111 Ky. 125 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1901
Opinion op the court by
affirming.
At the November election, 1891, appellant, A. W. Campbell, was elected a justice of tbe peace for magisterial district No. 5 of Pike county, and entered1 upon tbe discharge of the duties of the office. At the November election, 1897, J. J. Wolford was elected justice of the peace in the district to succeed appellant, but failed to qualify i as provided by law. After Wolford' failed) to- qualify, the county judge entered an order declaring a vacancy to. exist in the office of justice of the peace for the district* and appellee, J. L. Dotson, was regularly appointed to fill the vacancy. Appellant insists there was no vacancy to be filled, and that he was still the rightful officer, under section 99 of the Constitution: ,
“There shall be elected in eighteen hundred and ninety-four in each county a judge of the county court, a county court clerk, a county attorney, sheriff, jailer, coroner, surveyor and assessor, and in each justice’s district one justice of the peace and one constable, who shall enter upon the discharge of the duties of their offices on the first Monday in January after their election and continue in office-three years, and until the election -and qualification of their successors; and in eighteen hundred and ninety-*127 seven, and every four years thereafter, there shall be an: election in each county of the officers mentioned, who .shall hold their offices for four years (from the first Monday in January after their election), and until the 'election and qualification of their successors.” Appellant contends that under this section he continued in office for three years, and until the election and qualification of his .successor, and that, as Wolford was elected and failed to qualify, his right to the office was not interrupted. If this contention can be maintained, then, so far as section 99 goes, appellant would be entitled to the office for the next four years; for, according to that section, the election for justice of the peace is to be held every four years thereafter. The only other section ot the Constitution under which an election may be held is 152:
“Except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, vacancies in all elective offices shall be filled by election or appointment, as follows: If the unexpired term will •.end at the next succeeding annual election at which either •city, town, county, district, or 'State officers are to be •elected, the office shall be filled by appointment for the remainder of the term. If the unexpired term will not end at the next succeeding annual election at which either city, town, county, district, or State officers are to be ■elected, and if three months intervene before said succeeding annual election at which either city, town, county, district, or State officers are to be elected, the office shall be filled by appointment until said1 election, and then said vacancy shall be filled by election for the remainder of the term. If thre'e months do hot intervene between the happening nf said vacancy and the next succeeding election at which city, town, county, district or State officers 'are to be elected, the office shall be filled by ap*128 pointment until the second succeeding annual election- at which city, town, county, district oir State officers' are to be elected; and then, if any part of the term remains unexpired, the office shall be filled by election until the regular time for the election of officers to fill said offices.”
It will be observed that this section applies only to vacancies. If there is a vacancy in an elective office, it may be filled1 by appointment for the remainder of the term in certain contingencies, or by appointment until the next general election, and then by election for the remainder of the term in all other cases. But thlere can be no election under this section unless there is a vacancy. It therefore follows that, if there- was no vacancy in the office of justice of the peace after Wolford fíile'd to qualify, no election could be held under this section to fill the office; nor could it be held under section 99 until the end of four years. These are the only provisions of the Constitution for holding an -election for the office, and, if appellant’s contention is correct, — that there was no vacancy, — it will result that he gets a term of seven years, instead of three, as provided by section 99, because Wolford failed to qualify. Section 99 applies not only to justices of the peace, but to nearly all other county officers; and, if appellant’s construction is correct, then all these officers, where their successors die after their election, or for any other reason fail to qualify, will get two terms instead of one. It can not be maintained that in such a case the old incumbent would hold over unitl the next regular election, and that his successor might then be elected; for there is no authority for holding an election at that time for such- an office, unless there is a vacancy in it, and, if there is a vacancy, then it must be filled by appointment until that election, as was done in this case by the appointment of Dotson.
At the time the Constitution was formed, it had long been a settled rule in this State1 that where the person elected to an office died before qualification, or for any reason failed to qualify, or there was no election to fill the office at the time appointed by law a vacancy existed. The Constitution not only -aims at short, definite terms, but it also aims to vest in the people at the expiration of each term tbie right to choose the incumbents of the office for the next term; and section 152 was intended' to secure this right in all cases where the remainder of the term, in case of a vacancy, was long enough to justify it. In view of all the provisions of the Constitution, and the well-settled rule in the State at the time of its adoption, we' have no doubt that its framers intended by section 152 to provide for such a contingency as occurred in this case, and
Whole court sitting.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.