52 P. 17 | Or. | 1898
delivered the opinion.
The sole question presented by this cause is whether women are entitled to vote at a school meeting for director of the district in which such meeting is held. The plaintiff was awarded damages in the court below for having been denied the privilege of voting, from which judgment defendants appeal.
The law under which the right is claimed is as follows: “ Section 1. In all school districts in this state with a population of 1,000 and upwards, any citizen of this state shall be entitled to vote at a school meeting who is 21 years of age, and has resided in the district 30 days immediately preceding the meeting and has property in the district upon which he or she pays a tax”: Session Laws, 1891, 130. The contention of counsel for defendants is that the law is violative of section 2 of article II of the state constitution, which reads as follows: “In all elections not otherwise provided for by this constitution, every white male citizen of the United States, of the age of 21 years and upwards, who shall have resided in the state during the six months immediately preceding such election, and every white male of foreign birth of the age of 21 years and upwards, who shall have resided in this state during the six months immediately preceding such election, and shall have declared hie intention to become a citizen of the United States one year preceding such election,' conformably to the laws of the United States on the
On January 31, 1855, an act was passed providing for the election of county superintendents of common schools, for the division of the inhabited portions of the several counties into convenient school districts, the organization of new ones, for the election of directors and clerks to hold until the next annual meeting, and for the election of their successors at such time. It provided that the superintendents should be elected by the legal voters of the respective counties at the annual elections, which, under general law, were to be held in the several election precincts in the territory on the first Monday in June of each year, and at the same time defined and prescribed the qualifications of voters at school meetings as the laws of congress permitted as follows: “Every inhabitant over the age of 21 years who shall have resided in any school district for one month immediately preceding any district meeting, and who shall have paid or be liable to pay any tax except road tax in said district, shall be a legal voter at any school meeting, and no other persons shall be allowed to vote ”: Statute 1855, 458, 463. So far as we are now informed, this act was operative when the state constitution was adopted in 1857. At its session of 1862 the state legislature revised the common school system, and repealed the territorial act of January, 1855. The new act provided, as did the old, that the county superintendents should be elected by the legal voters of the several counties of the state, and such
Upon the other hand, the contention of counsel for plaintiff is, in effect, that the authority granted by the constitution to the legislative assembly to “provide by law for the establishment of a uniform and general system of common schools ” is a thing quite apart from the fundamental provisions touching suffrage and elections, in so far as it respects school districts which comprise the primary unit of the school system and its officers. That is to say that, while the elective franchise thus defined and established is
The Michigan case is much to the purpose from an historical analogy as well as from the similarity of those features of the constitutional provisions bearing upon the question under consideration. The provision of the Michigan constitution relating to suffrage and elections in force at the time the decision was rendered was adopted in 1850, and is as follows: “In all elections every male citizen, every male inhabitant, * * * shall be an elector, and entitled to vote; but no citizen or inhabitant shall be an elector or entitled to vote at any election unless he shall be above the age of 21 years, and has resided in this state
Language of similar import, by Finch, J., characterizes the New York case. Speaking of the contention of counsel for appellant that school officers were not constitutional officers, because the practical interpretation of that instrument has long and invariably been to the contrary, he says: “That is true, and only true, of the officers of the school district, as the fundamental unit of the school system. The trustees of such a district are the authorized business managers of the school within its boundaries, and the legislature has always assumed and been permitted to assume the right to determine who might vote for such trustees, and what qualifications should or should not be requisite and necessary. To that class of school cifficers intrusted with the government and control of the simple school district, by itself alone and within its own boundaries, the constitutional provisions have never been applied.” The Illinois case is of similar tenor, distinguishing the case of People ex rel. Ahrens v. English, 149 Ill. 622 (15 L. R. A. 131, 29 N. E. 678), wherein it was held that women had no right under the constitution to vote for county superintendent of schools, he being an officer recognized by the constitution, and within the purview of the pro
Under the Oregon territorial law of 1855 every inhabitant above the age of 21, without regard to sex, residing in the school district one month, and who paid or was liable to pay a tax, except road tax, was declared to be a legal voter at school meetings. By the same act, which prescribed the qualifications of voters at school meetings, it was ordained that a county superintendent of common schools should be elected by the legal voters, as elsewhere defined, of the respective counties. While such was the law the constitution was adopted and the state admitted into the Union, the constitution itself by special provision continuing all laws of the territory consistent therewith in force until altered or repealed. In 1862 our state legislature, by an act relating to common schools, revised the entire scope of the school system theretofore existing, and by special mention repealed the territorial laws above referred to. This act provided for the election of a county school superintendent by the legal voters of the several counties of the state, but provided that widows having children and taxable property in the district might vote by written proxy or in person at school meetings. Since that time the legislature has frequently acted upon the subject, and the present law is the outgrowth of numerous amendments. But at all times during the various changes, and as the law now stands, the qualifications prescribed for voters at school meetings have been and are broad enough to
These considerations lead to the conclusion that the power ascribed to the legislature under the constitution to provide for the establishment of a uniform .and the general system of common schools carries with it plenary power to establish the unit of that .system, denominated a school district, to determine what officers shall administer its affairs, who and what manner of persons shall be eligible to office and how and by whom they should be chosen. The elective franchise conferred by section 2, article II, does not, nor was it intended to, fix and define the qualification of voters at school meetings, but was designed only to govern in all general and special elections not •otherwise provided for by the constitution, and applies to the election of all officers known to the constitution, as well as to such as may be. provided for thereunder aside from those provided for under the special power of the legislature to establish a uniform and general system of common schools. There is strong logic in defendants’ contention, and yet it is believed there is sufficient ground for distinguishing the New .Jersey constitutional provisions from our own. If, however, we are mistaken in this, then there is a sharp conflict in the authorities, and we feel bound to .adopt the legislative construction which was placed upon this feature of the constitution from its inception, and has ever since been maintained. “That women are successful educators,” says Maxwell, J., in State ex rel. Crosby v. Cones, 15 Neb. 444 (19 N. W. 682), “is fully shown by experience.” And in Opin
Affirmed.