State ex rel. Young v. Cox
State ex rel. Young v. Cox
Opinion of the Court
The principal contention of the relator is that Section 2867, General Code (Section 1240, Revised Statutes, amended April 2, 1906), which provides that there shall be elected biennially in each county a clerk of the court of common pleas, who shall hold his office two years beginning on the first Monday of August next after the election, is in conflict with Section 16, Article IV of the Constitution, and is therefore unconstitutional and void.
The part of Section 16 of Article IV material to the question raised here reads as follows:
“There shall be elected in each county, by the electors thereof, one clerk of the court of common pleas, who shall hold his office for the term of three years, and until his successor shall be elected and qualified.”
On November 7, 1905, there was adopted an amendment to the Constitution, designated as Article XVII, as follows:
“Section 1. Elections for state and county officers shall be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in the even numbered years; and all elections for all other elective officers shall be held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in the odd numbered years.
“Section 2. The term of office of the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney-general, secretary of
“And the general assembly shall have power to so extend existing terms of office as to effect the purpose of section 1 of this article.
“Any vacancy which shall occur in any elective state office other than that of a member of the general assembly or of governor, shall be filled by appointment by the governor until the disability is removed, or a successor elected and qualified. Every such vacancy shall be filled by election at the first general election for the office which is vacant, that occurs more than thirty (30) days after the vacancy shall have occurred. The person elected
“Section 3. Every elective officer holding office when this amendment is adopted, shall continue to hold such office for the full term for which he was elected, and until his successor shall be elected and qualified as provided by law.”
Counsel insist that there is no direct conflict between Section 16 of Article IV and any other provision of the Constitution, unless a false interpretation is placed on the following language of Article XVII, Section 2: “The term of office of all elective county * * * officers shall be such even number of years not exceeding four (4) years as may be so prescribed”—prescribed, it is conceded, by the general assembly.
The claim is that a clerk of the court of common pleas is not a county officer—that he is a constitutional officer—and counsel would make a distinction between a constitutional office and a county office, and suggest that the constitution itself differentiates between these two classes of offices, and call our attention to Section 20 of Article II and Sections 1 and 2 of Article X.
There may be a technical distinction between these two classes of offices, but can it be claimed seriously that the electors of this state recognized or had in mind such a distinction when they adopted Article XVII containing the term “county officers?” Did they not intend to include in that class every officer generally and popularly known
Article XVII was adopted as an amendment to the constitution. It does not appear in the article itself just what provisions of the constitution were to be amended or superseded.
As was said in The State, ex rel., v. Creamer, 83 Ohio St., 412, it is as if it were written in Article XVII in express terms that all provisions of the constitution inconsistent with this expression of the will of the electors shall be regarded as amended or abrogated to the extent that may be necessary to give it full effect, which is the familiar rule for amendments and repeals by implication.
Applying then the doctrine announced in The State, ex rel., v. Creamer, supra, that earlier expressions in a constitution must must yield when it is necessary to give effect to the latest expression of the intention of those whose intention is entitled to control, Section 16 of Article IV has been abrogated. ,
The fact that the office of clerk of the court of common pleas was provided for in the judicial article and not in the county and township organization article of the constitution is unimportant. The rule applied in the case of The State, ex rel., v. McCracken, 51 Ohio St., 123, that where there is a general provision in the constitution and a special one the latter controls, has no application here. In the McCracken case there were before the court two contemporaneous provisions of the constitution, provisions which were in the constitution when it was adopted as a whole. Here we are considering an amendment to the constitution, the latest, expression of the electors on the subject, and
It is urged, however, on behalf of the relator, that, assuming that the office under consideration is a county office within the meaning of that term as used in Article XVII, the term of the office is placed within the control of the general assembly upon the express condition only that the legislature shall not abridge the term, and our attention is directed to the language used in the second section of the article: “The general assembly shall have power to so extend existing terms of office as to effect the purpose of section 1 of this article.”
This was a temporary provision, and had reference to terms of officers elected at the time Article XVII became effective. It was not intended as a permanent provision of the constitution applicable to officers to be chosen after its adoption. This was the view of the matter taken by Judge Spear in The State, ex rel., v. Metcalfe, 80 Ohio St., 244, where he refers to this feature of Article XVII as manifestly temporary only in operation; and Judge Davis in The State, ex rel., v. Pattison, 73 Ohio St., 305, says that the power to extend terms .as designated in Article XVII is confined to such officers as were already elected at the time when the amendment became effective.
The general assembly, in pursuance of this provision, extended the term of office of state and county officers by an act passed April 2, 1906 (98 O. L., 271) : “To conform the terms of office of various state and county officers to the constitu
The respondents properly refused to cancel the commission of relator and to issue to him a commission for a term of three years.
Judgment of the court of appeals affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting. The constitution of Ohio of 1851 provided for the election of certain
For more than half a century the provisions of Section 16 of Article IV, creating the office of clerk of common pleas court and fixing the term thereof, and Section 2 of Article X, authorizing the general assembly of Ohio to fix the term of county officers, remained the organic law of this state, and the clerk of the common pleas court was elected and held his office for the term provided in Section 16 of Article IV of the Constitution. The general assembly had no authority whatever either to limit or increase that term, nor had it
Our attention is called to only one reported case in this state where it was ever seriously claimed by any one that the office of the clerk of common , pleas court came within the general provision, of . Section 2 of Article X, relating to county officers. That is the case of The State, ex rel., v. McCracken, 51 Ohio St., 123. This court'in that case “held that Section 2 of Article X had no application whatever to the clerk of the common pleas court, independent of the .question of whether he was a county officer or not, for. the reason that the "provision of Section 2 of Article X is a general provision relating to county officers in general, while Section 16 of Article IV is a special próvision with reference to the clerk of the' court of ' common pleas. Spear, J., in discussing this question in that case used this language: ■’ “In support of the claim of Berwick A. Barton, it is contended ■ that the effect of the statute of March 2, 1893, is '■■to create a vacancy in the office of clerk, because such clerk is a county officer, and Section 2, of Article X, of the Constitution provides that ‘county officers shall hold their office for such term, not exceeding three years, as may be provided by law.’
“It is, we think, a sufficient answer to this proposition to say that the purpose of the framers of the ' constitution, by the adoption of Section 16, of Ar- ' tide IV, to take the office qf clerk of the court out of the operation of the terms of Section 2; of
•At the time the amendment to the constitution' known as Article XVII was adopted, this special provisión of the constitution, relating to the office of clerk of common pleas court, had been in force over fifty years and the highest court in the state had'twice declared that this section of the constitution created this office and fixed the term, notwithstanding Section 2 of Article X in general terms authorized the general assembly of Ohio • to fix the term of office of all county officers. ■ The provision of this amendment authorizing the general assembly to fix the term of office of all “elective county * * * officers” for an even number of years not exceeding four years is no broader, no ; more comprehensive, than Section 2 of Article X. The original section used the term “county officers,” while the language of the amendment is
The framers of this amendment to the constitution and the electors voting for its adoption must be presumed to have known not only the provisions of the constitution of 1851 but also the construction given these two provisions by the supreme court of the state. Therefore, if it were the purpose to repeal the special provision language clearly indicating that intention would have been used. The fact that this special provision of the constitution had obtained for so many years, and the further fact that this court had held that this special provision of the constitution exempted this office from the general provisions of Section 2 of Article X, is practically an unanswerable argument that it was not intended that another general provision in identical or at least substantially the same language would be given a different construction. .Nor could the correctness of the construction of these constitutional provisions by this court have been questioned, for there is absolutely no authority to the contrary. The United States courts and the courts of all the states of the Union have uniformly held that special provisions of a constitution or a law always obtain as against general provisions. If this general provision were intended to have the effect of repealing the special provision then the only possible excuse for not specifically
There is another consideration, however, that would seem to be decisive of this question. The amendment (Article XVII) does not in terms repeal Section 16 of Article IV of the Constitution of 1851. If that section is repealed by this amendment it must be by implication. Spear, J., in the case of The State, ex rel., v. Metcalfe, 80 Ohio St., 244, 259, expresses a familiar doctrine in this very clear language: “Repeals by implication are not favored with respect to statutes, and for a stronger reason they should not be favored with respect to constitutional provisions. The repugnancy, to work a repeal, must be wholly irreconcilable, as the intention to repeal will not be presumed, nor the effect of the repeal admitted, unless the inconsistency is unavoidable. The State, ex rel., v. Dudley, 1 Ohio St., 437; Cass v. Dillon, 2 Ohio St., 607; Raudebaugh v. Shelley, 6 Ohio St., 308; Commissioners v. Board of Public Works, 39 Ohio St., 628; Eggleston v. Harrison, 61 Ohio St., 397; The United States v. Sixty-seven Packages of Dry Goods, 17 How., 85.”
The provisions of Article XVII are no more in conflict, no more repugnant, to the provisions of Section 16 of Article IV than were the provisions of Section 2 Article X of the Constitution of 1851, yet these two provisions of the constitution of 1851 were held to be consistent, and the correctness of this holding is not even challenged.
In view of the doctrine announced in The State,
It is true that Section 1 of this amendment provides that “Elections for state and county officers •shall be held on the-first Tuesday after the. first Monday in November in.-the even numbered-years; and all elections for all other- elective- officers shall be held, on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November in the odd numbered years.” .-This, of course, is not possible if the term of- the office of clerk is still three years as specifically provided in Section 16, Article IV, and it is the clear, duty, of this court to give effect to Section! of Article XVII if possible, but that can not be done upon the- theory that there is a difference in the meaning of the
■ Section 2 of this amendment provides that the general assembly shall have power to extend existing terms of office so as to effect the purpose of section 1 of this article. It is claimed that this provision applies only to the existing terms of officers then in office, but that is not the language used.
This provision of the amendment has been construed by this court in the case of The State, ex rel., v. Pattison, 73 Ohio St., 305. At page 328 the court, in its opinion, says: “The phrase ‘existing terms of office’ means the terms of office as defined in the constitution and the acts of the general assembly as existing at the time of the proposal and adoption of the amendment. It could not refer only, to the terms of those actually holding office at the time of the adoption of the amendment. Those were provided for by Section 3 of the amendment.” This proposition, so clearly stated in the opinion, is carried into the third paragraph of the syllabus of that case, part of which is as follows: “The phrase ‘existing terms of office’ means the terms of office as defined in the constitution and acts of the general assembly as they existed at the time of the proposal of the amendment and of its adoption.”
Section 3 of this amendment does provide that every elective officer holding office when this amendment is adopted, shall continue to hold such office for the full term for which he was elected, and until his successor is elected and qualified as provided by law. So that there was absolutely no necessity for any provision in the constitution authorizing the general assembly to extend existing terms
This limitation upon the authority of the legislature to change existing terms of office could apply only to constitutional offices and constitutional terms, and not to offices created by the legislature or terms fixed by the legislature itself, for as to these terms the constitution conferred full power upon the legislature to fix the term within certain limitations of time. Nor would it apply to the constitutional offices where the constitution specifically authorized the legislature to fix the term. This construction may not be free from doubt, yet it is in line with the former constructions given this section by this court, and it does effect the purposes of Section 1 of Article XVII. There is no other possible construction of this amendment that will effect such purpose or that will authorize the legislature of the state to ctano-e existing terms of office specifically provided by the constitution itself.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.