26 N.Y.S. 225 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This is an appeal from a judgment entered upon the verdict of a jury rendered by direction of the court, subject to the opinion of the court at general term, and ordered by the court to be heard in the first instance at general term. On the 3d day of March, 1891, the relator John Wesley Bishop was elected excise commissioner for the town of Olive, county of Ulster. He filed what purported to be his official oath and bond on the 11th day of March, 1891, but did not take or file the oath required by chapter 163, Laws 1890, until the 9th day of April, 1892. The relator Wilbur F. Hill was elected excise commissioner for the town of Olive, county of Ulster, on the 1st day of March, 1892, and on the 7th day of March, 1892, he filed with the town clerk papers purporting to be his official oath and bond, but did not take or file the oath required by said chapter 163, Laws 1890, until the 8th day of April, 1892. On the 16th day of April, 1892, the town board of the said town of Olive declared the offices of excise commissioners to which said relators had been elected, as before stated, to be vacant, for the reason that they had not filed the oath required by chapter 163, Laws 1890, and thereafter proceeded to appoint the defendants, Zachariah Palen and George W. Beesmer, excise commissioners, to fill said vacancies. That Palen and Beesmer thereafter and •in due time took and filed the necessary oaths of office, including the one required by chapter 163, Laws 1890, together with their official bonds, with the town clerk, and thereafter, with one Albert Elmendorf, the other excise commissioner of said town, met and organized as the excise board of said town, and granted licenses as such board of excise, and received the money therefor. Thereafter this action was commenced, asking for a judgment upon the right of the said John Wesley Bishop and Wilbur F. Hill to hold the offices of excise commissioners of said town, and that the defendants be adjudged to have no just or legal right to hold, occupy, or exercise the duties of said office of excise commissioner, and that the said defendants be ousted and excluded from the office of commissioners of excise of the town of Olive. Section 1, c. 163, Laws 1890, enacted that “it shall be unlawful for any excise commissioner in the several villages, towns and cities of this state, to be either directly or indirectly interested in the manufacture
. The relators, it appears from the case, were ignorant of the requirement of chapter 163 until about the time they took the oath within required, and filed the same in the town clerk’s office. It will be seen from what I have stated in regard to the requirement of said chapter 163, and from section 51, c. 569, herein set forth, that the relators come squarely within the provisions of these two statutes, and by their failure to take and file the oath provided for in chapter 163, Laws 1890, as therein set forth, and as provided for in chapter 569, Laws 1890, they were disqualified and debarred from holding the office of excise commissioners, provided the law requiring such oath to be taken and filed was one that the legislature had power to pass. That portion of chapter 163, Laws 1890, which provides for taking and filing the oath; that the person so taking and filing it has not been engaged either directly or indirectly in the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors, and disqualifies him from holding or continuing to hold office, unless he does so,—is challenged as repugnant to article 12 of the constitution of the state of New York. That article, after prescribing the form of the oath to be taken by members of the legislature and executive and judicial officers, except such inferior officers as shall be by law exempted, concludes with the following sentence: “No other oath, declaration or test shall be required as a qualification for any office of public trust” This last clause of the article does not prohibit the legislature from prescribing qualifications as to fitness for office, but does prohibit requiring the candidate to take any oath