123 Cal. 307 | Cal. | 1899
On the fourteenth day of October, 1895, the office of superintendent of schools of the city and county of San Francisco became vacant by the death of the incumbent, who, on November 6, 1894, had been elected to fill the office for a term of four years, commencing upon the first Monday in January, 1895. On the twenty-fourth day of October, 1895, the
Section 14 of the consolidation act of the city and county of San Francisco thus declares: “In case of a vacancy in the office of superintendent, the board of education may appoint a person to fill the vacancy until the regular election then next following, when the office shall be filled by election of the people.” (Stats. 1863, p. 605.) The constitution declares, article IX, section 3, “That the superintendent of schools for each county shall be elected at each gubernatorial election.” Section 14 of the consolidation act, above quoted, contains the law governing the method of filling vacancies in this office. (People ex rel. Young v. Babcock, 114 Cal. 559.)
The determination of this appeal turns upon the construction to be given to this section. By appellant it is contended that the “regular election then next following” means the next election at which officers of this class, to wit, superintendent of schools in counties are to be elected; that the final clause, “when the office shall be filled by election of the people,” is adjectival and descriptive in character; or, to paraphrase the section and give it the meaning for which appellant contends, it is that the person appointed by the board to fill the vacancy shall hold office until
In support of his position appellant relies with much confidence upon the case of People v. Budd, 114 Cal. 168. In that case the office of lieutenant governor having become vacant by the death of the incumbent, this court was called upon to construe the language of section 8, article V, of the constitution relative to the filling of the vacancy. It was decided that the phrase “the next election by the people,” as employed in the constitution, did not mean the next general election, or the next election held by the people, but that the section, taken as a whole, simply provided for the filling of vacancies by appointment; that the appointee held until the office was filled in the manner provided by law, and that the section itself did not provide the manner nor contain any provision for the holding of such an election; therefore, and under all these facts, it was determined that the appointee held until the next election at which a lieutenant governor was to be regularly elected, or, in other words, until the next gubernatorial election. But in this case, as in all such cases, no set rule can be formulated for the construing of the provisions of similar statutes. Cases may be instanced, and indeed some are cited in People v. Budd, supra, where the phrase “regular election” has been construed to mean the next election at which officers of the particular class are regularly to be elected, but no such inflexible definition can be given to the word “regular,” as will hereafter clearly appear. In the case of any particular statute the construction can be determined only by considering the context in which the word is found, the purpose of the statute and the object which it was designed to
In sections 754 and 854 of the municipal corporation act of 1883 (Stats. 1883, pp. 251, 267) provision is found for filling vacancies in municipal offices. It is declared that, “Any vacancy occurring in any of the offices provided for in this act shall be filled by appointment by the board of trustees: but, if such office
Coming to the consideration of the meaning of the phrase as employed in the consolidation act, it is apparent, we think, that the word "regular” as there used is an adjective synonymous with “general,” and that it was not within the contemplation of the legislative mind that the appointee of the board of education should hold for the remainder of the unexpired term. If such had been the intent, it could readily have been expressed in brief and certain terms, but to give this language that meaning would be to deprive of all efficacy the final clause of the section, “when the office shall be filled by election of the people.” We cannot accede to the construction which appellant puts upon this sentence: 1. Because so to do would be to say that the legislature used a most unhappy and cumbrous circumlocution to express an extremely simple idea; and 2. Because thus to construe the clause is to do direct violence to the proper and grammatical use of language. If it be said, as appellant contends, that the clause is only descriptive and the verb “shall be filled” is to be considered as importing mere futurity, the result is to attribute to the legislature, in a case which does not call for it, a faulty and ungrammatical use of the parts of English speech. The clause, grammatically construed, is mandatory in its nature, and is a declaration that when the next regular election arrives the office shall be, must be, filled by the people. But, such being its construction, it is without meaning if the phrase “regular election” is to be held to mean the election at which the office is regularly to be filled, for such an election can only come at or near the expiration of the term. “Regular election” as thus employed,
The judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed.
Temple, J., and McFarland, J., concurred.