State Ex Rel. Sokira v. Burr
State Ex Rel. Sokira v. Burr
Opinion of the Court
The issue in this case is whether Rolen Henry Burr, who, in 1962 pleaded guilty to the crime of distilling and was sentenced to *Page 1341 one year and one day in the state penitentiary, with one year's probation, and who, in 1964, was pardoned with an express restoration of his civil and political rights, is disqualified from holding the office of mayor of the Town of Brookside, Alabama. The certificate of pardon issued by the Board of Pardons and Parole restored Burr's "civil and political rights," specifically stating the following:
"ORDERED that all disabilities resulting from the above stated conviction be and they are hereby removed and the civil and political rights of the above named are restored."
In 1988, Burr was elected to his third term as the Mayor of the Town of Brookside, Alabama, and on February 21, 1990, Frank C. Sokira, William P. Murray, and William Lehman ("the petitioners") filed a petition for a writ of quo warranto, alleging that Burr holds the office of mayor in violation of Ala. Code 1975, §
The petitioners allege that Burr's holding public office violates §
"(a) The following persons shall be ineligible to and disqualified from holding office under the authority of this state:
". . . .
"(3) Those who shall have been convicted of treason, embezzlement of public funds, malfeasance in office, larceny, bribery or any other crime punishable by imprisonment in the state or federal penitentiary and those who are idiots or insane." (Emphasis added.)
That provision formerly appeared at Ala. Code (1940), T. 41, § 5.
Article IV, § 60, of the Alabama Constitution (1901) similarly mandates:
"No person convicted of embezzlement of the public money, bribery, perjury, or other infamous crime, shall be eligible to the legislature, or capable of holding any office of trust or profit in this state." (Emphasis added.)
At the time Burr pleaded guilty to distilling, the Alabama legislature had defined the crime of distilling in Ala. Code (1940), T. 29, § 103, and expressly made distilling a felony, punishable by at least one year in the penitentiary. That section provided:
"Any person . . . who shall, within this state, distill, make or manufacture any alcoholic . . . liquors or beverage, any part of which is alcohol, shall be guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, be punished by imprisonment at hard labor in the penitentiary for not less than one year nor longer than five years . . . ."
Applying Ala. Code 1975, §
While these laws specifically address the effect of a felony conviction on a person's qualification to hold public office, they do not address how a pardon that expressly restores to an individual his "civil and political rights" affects that individual's ability to hold public office. Thus, the ultimate issue becomes whether the State's pardon of Burr, expressly restoring his civil and political rights, allows him to hold the office of mayor. In entering summary judgment in favor of Burr, the trial court did not address this legal question except to hold that justice would not be served by granting the writ of quo warranto.
Ala. Code 1975, §
"When any person holding any office or place under authority of this state is sentenced by any court of the United *Page 1342 States, of this state or of any other state to imprisonment in the penitentiary or hard labor for the county, his office or place shall be vacated from the time of the conviction. If the judgment is reversed, new trial granted, or judgment notwithstanding the verdict is rendered, he shall be restored to office; but, if pardoned, he shall not be restored to office." (Emphasis added.)
The only direction provided regarding an individual who is pardoned prior to holding public office is found in Amendment No. 38 to the Ala. Const. (1901), which states that "No pardon shall relieve from civil and political disabilities unlessspecifically addressed in the pardon." (Emphasis added.)
Chief Justice Marshall, writing for the United States Supreme Court, recognized that "a pardon is an act of grace, proceeding from the power entrusted with the execution of the laws, which exempts the individual, on whom it is bestowed, from the punishment the law inflicts for a crime he has committed."United States v. Wilson, 7 Pet. 150, 159, (32 U.S.),
"A pardon reaches both the punishment prescribed for the offense and the guilt of the offender; and when the pardon is full, it releases the punishment and blots out of existence the guilt, so that in the eye of the law the offender is as innocent as if he had never committed the offense. . . . [I]t removes the penalties and disabilities, and restores him to all his civil rights; it makes him, as it were, a new man, and gives him a new credit and capacity.
"There is only this limitation to its operation; it does not restore offices forfeited, or property or interests vested in others in consequence of the conviction and judgment."
This Court followed the language of Justice Field in decidingHogan v. Hartwell,
" 'The doctrine has generally been accepted by the court; that a full and unconditional pardon restores to the offender the customary civil rights which ordinarily belong to a citizen' and this includes restoration to the 'pardoned offender his eligibility for state elective office which was forfeited by his conviction.' " (Emphasis added, citation omitted.)
During the same year that this Court decided Hogan, this Court quoted Justice Field's analysis of a pardon in In reStephenson,
This Court concluded that a prerequisite to the admission to the bar is a good moral character, and that "an application for reinstatement of an attorney, after the judgment of disbarment has become final, must be treated as an application for admission to the practice, and not as an application to vacate the order of disbarment."
" ' "[A] person . . . is relieved from the legal consequences of a specific crime" ', and . . . ' "a full and unconditional pardon restores to the offender the customary civil rights which ordinarily belong to a citizen." ' "
However, the Court of Appeals stated that this language "constitute[d] broad generalizations and like all statements of generalities, will lead to paradoxical conclusions if mechanically and literally applied to every factual situation."
"The governor shall have power . . . to grant pardons. . . . Pardons in cases of felony and other offenses involving moral turpitude shall not relieve from civil and political disabilities, unless approved by the Board of Pardons and specifically expressed in the pardon."
In 1939, the people ratified Amendment 38 to the Alabama Constitution (1901); that amendment expressly gave to the legislature the "power to provide for and to regulate the administration of pardons and paroles." That amendment stated that "no pardon shall relieve from civil and political disabilities unless specifically expressed in the pardon." (Emphasis added.) Justice Coleman argued that when the pardondoes expressly restore civil rights, "then the person pardoned is relieved from all loss of civil rights, unless and except as the pardon itself may limit restoration."
Nearly 30 years after Justice Coleman's dissent inMason, this Court, in Randolph County v. Thompson,
The reasoning asserted in Randolph County was similarly applied to city officials in Sumbry v. State ex rel. Grant,
" 'Because, in Alabama, a pardon eliminates neither the fact of conviction nor the moral guilt accompanying the conviction, we must conclude that a pardon does not restore to one pardoned the eligibility to hold public office." '
After a thorough review of the Alabama cases addressing the effect of pardons that expressly restore civil and political rights, we now hold that the better reasoned decision is this Court's previously cited case of Hogan v. Hartwell, and we adopt the opinion of United States Supreme Court Justice Field, in Ex parte Garland, where he stressed that a pardon, expressly restoring to an individual his civil and political rights,removes the disabilities that accompany a conviction. Justice Field wrote that the effect of the pardon is "to relieve the petitioner from all penalties and disabilities *Page 1345 attached to the offense" and said that "to exclude him, by reason of that offense, from continuing in the enjoyment of a previously acquired right, is to enforce a punishment for that offense notwithstanding the pardon." Ex parte Garland, 4 Wall. (71 U.S.) at 381.
By readopting this Court's decision in Hogan, we recognize that a pardon that restores to an individual all civil rights and political privileges necessarily nullifies all legal punishment for the offense. In other words, if the conviction incorporates certain civil and political disqualifications, then a pardon that specifically revives all civil and political rights must certainly remove any and all legal incapacities. See Ala. Const. (1901), § 124, amend. No. 38.
Thus, we expressly reverse our holding in Sumbry. However, we distinguish our holding in Randolph County. As noted above, inRandolph County, Thompson applied to the governor for an appointment to the office of supernumerary sheriff. Specifically applying the rationale established in Mason, this Court held that Thompson was ineligible and disqualified from holding the office of supernumerary sheriff. We now hold that the decision in Mason is erroneous and, in light of the better reasoned Hogan decision, we hold that Thompson's pardon restoring his civil and political rights necessarily restored his eligibility to hold public office. However, the pardon, although restoring Thompson's eligibility to hold a position of trust, could not compel the governor to appoint him to the position of supernumerary sheriff. Therefore, we reverseRandolph County only to the extent that it relies on the rationale in Mason.
In this case, the trial court stated in its summary judgment "that justice would not be served by granting the relief sought by Plaintiffs." Where the trial court's legal reasoning is lacking, but its judgment is nonetheless proper, the judgment will not be disturbed on appeal. Progressive Specialty Ins. Co.v. Hammonds,
AFFIRMED.
HORNSBY, C.J., and ALMON, SHORES, ADAMS, KENNEDY and INGRAM, JJ., concur.
HOUSTON and STEAGALL, JJ., concur specially.
"There is nothing in the law of pardons which will warrant the court in reaching a conclusion that the amnesty or immunity claimed to be afforded by the law to the defendants in 1904 wiped out the existence of the transactions, matters, and things concerning which they testified. The difference between a crime committed and forgiven, and its physical occurrence, must not be overlooked. . . ."A pardon or amnesty secures against the consequences of one's acts, and not against the acts themselves; it involves forgiveness, not forgetfulness." (Emphasis added.)
The court in Swift adopted this reasoning from Ex parteGarland,
The Supreme Court of Arkansas again applied this phrase inState ex rel. Attorney General v. Irby,
" '. . . a pardon implies guilt, it does not obliterate the fact of the commission of the crime, and the conviction thereof; it does not wash out the moral stain; as has been tersely said it involves forgiveness and not forgetfulness.' " (Emphasis added.)
Judge Harwood utilized this language in Mason, when he overruled the reasoning set out in Hogan v. Hartwell.
Concurring Opinion
By Amendment No. 38 to the Alabama Constitution of 1901, § 124 of the Constitution was amended to provide in pertinent part: "The legislature shall have power to provide for and toregulate the administration of pardons, paroles, remissions of fines and forfeitures. . . . No pardon shall relieve from civiland political disabilities unless specifically expressed in thepardon." (Emphasis added.)
The people have given the legislature the power to pardon and the power to restore civil and political rights by specifically providing for this in the pardon. I can find nothing in the Constitution that gives the judiciary the power or the right to overrule the exercise of this legislative power. Whatever common law rights the judiciary had to regulate pardons or to condition them, if any, have been preempted by the Constitution. Under the separation of powers doctrine (§§ 42 and 43, Constitution), which this Court has recently rediscovered and applied ex mero motu, ex proprio motu, and suasponte to strike down an act of the legislature (Armstrong v.Roger's Outdoor Sports, Inc.,
STEAGALL, J., concurs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State of Alabama Ex Rel. Frank C. Sokira v. Rolen Henry Burr.
- Cited By
- 23 cases
- Status
- Published