83 Ky. 451 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1885
delivered the opinion op the court.
The appellee, Mrs. M. C. Lucas, filed her petition in the Daviess Circuit Court, ásking a mandamus against the appellant, who was the connty judge of Daviess county, compelling him to permit her to •qualify as jailer of that county. It is alleged in her petition that she was elected to that office at the August election, 1884, by the qualified voters of the •county, receiving the highest number of votes cast; that by a comparison of the poll-books by those .authorized by law to compare them, it was ascertained that she was elected, and a certificate of that fact is filed with and made part of her petition; that she appeared in the Daviess County Court, •of which court the appellant Atchison was the presiding judge, his court being then in' session, and producing to him her certificate of election, offered to qualify by taking the oath and executing a bond with good and sufficient sureties; that the defendant refused to permit her to qualify, to administer the •oath, or accept her bond.
A. demurrer was sustained to his answer, and failing to plead further, a peremptory mandamus was-awarded, directing the appellant to permit the appellee to qualify as jailer. *
This action of the circuit court was stayed by x supersedeas, and the case is here on the appeal of the county judge as well as the appeal of the contestant, Duncan.
It is maintained by counsel for the appellee that the county judge had no right to supersede the' execution of the writ, and if permitted to do SO' the effect would be to destroy a remedy for immediate relief, and where no delay should exist in its. execution.
While the writ is purely mandatory and not' remedial, we find nothing in the Code of Practice with reference to the right of appeal distinguishing a proceeding of this character from a final order or judgment in other cases. No exception has been made, but, on the contrary, when the Commonwealth is affected by a final order on an application for a. mandamus, the Attorney General may prosecute an appeal without security, as provided by section 478 of the Code, the framers of the Code doubting the-right of the Attorney General to appeal without
The county judge, therefore, in determining the ■eligibility of the appellee, would, under the general rule applicable to such cases, have assumed a jurisdiction not belonging to that tribunal, and mandamus would have been the proper remedy to compel the' •discharge of this simple duty. •
It is not a question in this case as to the solvency ■or the sufficiency of the sureties, or an attempt on the part of the circuit court to interfere with the ■discretion of the county judge as -to the character of the bond; but the complaint is, that the county judge has declined to act in any manner. He could, therefore, in a proper case, be compelled to act, but having the discretion as to the sufficiency of the ¡sureties, the circuit judge was powerless to control its exercise. All that the circuit judge has done in this case is to compel the county judge to entertain the motion. (Clark v. McKenzie, 7 Bush, 523; Cate v. Ross, 2 Duvall, 243; High on Extraordinary Legal Remedies, sections 151, 152.)
The contesting board, after the offer by the appel
By section 11 of the same article it is provided, that “when a new election is ordered, or the incumbent adjudged not to be entitled, his powers shall immediately cease, and if the office is not adjudged to another, it shall be deemed To be vacant.”
An appeal is allowed from the decision of the contesting board to the circuit court of the county in which the contestant resides, and from thence to the ■Court of Appeals, as in other cases. The appellee’s remedy, when the decision of the contesting board was adverse to her right, was by an appeal to the ■Court of Appeals, and there her constitutional right to hold the office could have been determined; but it is insisted that when the application was made to the county judge there was no decision adverse to the appellee, and, therefore, it was the duty of the ■county judge to obey the writ.
It may be conceded for the purposes of this case that no supersedeas could have issued in order to ■stay the writ; that the certificate of election is the •evidence of the right to qualify, and the party holding such a certificate is not compelled to postpone
The party making the application for the writ; must show a clear legal right on his part to have the duty performed. If, therefore, it appeared from, the petition of the appellee that she was constitutionally ineligible to the office of jailer, the circuit judge should have refused.the writ.
The case of Patterson v. Miller, above, determining the duty of the county court in regard to the qualification of county officers, did not arise from any mandatory order from the one court to the other, but was an action of trespass against Miller, who had. seized the property of the plaintiff, pretending to. be the sheriff of Russell county, when, in fact, he was not the sheriff, this court holding that the fact, of his qualification in the county court as sheriff' could not be relied on to prove his eligibility to the-office, for the reason the - county court had no right to make such an inquiry. In the case being considered, if the appellee was not entitled to the office under any state of case on account of her sex, or if the office had been declared vacant by the contesting board, as provided by statute, we see no reason why the county court, in either instance, could not. refuse the application to qualify; and certainly, when, applying to the circuit judge asking a mandamus,, she must allege a state of facts showing her entitled, to the writ.
In Justices of Spencer County Court v. Harcourt, 4 B. M., 499, the latter was held by his associate justices not entitled to hold the office of justice of the peace, because he was at the time holding the office of postmaster under the Federal Government. The office was declared vacant by the county court, and the •circuit judge, on the application of Harcourt, made an order for peremptory mandamus against the justices. On an appeal by the justices to this court, it was held that the order of the county court declaring the office vacant did not have the effect of removing Harcourt, as the justices had no judicial * power over the subject; but though they had not the power to remove or determine judicially that the •office had been foreited, to entitle Harcourt to sustain his application for a peremptory mandamus, ■■•etc., he must show that he was a justice of the peace, and had the constitutional and legal right to
In Lowe v. Phelps, 14 Bush, 642, this court said:
“Mandamus can not be maintained unless there-is a legal right in the appellant and a corresponding duty imposed by law on the appellee.” 3
It is plain, therefore, that if the appellee cannot: hold the office of jailer under the Constitution, the writ should have been withheld, and this at last, is the vital question presented on the appeal.
Section 8, article 2, of the Constitution provides, that “every free white male citizen of the age of' twenty-one years, who has resided in the State two-years, or. in the county, town, or city in which he-offers to vote one year next preceding the election, shall be a voter, but such voter shall have been a. resident of the precinct in which he offers to vote, and he shall vote in said precinct and not elsewhere.”
Section 1, of article 6, of the Constitution pro- • vides ' that certain officers, including jailer, shall be elected, etc., and section 2 of the same article prescribes the qualifications as follows:
“No person shall be eligible to the offices mentioned in this article who is not at the time twenty-four years old (except clerks of county and circuit courts, sheriffs, constables, and county- attorneys, who • shall be eligible at the age of twenty-one years), a ■ citizen of the United States, and who has mot resided*463 two years next preceding the election in the State,, and one year in the county or district for which he is a candidate.”
The fourteenth amendment to the Constitution of the United States defines who are citizens in the following language: “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject' to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.” It is, therefore,, not necessary to discuss the meaning of the word, person or the word citizen as used in the State. Constitution, as both include women as well as men in the most comprehensive sense; but being a citizen does not necessarily entitle one to the right of suffrage or the right to* hold any constitutional office. By the provisions of the Constitution of this State, adopted in the year 1792, and by a like provision of the Constitution of 1799, as well as in the. present Constitution, women were excluded from the-right of suffrage by conferring that right upon male-citizens alone, and it would be a singular construction of that provision in either Constitution to determine that women should have no voice in the selection of those who are to fill the offices created by the Constitution, and at the same time given the right to fill those offices if elected by the popular vote.
While our form of government is based on the theory that the people are 'Capable of choosing-their own officers, and under our State Constitution all persons are eligible to office not excluded by its. provisions, it necessarily follows, it seems to us,
It is true that, under the rule for the construction of statutes, a word importing the masculine 'gender may and often is extended or applied to ■females as well as males, and this rule is adopted that the will or intent of the law-making power may become effectual, and the object in view accomplished.
If it appeared from the provisions of the Constitution that the framers of that instrument intended to confer the right to hold office on the female citizen as well as the male citizen, although certain words are used implying the right in the male citizen only, this court, in order to carry out that
After a careful consideration of the entire instrument, we find no room for such a construction; but, •on the contrary, so many provisions repugnant to .such a view of the question as amounts to • the exclusion of females from the exercise of the rights claimed.
At common law, a womáh could not hold any public office, and with three Constitutions adopted for this State, beginning with the formation of the State Grovernment, with the right of women during this ■entire period to vote for and hold these constitutional offices at least asserted, if not generally discussed, we find no change made from the adoption •of the first Constitution to the present time with reference to the exercise of these great rights, and it seems to us to be unreasonable to hold that, while the right to vote is denied them, the greater right, that of holding the offices voted for, is secured to them by that instrument, or at least not prohibited "by its provisions. The entire frame-work of the Constitution forbids such a construction.
In the case of Minor v. Happersett, 21 Wall., 162, upon a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Missouri from the Supreme Court of the United States, Mrs. Minor, wishing to vote for electors for President, applied to be registered as a lawful voter. This Happersett refused to do on the ground that she was not a male citizen of the United States, fhe •Constitution of the State of Missouri providing that '“every male citizen of the United States shall 'be
A question was presented to the Supreme Court; of Massachusetts as to the right of a woman to-hold the office of justice of the peace. It was held that a woman formally appointed and commissioned, a justice of the peace would have no constitutional! or legal authority to exercise any of the functions! appertaining to that office. (Supplement, 107 Mass., 604.)
Many other authorities might be cited with reference to the same subject, denying the right here-insisted on by the appellee, and none have been-produced showing a different construction of constitutional provisions similar in effect to the organic-law of this State.
We do not mean to adjudge that offices of legislative creation may not be filled by women, or the right of suffrage granted them in certain cases; but, on the contrary, such rights may be conferred. We-have been discussing only the provisions of the Constitution affecting the right of suffrage, and the right to hold office when applied to offices' created by the.Constitution.
On the appeal of Duncan, who was not entitled to the office by reason of the ineligibility of the; appellee, he did become entitled to. it when the office; became vacant, under an appointment from the; county judge. He is claiming on his appeal the; allowance made to the- appellee for her services as; jailer by the circuit court, and while he may be entitled to the fees, they amount to an insignificant sum, and over which this court has no jurisdiction. The entire account is for two hundred and ninety-four dollars, a dollar or two of which is for committing and releasing prisoners; the balance is for food and diet actually furnished the prisoners in jail, and purchased by money from the pocket of the;
Judgment as to Duncan affirmed.