These proceedings were instituted in the Circuit Court of Logan County under the provisions of Code, 6-6-7, by citizens, residents and voters of Logan County, West Virginia, hereinafter referred to as petitioners, for the removal of the respondents as members of the Logan County Board of Education, hereinafter referred to as the Board, because of an alleged violation of Code, 61-10-15.
In one proceeding Leslie Dials and twelve other residents and voters of Logan County seek the removal of Joe D. Blair and L. F. Workman as members of the Board. In the other proceeding Johnny Smith and five other residents and voters of Logan County seek the removal of Earl Justice and Thomas Davis as members of the Board. No proceeding was instituted against the fifth member of the Board, Merril Bartram. The two proceedings were consolidated by agreement of the parties by proper order of the Circuit Court because the issues and facts аs they apply to both cases are the same.
Answers were filed by all of the respondents and the petitioners demurred to each of the answers. The demurrers were overruled by the trial court and the petitions dismissed. Upon aрplication to this Court, an appeal was granted to the rulings of the trial court.
The petitions for the removal of Blair and Workman alleged that Blair violated the provisions of Code, 61-10-15, in that he was pecuniarily interested in the furnishing of water to the Board by Man Water Works, Inc., a corporation, Ear ling Water Works, Incorporated, a corporation, and Buffalo Creek Water Company, a partnership, and that Workman, a member and president of thе Board knowingly approved the violation of the statute *766 by voting for the payment of bills submitted by the three water companies for water furnished to certain school buildings with full knowledge of the pecuniary interest Blair had in the three water companies.
The petition for the removal of Davis and Justice as members of the Board was based on the same ground asserted against Workman. If Blair is guilty of a violation of Code, 61-10-15, which would subject him to removal from the Board, then the other members who voted for the payment of the water bills, knowing of Blair’s interest in the water companies which furnished the water, are also subject to removal from office, under Code, 6-6-7.
Hunt
v.
Allen,
The answers of Workman, Davis and Justice аdmitted that they new of Blair’s interest in the water companies when they approved the payment of the bills, but for some unexplained reason, the removal proceeding against Workman was abandoned.
The answer of Blair stаtes that he is an officer and stockholder in the Man Water Works, Inc., a corporation; that he owns 9 of the 96 shares of stock in said corporation; that he has never received any dividends in said corporation but recеives a monthly salary of $400. as president of this corporation; that he is an officer and stockholder in the Earling Water Works, Incorporated, a corporation, that he owns 125 of the 270 shares of stock in said corporation, that he has received no dividends from said corporation but that he receives a monthly salary of $300. as secretary-treasurer of this corporation; that he is a partner in the Buffalo Creek Water Company and that he has never received any income of any kind from said partnership. He admitted that the three water companies furnished water to certain schools in Logan County and that the water companies had been paid by the Board for the water furnished, but said *767 that each of the water companies is a public utility-supplying water in various areas of Logan County under certificates of public convenience and necessity issued by the Public Service Commission оf West Virginia, and subject to regulation and supervision by said Commission ; that there is no overlapping of the areas served by these companies, that each is the only water public utility in the area covered by its certificate; thаt since he has been a member of the Board these companies have been furnishing water to school buildings in the areas served by them at rates set and approved by said Commission and subject to the regulation and supervision thereby; that it is the duty of the Board and its members, under Code, 18-5-9, to provide “all necessary supplies for the schools” and to provide “for the health and cleanliness of the pupils”; that the water companies are the only available sources of water for these schools in the areas in which they serve; that the water companies are required under the law to furnish water to the schools, that he had no voice, influence or control as a mеmber of said Board with regard to the furnishing of water to the schools, that as a member of the Board he was required under the law to see that water was furnished to the schools.
The answers of the other respondents contend the same material facts and by virtue thereof they asserted they had committed no unlawful acts and were not subjected to removal from the Board and prayed that petitions for removal be dismissed. The petitioners’ demurrers to the answers admitted all facts well pleaded but contend that Code, 61-10-15, provides for no exceptions.
The mere fact that Blair received a salary as an employee of the water companies would not constitute sufficiеnt grounds for his removal as a member of the Board of Education. See
County Court
v.
City of Grafton,
Code, 6-6-7 provides the procedure for the removal of any member of the school board for a violation of the prоvisions of Code, 61-10-15. Code, 61-10-15, provides that any member of the school board directly or indirectly pecuniarily interested in the proceeds of any contract or service awarded or furnished to the Board in which he may have а voice, influence or control shall be removed from office, and a conviction under Code, 61-10-15, is not a prerequisite for such removal procedure.
Jordan, et al.
v.
McCourt, et al.,
This removal proceeding is based on an alleged violation of Code, 61-10-15, which is a penal statute. Such statutes are to be given a strict construction, and this principle is stated in 17 M.J., Statutes, §67, in the following language: “Penal statutes are construed strictly against the state and favorably to the liberty of the citizen. It is a rule of general application that such statutes are not to be extended by construction, but must be limited to cases clearly within the language used. Every case charged as a violation must come within the letter, spirit аnd purpose of the statute. And a penal statute cannot be extended by implication or construction. It cannot be made to embrace cases not within the letter though within the reason and policy of the law. To cоnstitute the offense the act must be both within the letter and spirit of the statute defining it.”
It is true that members of school boards have been removed from office in this State under the provisions of the statutes relied on in the case at bar, wherе they have
*769
had pecuniary interest in contracts with the school boards for furnishing’ labor, building materials, groceries, construction work and for the sale of car parts to said boards.
Kesling
v.
Moore,
The removal of public officers is discussed in 43 Am. Jur., Public Officers, §193, wherein it is stated: “The remedy by the removal of a public officer has been said to be a drastic one, and the statutory provision defining the grounds for removal is givеn a strict construction.” It has been held in a removal proceeding that where there is a reasonable difference of opinion with regard to the law applicable and a violation thereof, a public officеr should not be removed.
State
v.
Roth,
(Iowa)
Under the circumstances of this case, it would appear that Blair had no discretion in the matters involved, either in the furnishing of the water to the schools or for the payment of the bills rendered for such water. It is mandatory for the water companies to furnish the services and for the Board to pay for same. It was not intended for such a case to come within the meaning of the provisions of the statutes relied on here for the removаl of Blair, and if the statutes do not apply to Blair, they of course do not apply to the other respondents, Davis and Justice, other members of the Board. If Blair is not guilty of violating Code 61-10-15, and we so find, then none of the respondents could be removed from office in this proceeding.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Logan County is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
