involve a political question is found a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political department; or a lack of judi*212dally discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; or the impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial discretion; or the impossibility of a court’s undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate branches of government; or an unusual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already made; or the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question.” (Emphasis added.)
As Justice Brennan cautioned in Baker, a court does not label a case a "political question” merely because it is a "political case”. It may do so when the controversy meets the criteria of the doctrine, and presents the dangers Professor Bickel and Justices Frankfurter and Brennan described.
In the instant case, the parties and the opinions of the justices canvass the standards said to control the resolution of this case. Although nominally a question of constitutional construction is presented, the opinions demonstrate that there is no principled nonarbitrary way to decide this case. It is "intractable” to principled legal resolution.
The "sheer momentousness” of this case in which the Court is asked to judge one of its own, and where the Court is asked to resolve policy issues as yet unweighed by the people, tends to "unbalance judicial judgment”.
The policies here in conflict are fundamental ones in a constitutional democracy and beyond the competence of a court to decide. Making a policy choice regarding the composition of the Court between equally plausible views under such circumstances is not consistent with the concept that the people decide the composition of the Court. Such a decision may damage this Court’s reputation for objectivity.
However this controversy is characterized, if the Court decides for or against the proposition advanced by the Attorney General, we are inevitably playing a role in the selection of a justice and doing so in one of the most highly politicized controversies that has come to this Court.
The constitution seeks to assure a strong and smoothly functioning Court. If a decision on the constructional issue would weaken the Court and impair its ability to function, then, in deference to that constitutional value, the Court should avoid such a decision.
We should carefully guard the reputation of this Court. Which Governor’s appointee sits on this Court matters far less in the long run than that this Court continue to be, and be perceived as, impartial and objective.
Alternatively, we could conclude that neither the appointee of the former Governor nor an appointee of the present Governor would be deemed duly authorized or appointed to succeed Justice Moody.
Because § 23 provides for the filling of the vacancy created by the death of Justice Moody by empowering "the governor” to fill the vacancy, albeit the meaning of § 23 is unclear whether the Governor so empowered is the former or the present Governor, the Legislature could not, in my opinion, provide by law, pursuant to Const 1963, art 4, § 38, for the filling of the vacancy created by the death of Justice Moody.
A successor to Justice Moody would then be elected by the people at the general election in November, 1984, unless, by vote of the *214people, the constitution shall have been amended to provide for filling the vacancy or choosing his successor in some other manner.
No judgment of a trial court is here being affirmed by an equally divided court. Opinions joined in by less than four of the six participating members of this Court do not have finality. Today’s disposition cannot, in my opinion, decide or adjudicate this controversy.
The court rule provides:
"Decisions by the Supreme Court. No motion shall be decided nor order entered by the Court unless all required documents have been filed with the Court and requisite fees have been paid and, except for affirmance of action by a lower court or tribunal by even division of the Justices of the Supreme Court voting thereon, decisions of the Supreme Court shall be made by concurrence of a majority of the Justices voting thereon.” GCR 1963, 865.3.
See Const 1963, art 6, § 4.