8 A.2d 398 | Pa. | 1939
This appeal1 from the refusal, on a taxpayer's bill, to restrain county commissioners from submitting a local option referendum to the voters of the borough of East McKeesport, involves construction of Article V, entitled "Local Option", of the Liquor Control Act approved June 16, 1937, P. L. 1762, 1792, 47 PS sections 744-501 et seq. The Article has three sections. Section 501 provides that a local option referendum may be held once in four years "on the date of the primary election immediately preceding any municipal election." As the constitution provides that municipal elections be held in November2 in odd-numbered years, section 501 therefore clearly specifies that the local option election must be held, if at all, on the date of the primary *115 preceding the municipal election, which primary, under the Election Code, is held in September. Section 502 provides that on an electors' petition for a local option referendum the "county commissioners shall cause a question to be submitted at the primary immediately preceding the municipal election occurring at least sixty days thereafter, by certifying a resolution, duly adopted, to the county commissioners for submission of such question, on the ballot or on voting machines, at such election in the manner provided by the election laws of the Commonwealth." Section 503, the third section of Article V, makes it unlawful to sell liquor in local option areas. The provision quoted, from section 502, is not well drawn but we think the legislative intention can be ascertained and made effective.
1. Appellant contends that no local option referendum can be held in 1939 because there are less than sixty days between the primary election date, September 12th, and the date of the municipal election, November 7th. On the other hand, the county commissioners contend that the sixty day period referred to, specifies the period which must elapse between the filing of the petition and the election. The requirement in section 502 that the question be submitted "at the primary immediately preceding the municipal election" is the same as that made in Section 501, and, in both sections, means the September primary established by the Election Code. The words "at least sixty days thereafter" cannot possibly have been intended to refer to a municipal election sixty days after the primary, because both sides agree that so long as the primary and municipal election days remain fixed as now provided by the statute and the constitution, there never can be a sixty day period between the two dates. The legislature did not intend, as appellant's argument suggests, to enact what was impossible. The prior law, the Act of 1933 (Special Session), P. L. 15, 29, had provided that the referendum might take place "at the general *116
or municipal election occurring at least sixty days" after filing the petition. For the general or municipal elections so specified in the earlier Act, the later Act substitutes the primary but retains the provision that the petition must be filed at least sixty days before the vote takes place. Section 604 of the Election Code of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333, 1356,
2. Appellant, by confusing the purpose or function of a primary election with the purpose of a local option vote, takes a second position and contends that as (in the words of section 702 of the Election Code of 1937, P. L. 1362, 25 PS section 2812) "no elector who is not registered and enrolled as a member of a political party, in accordance with the provisions of this act, shall be permitted to vote the ballot of such party or any other party ballot at any primary" the voters who, for example, had not specified a party designation when they registered, will be disqualified, and that, accordingly, the Liquor Control Act is unconstitutional as disfranchising such voters: Constitution, Art. VIII, sec. 1. But this argument must also be rejected as leading to a construction inconsistent with the legislative intention to enact a law within its power. One of the purposes was to provide a local option vote. The earlier Act of 1933 had provided that such vote might take place either at a general or a municipal election; the legislature desired to change this by limiting referendums *117
to municipal election years and advancing the date to that of the primary preceding the municipal election. It of course had the power to do that. The Election Code defines or describes a number of elections, among them general election, municipal election, primary election and special election: section 102 of the Act of 1937, P. L. 1334,
PER CURIAM:
Order affirmed; an opinion will be filed later giving the reasons for the order. The court is of opinion that the local option referendum shall be by separate ballot; where voting machines are used they shall be adjusted to permit such referendum voting.