Morton v. Youngerman

89 Ky. 505 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1890

JUDGE PRYOR

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal involves the right to the office of city-engineer for the city of Newport. The appellant is holding over for the reason that the appellee, as he contends, was not elected by the city council in the mode prescribed by the charter of the city.

Section 28 of the charter provides that the engineer shall be elected by the board of conncilmen at its second meeting in January, and that “he shall be elected for one year, and until his successor is elected and qualified.” By a regulation adopted by the council, the presiding officer is entitled to a vote only when *507the board is a tie, and by an additional regulation it is further provided that “a majority of the members ■elected and voting shall be necessary to choose any ■officer elective by the board.”

It is also a' rule that when nominations are made, “after the fourth roll-call, should there be no election, the candidate receiving the lowest number of votes shall be dropped, and so on, until an election is had; and in case of a tie the presiding officer shall decide.”

There were three nominations made, and four ballots taken without an election, and on the fifth ballot ■one of the candidates, under the rule prescribed, was ■dropped. On the sixth ballot the appellant obtained three votes and the appellee six, the other three couneilmen, there being twelve in all, not voting. It was then announced that the appellee was elected. It is urged that the appellee should have received a majority of the entire council, and that the mode of proceeding by which the appellee was elected is in violation of the organic law of the city. Besides, it is further .argued that the three members who declined to vote for either the appellee or the appellant offered to cast their votes on the sixth ballot for the candidate who had been dropped, and this was denied them.

We perceive no reason why the council could not adopt a rule which would facilitate the proceedings and result in an. election, that otherwise would have prevented the election altogether at the whim of the minority. The charter did not require a majority of .all the members present to vote.in order to make the ■election valid. There were nine votes cast out of the *508twelve, three members declining to vote for either candidate, and in the absence of an express statute requiring a majority of the entire body, a plurality of the votes cast, there being a,quorum present and voting, elected the officer. Mr. Dillon says: “If all the members of the select body or committee, or if all of the agents, are ■ assembled, or if all have been duly-notified, and the minority refuse or neglect to meet with the others, a majority of those present may act, provided those present constitute a majority of the-whole number; in other words, a major part of the-whole is necessary to constitute a quorum, and a majority of the quorum may act.”. (1 Dillon on Mun. Corp., page 334.)

There was nothing unreasonable in the regulations-adopted for the election, and if there had been no-such rule the appellee was entitled to the office, because he obtained a majority of the- nine votes cast,, the entire body being present.

The appellee being, therefore, entitled to the office*, the judgment below is affirmed.

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