Mandamus. Motion for a rule on the District Judge of the Eastern
District of Louisiana to show cause why a mandamus should not be
issued requiring him to restore Duncan N. Hennen to the office of
the clerk of the district court. The petition states the
appointment of the relator to the office of clerk of the district
court in 1834; the full and complete performance of his duties as
cleric of the court until May 1837; the acknowledgment of the
fidelity and capacity with which the duties of the office were
performed, stated in writing by the district judge; and the
appointment of another person to the office, from personal motives
and the influence of friendship and a knowledge of the capacity of
the person appointed to perform the duties of the office. The
petition also states the performance of the duties of Clerk of the
Circuit Court of the Eastern District of Louisiana under the
appointment as clerk of the district court, and the offer to
perform those duties after his asserted removal as clerk of the
district court, and that, the judges of the circuit court being
divided in opinion as to his right to exercise the office of clerk,
the business of the circuit court was entirely suspended.
The appointment of clerks of courts properly belongs to the
courts of law, and a clerk of the court is one of those officers
contemplated by the provision in the Constitution giving to
Congress the power to vest the appointment of inferior officers as
they think proper. The appointing power designated by the
Constitution in the latter part of the second section of the second
article of the Constitution was no doubt intended to be exercised
by the department of the government to which the officer to be
appointed most appropriately belonged.
It cannot be admitted that it was the intention of the
Constitution that those offices which are denominated inferior
offices should be held during life. In the absence of all
constitutional or statutory provision as to the removal of such
officers, it would seem to be a sound and necessary rule to
consider the power of removal as incident to the power of
appointment.
The tenure of ancient common law offices and the rules and
principles by which they are governed have no application to the
office of the clerk of a district court of the United States. The
tenure in those cases depends in a great measure upon ancient
usage. But in the United States there is no ancient usage which can
apply to and govern the tenure of offices created by the
Constitution and laws. They are of recent origin, and must depend
entirely on a just construction of our Constitution and laws, and
the like doctrine is held in England, where the office is not an
ancient common law office, but of modern origin, under some act of
Parliament. In such a case, the tenure of the office is determined
by the meaning and intention of the statute.
The law giving the district courts the power of appointing their
own clerks does not prescribe any form in which this shall be done.
The power vested in the court is a continuing power, and the mere
appointment of a successor would
per se be a removal of
the prior incumbent, so far at least as his rights were
concerned.
The Supreme Court can have no control over the appointment or
removal of a clerk of the district court or entertain any inquiry
into the grounds of the removal. If the judge is chargeable with
any abuse of his power, the Supreme Court is not the tribunal to
which he is answerable.
The Court having decided that the rule granted at the August
term of the Court, held by MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY, should be
discharged, the counsel presented another petition to the Court
setting forth the same facts as those stated in the petition, the
matters of which are set forth in the report of the preceding case,
with others.
The additional facts stated in the petition were that the
petitioner is in the full and undisputed possession of the seal of
the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, and of the
records of the said circuit court.
Page 38 U. S. 231
That there is now pending in said circuit court a cause in which
the petitioner, a citizen of the State of Louisiana, is the
plaintiff and Rezin D. Shepherd, a citizen of Maryland, is the
defendant; that the value of the property in controversy between
petitioner and said Shepherd exceeds in amount the sum of six
thousand dollars in cash. That in consequence of the disagreement
between the judges of the circuit court, and the refusal of Judge
Lawrence to allow the petitioner, the true and lawful clerk of said
court, to perform the duties thereof, the petitioner is prevented
from proceeding in said cause, and the petitioner is prevented from
bringing the said cause up to this Court for its final
decision.
The petitioner further states that the judges of the said
circuit court continue to differ in opinion as to the legal rights
of the petitioner and said John Winthrop to the offices of clerk of
the district and circuit courts, so that no one does or can perform
the duties of the office of clerk of the circuit court aforesaid,
and that the suitors in said court are thereby delayed, and the
administration of justice therein wholly suspended, and the
appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of the United States
over the judgments and decrees of said circuit court wholly
suspended and incapable of being exercised.
"All which evils are remediless at and by the ordinary
proceeding before the said district or circuit courts and can only
be terminated and redressed by the interposition of this Honorable
Court by its extraordinary process of mandamus."
The petition prays that the court, after consideration, will
award a writ of mandamus to be directed to the Honorable Philip K.
Lawrence, Judge of the District court of the United States for the
Eastern District of Louisiana, commanding him forthwith to restore
the petitioner to his office of clerk of the District Court of the
United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
By an agreement between the counsel for the relator and the
judge of the District Court of Louisiana, the questions presented
to the Court on the petition were argued, the usual notice being
dispensed with.
Page 38 U. S. 256
MR. JUSTICE THOMPSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application for a rule upon the Honorable Philip K.
Lawrence, Judge of the District Court of the United States for the
Eastern District of Louisiana, to show cause why a mandamus should
not be issued against him requiring him to show cause why he should
not restore Duncan N. Hennen to the office of clerk of the said
district court.
The petition sets forth that the petitioner, Duncan N. Hennen,
on 21 February in the year 1834, was duly appointed clerk of the
said court by the Honorable Samuel H. Harper, judge of the said
court. That a commission was duly issued under the hand and seal of
the judge. That he accepted the appointment and gave the bond with
sureties required by law, and thereupon entered upon the duties of
the office and continued to discharge the same, methodically,
skillfully, and uprightly, and to the satisfaction of the district
court. That by virtue of said appointment and of the provisions of
the statute in such case made and provided, he was from the period
of the organization of the Circuit Court of the United States for
the said District of Louisiana, in like manner the clerk of the
said circuit court, and performed all the duties of said office.
That he continued to perform the said duties and receive the
emoluments and in all respects to hold and occupy said offices
until on or about 18 May in the year 1838, when he received a
communication from the Honorable Philip K. Lawrence, then and now
the judge of the said District Court of the United States for the
said Eastern District of Louisiana, apprizing him of his removal
from the said office of clerk and the appointment of John Winthrop
in his place. And in this communication he states unreservedly that
the business of the office for the last two years had been
conducted promptly, skillfully, and uprightly and that in
appointing Mr. Winthrop to succeed him, he had been actuated purely
by a sense of duty and feelings of kindness towards one whom he had
long known, and between whom and himself the closest friendship had
ever subsisted. And that as his capacity to fill the office cannot
be questioned, he felt that he was not exercising
Page 38 U. S. 257
any unjust preference in bestowing on him the appointment. The
petition further states that Judge Lawrence did, on or about 18 May
in the year 1838, execute and deliver to the said John Winthrop a
commission or appointment, as Clerk of the said District court for
the Eastern District of Louisiana, and that he does to a certain
extent execute the duties appertaining to the said office, and is
recognized by the said judge as the only legal clerk of the said
district court.
The petition further states that on or about 21 May, in the year
1838, the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern
District of Louisiana met according to law, when the Honorable John
McKinley, one of the Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the
United States, and the said Judge Lawrence appeared as judges of
the said circuit court, and that the petitioner and John Winthrop
severally presented themselves, each claiming to be right fully and
lawfully the clerk of the said circuit court; that the judges
differed in opinion upon the said question of right, and being
unable to concur in opinion, neither of said parties was admitted
to act as clerk or recognized by the court as being rightful clerk,
and no business was or could be transacted, and the court
adjourned.
The petitioner claims that he was legally and in due form
appointed clerk of said district court, and by virtue of said
appointment became lawfully the clerk of said circuit court. And
that he has never resigned the said offices or been legally removed
from the same or either of them. But that he is illegally kept out
of the said office of clerk of the said district court by the
illegal acts and conduct of the said Philip K. Lawrence, judge as
aforesaid, and the said John Winthrop, claiming to hold the said
office under an appointment from the said Judge Lawrence, which he
is advised and believes is illegal and void. And prays that the
court will award a writ of mandamus directed to the said judge of
the district court commanding him forth with to restore the
petitioner to the office of clerk of the said District Court of the
United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana.
The district judge has appeared by counsel to oppose this
motion, and the facts set out in the petition have not been denied.
And the question presented to the Court is whether the petitioner
has shown enough to entitle him to a rule to show cause why a
mandamus should not issue. If he has been legally removed from the
office of clerk, there are no grounds upon which the present motion
can be sustained.
By the Constitution of the United States, art. 2, s. 2, it is
provided that the President shall nominate, and by and with the
advice and consent of the Senate shall appoint certain officers
therein designated and all other officers of the United States
whose appointments are not herein otherwise provided for and which
shall be established by law, but the Congress may by law vest the
appointment of such inferior officers as it shall think proper in
the President alone, in the courts of law, or in the heads of
departments. The appointing
Page 38 U. S. 258
power here designated in the latter part of the section was no
doubt intended to be exercised by the department of the government
to which the officer to be appointed most appropriately belonged.
The appointment of clerks of courts properly belongs to the courts
of law, and that a clerk is one of the inferior officers
contemplated by this provision in the Constitution cannot be
questioned. Congress, in the exercise of the power here given by
the Act of 24 September, 1789, establishing the judicial courts of
the United States, 1 Story's Laws U.S. 56, s. 7, declared that the
Supreme Court and the district courts shall have power to appoint
clerks of their respective courts and that the clerk for each
district court shall be clerk also of the circuit court in such
district.
When this law was passed, Louisiana formed no part of the United
States, and of course had no district court to which the act of
1789 would apply. But by the Act of 26 March, 1804, 2 Story's Laws
933, providing for the temporary government of Louisiana, a
district court is established, and the law directs that the judge
thereof shall appoint a clerk for the said district, who shall keep
the records of the court and receive the fees provided by law for
his services. And a like provision is made by the Act of April 8,
1812, 2 Story 1225, passed for the admission of Louisiana into the
Union. And by the Act of 3 March, 1837, 4 Story 2538, extending the
circuit court system and embracing Louisiana in the Ninth Circuit,
it is declared, that the said circuit court shall be governed by
the same laws and regulations as apply to the other circuit courts
of the United States, and the clerks of the said courts
respectively, shall perform the same duties and be entitled to
receive the same fees and emoluments which are by law established
for the clerks of the other circuit courts of the United States.
The clerk of the district court therefore, in Louisiana, became the
clerk of the circuit court, standing upon the same footing in all
respects as the clerks of the other district courts. His rights or
his duties were in no respect changed by the establishment of a
circuit court in that state, except that the duties of a clerk of
that court were superadded to those of a clerk of the district
court. And this was by express provision of law, and required no
act on the part of the circuit court to constitute him clerk of
that court.
Such, then, being the situation in which the petitioner stood
prior to 21 May, 1838, the question arises whether the district
judge had the power to remove him and appoint another clerk in his
place.
The Constitution is silent with respect to the power of removal
from office where the tenure is not fixed. It provides that the
judges both of the supreme and inferior courts shall hold their
offices during good behavior. But no tenure is fixed for the office
of clerks. Congress has by law limited the tenure of certain
officers to the term of four years, 3 Story 1790, but expressly
providing that the officers shall, within that term, be removable
at pleasure, which, of course, is without requiring any cause for
such removal. The clerks of courts are not included within this
law, and there is
Page 38 U. S. 259
no express limitation in the Constitution or laws of Congress
upon the tenure of the office.
All offices the tenure of which is not fixed by the Constitution
or limited by law must be held either during good behavior or
(which is the same thing in contemplation of law) during the life
of the incumbent, or must be held at the will and discretion of
some department of the government, and subject to removal at
pleasure.
It cannot for a moment be admitted that it was the intention of
the Constitution that those offices which are denominated inferior
offices should be held during life. And if removable at pleasure,
by whom is such removal to be made? In the absence of all
constitutional provision or statutory regulation, it would seem to
be a sound and necessary rule to consider the power of removal as
incident to the power of appointment. This power of removal was
incident to a subject much disputed and upon which a great
diversity of opinion was entertained in the early history of this
government. This related, however, to the power of the President to
remove officers appointed with the concurrence of the Senate, and
the great question was whether the removal was to be by the
President alone or with the concurrence of the Senate, both
constituting the appointing power. No one denied the power of the
President and Senate jointly to remove, where the tenure of the
office was not fixed by the Constitution, which was a full
recognition of the principle that the power of removal was incident
to the power of appointment. But it was very early adopted as the
practical construction of the Constitution that this power was
vested in the President alone. And such would appear to have been
the legislative construction of the Constitution. For in the
organization of the three great departments of state, war, and
treasury in the year 1789, provision is made for the appointment of
a subordinate officer by the head of the department who should have
the charge and custody of the records, books, and papers
appertaining to the office when the head of the department should
be removed from the office of the President of the United States. 1
Story 5, 31, 47. When the Navy Department was established in the
year 1798, 1 Story 498, provision is made for the charge and
custody of the books, records, and documents of the department in
case of vacancy in the office of Secretary, by removal or
otherwise. It is not here said by removal by the President, as is
done with respect to the heads of the other departments, and yet
there can be no doubt that he holds his office by the same tenure
as the other secretaries, and is removable by the President. The
change of phraseology arose probably from its having become the
settled and well understood construction of the Constitution, that
the power of removal was vested in the President alone in such
cases, although the appointment of the officer was by the President
and Senate.
It all these departments, power is given to the Secretary to
appoint all necessary clerks; 1 Story 48; and although no power to
remove is expressly given, yet there can be no doubt that these
clerks hold their office at the will and discretion of the head of
the department.
Page 38 U. S. 260
It would be a most extraordinary construction of the law that
all these offices were to be held during life, which must
inevitably follow, unless the incumbent was removable at the
discretion of the head of the department; the President has
certainly no power to remove. These clerks fall under that class of
inferior officers the appointment of which the Constitution
authorizes Congress to vest in the head of the department. The same
rule, as to the power of removal, must be applied to offices where
the appointment is vested in the President alone. The nature of the
power and the control over the officer appointed does not at all
depend on the source from which it emanates. The execution of the
power depends upon the authority of law, and not upon the agent who
is to administer it. And the Constitution has authorized Congress
in certain cases to vest this power in the President alone, in the
courts of law, or in the heads of departments, and all inferior
officers appointed under each by authority of law must hold their
office at the discretion of the appointing power. Such is the
settled usage and practical construction of the Constitution and
laws, under which these offices are held. The tenure of ancient
common law offices and the rules and principles by which they are
governed have no application to this case. The tenure in those
cases depends in a great measure upon ancient usage. But with us
there is no ancient usage which can apply to and govern the tenure
of offices created by our Constitution and laws. They are of recent
origin, and must depend entirely upon a just construction of our
Constitution and laws. And the like doctrine is held in the English
courts, where the office is not an ancient common law office, but
of modern origin under some act of parliament. In such a case the
tenure of the office is determined by the meaning and intention of
the statute. The case of
Smyth vs. Latham, 9 Bing. 672,
was governed by this rule. The office in question was that of
paymaster, appointed under an act of parliament, and the court
said:
"This is not an ancient common law office the tenure of which is
to be governed by ancient usage, and the question is no more than
an inquiry into the meaning and intention of the statute itself,
and that by the legal construction of the act of parliament the
tenure of the office was during pleasure, and that the new
appointment was of itself a revocation of the first."
And the same rule has governed the decisions of the State courts
in this country whenever the power of appointment and tenure of
office has been drawn into discussion. The questions have been
governed by the construction given to the constitution and laws of
the state where they arose.
The case of
Avery v. Inhabitants of Tyringham, 3 Mass.
177, falls within this class of cases. The Chief Justice there says
it is a general rule that an office is held at the will of either
party unless a different tenure is expressed in the appointment or
is implied by the nature of the office or results from ancient
usage. The office held by the petitioner clearly falls within
neither of these exceptions, and of course comes within the general
rule, and is held
Page 38 U. S. 261
at the will of either party. The petitioner would doubtless
claim the right to resign the clerkship if he chose so to do. And
the court had a right to put an end to it, at its election.
The same principle governed the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in
the case of
Leghman v. Sutherland, 3 Serg. & R. 145.
The question there turned upon the construction of the Constitution
and law of Pennsylvania. By the Constitution of 1790 it is provided
that the governor shall appoint all officers whose office is
established by the constitution or shall be established by law and
whose appointments are not otherwise provided for. And the court
said
"The Constitution is silent as to the removal of officers. Yet
it has been generally supposed that the power of removal rested
with the governor, except in those cases where the tenure was
during good behavior,"
clearly recognizing the principle that the power of removal was
incident to the power of appointment in the absence of all
constitutional or legislative provision on the subject. The case of
Hoke vs. Henderson, 4 Dev. 1, decided in the Supreme Court
of North Carolina, is not at all in conflict with the doctrine
contained in the cases referred to. That case, like the others,
turned upon the Constitution and laws of North Carolina, and by the
express terms of the law, the tenure of the office was during good
behavior, and was, of course, governed by very different
considerations from those which apply to the case now before the
Court.
The law giving the district courts the power of appointing their
own clerks does not prescribe any form in which this shall be done.
The petitioner alleges that he has heard and believes that Judge
Lawrence did, on 18 May, 1838, execute and deliver to John Winthrop
a commission or appointment as clerk of the District Court for the
Eastern District of Louisiana, and that he entered upon the duties
of the office and was recognized by the judge as the only legal
clerk of the district court. And in addition to this, notice was
given by the judge to the petitioner of his removal from the office
of clerk and the appointment of Winthrop in his place, all which
was amply sufficient if the office was held at the discretion of
the court. The power vested in the court was a continuing power,
and the mere appointment of a successor would,
per se, be
a removal of the prior incumbent, so far at least as his rights
were concerned. How far the rights of third persons may be affected
is unnecessary now to consider. There could not be two clerks at
the same time. The offices would be inconsistent with each other,
and could not stand together. If the power to appoint a clerk was
vested exclusively in the district court and the office was held at
the discretion of the court, as we think it was, then this Court
can have no control over the appointment or removal or entertain
any inquiry into the grounds of removal. If the judge is chargeable
with any abuse of his power, this is not the tribunal to which he
is amenable. and as we have no right to judge upon this matter
or
Page 38 U. S. 262
power to afford redress if any is required, we abstain from
expressing any opinion upon that part of the case.
The motion is accordingly
Denied.
On consideration of this motion and of the arguments of counsel
thereupon had as well in support of as against the motion, it is
now here considered, ordered, and adjudged by this Court that the
said motion be and the same is, hereby overruled, and that the said
mandamus or rule prayed for be and the same is hereby denied.