118 Ky. 178 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
The record herein presents an agreed case in which the parties sought in the court below, and are now seeking in
It appears that John P. Newman was duly elected judge of the Seventeenth Judicial District at the regular election held therein on the 3d day of November, 1903, for the full term of six years, beginning the first Monday in January, 1904; that he received his certificate of election from the State Board of Election Commissioners, and his commission from the Governor, after which he took the required constitutional and statutory oaths. But before the arrival of the time for undertaking the performance of the duties of his office, Newman died — -his death having occurred January 1, 1904 — -thereby causing a vacancy in the office to which he had been elected. On January 27, 1904, the Governor duly appointed and commissioned the present incumbent, Albert S. Berry, to fill the vacancy, and he has, ever since his appointment, performed the duties of the office.
Obviously, the section of the Constitution supra will not permit the appointee of the Governor to continue in the office in question until the expiration of the term for which his predecessor was elected, as the term will not end at the next annual election at which city, town, county, district or State officers will be elected. It is equally manifest that the contingency can not arise that would entitle him to continue in office until the second annual election after the happening of the vacancy at which officers of the classes named are to be elected, because more than three months will intervene between the happening of the vacancy and the time for the holding of the first election thereafter of the character indicated, and it is only where three months do not inter
The only question that remains to be determined is as to whether at the November election, 1904, there will be elected either city, town, county, district or State officers. This court judicially knows that on Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1904, members of Congress and presidential electors will be voted for in every county and elected throughout the State. In Eversole v. Brown, 21 R. 925, 53 S. W. 527, and Neely v. McCollum, 21 R. 823, 53 S. W. 37, it was held by this court that members of Congress are not district or State officers, within the meaning of section 152 of the Constitution. But in Todd, Mayor, v. Johnson County Clerk, etc., 99 Ky., 550, 18 R., 354, 36 S. W., 987, 33 L. R. A., 399, it was held by this court that presiden tal electors are State officers, within the'meaning of the section supra. We adhere to the conclusion expressed in that case, and find
We are of the opinion, therefore, that an election should be held in Campbell county on Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1901, for the purpose of electing a circuit judge for the Seventeenth Judicial District, to fill the vacancy in that office caused by the death of John P. Newman, and to serve during the remainder of the term for which he was elected.
Wherefore the judgment is affirmed.