7 Utah 279 | Utah | 1891
'This was an application based on an affidavit of Eich-ard W. Young, a member of the board of education of Salt Lake City, for a writ of prohibition against .the defendants, prohibiting them from publishing a notice of election to decide upon the issuing and sale of bonds to raise money to purchase school-house sites, and for buying and building school-houses, and from appointing judges to hold such election, and from receiving the returns thereof. The district court held that, upon the facts stated in the affidavit, the law did not authorize the issuance of the writ, and the plaintiff appealed to -this court. The fifteenth article of an act of the legislature providing for a uniform system of free schools throughout the Territory, in force March 13, 1890, makes the school trustees of each city of the first and second class, together with the mayor thereof, a body
“ That all the registration and election offices of every description in the Territory of Utah are hereby declared vacant, and each and every duty relating to the registration of voters, the conduct of elections, the receiving or rejection of votes, and the canvassing and return of the same, and the issuing of certificates or other evidence of election in said Territory, shall, until other provisions be made by the legislative assembly of said Territory, as is hereafter by this section provided, be performed under the existing laws of the United States and said Territory by proper persons, who shall be appointed to execute such offices, and to perform such duties, by a board of five persons to be appointed by the president, by and with the advice and consent of the senate, not more than three of whom shall be members of one political party, and a majority of whom shall be a quorum. The members of said board so appointed by the president shall each receive a salary at the rate of $5,000 per annum, and shall continue in office until the legislative assembly*282 of said Territory shall make provision for filling said offices, as herein authorized. The secretary of the Territory shall be secretary of said board, and keep a journal of its proceedings, and attest the action of said board under this section. The canvass and return of all votes at elections in said Territory, for members of the legislative .assembly thereof, shall also be returned 'to said board, which shall canvass all such returns, and issue certificates of election to those persons who, being eligible for such elections, shall appear to have been lawfully elected, which certificates shall be the only evidence of the right of such persons to sit in such assembly: Provided, that the said board of five persons shall not exclude any person otherwise eligible to vote from the polls on account of any opinion such person may entertain on the subject of bigamy or polygamy, nor shall they refuse to count any such vote on account of the opinion of the person casting it on the subject of bigamy or polygamy- but each house of such assembly, after its organization, shall have power to decide upon the elections and qualifications of its members; and at or after the first meeting of such legislative assembly, whose members shall have been elected and returned according to the provisions of this act, said legislative assembly may make such laws, conformable to the organic act of said Territory, and not inconsistent with other laws of the United States, as it shall deem proper concerning the filling of the offices in said Territory declared vacant by this act.”
The connection of the provisions of this section bearing upon the question under consideration will be more apparent if other portions of it are omitted. Without such parts the section would read: “All registration and election offices * ' * * are declared vacant, and * * * every duty relating to registration, * * * the conduct of elections, the receiving of
At the time the act of coDgress under consideration took effect, election offices existed in the various counties and municipalities in this Territory. A portion of the language of the first sentence of the ninth section, considered alone, would indicate an intent to empower the board to appoint persons to execute the duties of election offices that might afterwards be made as well as those then existing. But the other language connected with this, found in the section declaring the offices vacant, and giving the board the power to appoint until other provision be made by the legislature for filling the offices declared vacant, and requiring the performance to be under existing laws, should be considered with it. The offices which the board known as the “Utah Commission ” was authorized and required to appoint persons to execute were those offices which the legislature was authorized to provide by law for filling, and they were the ones made vacant by the first clause of section 9. The election offices created by the legislative enactment of March 13, 1890, were not made vacant by the ninth section of the act of congress of March 22, 1882.. The latter section was designed to vacate the offices then in existence, not to prohibit any legislature, whose members might be selected at elections conducted by persons appointed by the board, from making laws by which such vacant offices might be filled. The persons- filling the election offices at the time the act of congress took effect were deemed unsuitable, and the law for filling them then in force were believed to be objectionable. To remove and replace such unsuitable election officers, and to render nugatory such objectionable laws, was the purpose of section 9. So far that section evinced an intention to deny to the people of the Territory to which
^Reference has been made to section 23 of an act of congress in force March 3, 1887. This section, in effect, merely requires the laws enacted by this Territorial legislature, mentioned in the section above quoted, to be approved by congress before taking effect. Our attention has been also called to an irreconcilable repugnancy between certain provisions of sections 102 and 103 of article 15 of an act of the Territorial legislature (Sess. Laws 1890, p. 128), relating to elections to determine whether bonds shall be issued and sold, and sections 122-125 of the same act. The two sections first mentioned contain, among others, the following provisions: That “ fifteen days before an election for school trustees for levying taxes, for voting on the- issue of bonds, or for any other purpose named in the article, the city councils of the several cities shall appoint from each municipal ward three judges of such election.” These sections also
Section 125 requires the returns to be canvassed by the board of education, and makes it the duty of that body to file with the clerk of the county a certified copy of the order of the board, and of the notice, and an affidavit showing when and where published, and also a statement showing the number of inhabitants, and the value of the taxable property in the district, and that the amount of bonds proposed to be issued does not exceed two per cent, of the 'value of such taxable property, and also facts showing that all matters in relation to the issue thereof were lawfully conducted. Sections 102 and 103 provide for' calling and holding elections to vote for trustees, levying taxes, and other elections, as well as