185 P. 562 | Mont. | 1919

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

As a result of the election held in November, 1918, Nellie Sullivan was declared elected to the office of county auditor of Silver Bow county. Ludwig Rose, her competitor, instituted a contest, and has appealed from a judgment dismissing it. There is presented the single question: Can a woman, otherwise [1] qualified, be denied the right to hold the office of county auditor because of her sex?

The office of county auditor is not mentioned in the Constitution. It was created by an Act of the legislative assembly approved March 7, 1891 (Laws of 1891, p. 227). Section 2 of the Act provides, among other things, “There shall be elected * * * some male person to serve as county auditor, ’ ’ etc, The Act h&s been brought forward into , the later compilations of the laws, and section 2 above is now section 3101, Revised Codes. At the time the statute was enacted, and thereafter, until the suffrage amendment was adopted in 1914, the Constitution of this state (sec. 2, Art. IX) prescribed the qualifications necessary to entitle a person to vote at general elections and for state officers, as follows: A male; of the age of twenty-one years or .over; a citizen of the United States; a resident of this state for one year immediately preceding the election at which he. offers to vote, and of the towij, county or precinct for such time as the law might prescribe. The ex*483ceptions are not material here. Section 10 of the same Article of the Constitution provided: “Women shall be eligible to hold the office of county superintendent of schools or any school district office.”

Section 11 provides: “Any person qualified to vote at general elections and for state officers in this state, shall be eligible to any office therein except as otherwise provided in this Constitution, and subject to such additional qualifications as may be prescribed by the legislative assembly for city offices and offices hereafter created.” Additional qualifications are prescribed for state senator, certain elective state officers, district judge, member of constitutional convention, and county attorney, but no other qualifications are imposed by the Constitution for other state or county officers. In other words, prior to the adoption óf the suffrage amendment, to qualify a person to hold any county office, other than county superintendent of schools, such person must have been qualified to vote at general elections and for state officers; that is to say, such person must have been a male, of the age of twenty-one years or over, a citizen of the United States, a resident of this state for a year immediately before the election, and of the town, county or precinct for such time as the law might prescribe.

Since the language of sections 2 and 11, Article IX above, is mandatory and prohibitory, it was beyond the power of the legislature to render a person eligible to hold a public office who did not possess all the qualifications prescribed by the Constitution for such office, but it was left free to attach additional qualifications to the incumbent of the office of county auditor — an office created after the Constitution was adopted.

But by the use of the word “male” in the statute, the legislature could not have intended to prescribe an additional qualification for the office of county auditor, for the Constitution had already made the sex attribute male, an indispensable qualification to hold any county office, whether created by the Constitution or by statute, except the office of county superintendent of schools.

*484The words “additional qualifications5’ were used in section 11, Article IX, advisedly. They mean some qualifications added to those already enumerated in the Constitution. They never did mean a repetition of some qualification already required. The meaning of the language is too plain to admit of further discussion.

It is probable that the word “male” was inserted in the [2] statute through inadvertence, and, if so, should be treated as surplusage and disregarded. (Shapard v. Missoula, 49 Mont. 269, 141 Pac. 544.) Its presence adds nothing to the meaning of the Act. If in enacting the statute the legislature had substituted the word “female” for the word “male,” the Act would have been unconstitutional, for women were then not qualified to vote at general elections and for state officers, and therefore were not qualified to hold thé office of county auditor.

If the word “male” had been omitted altogether, the statute would have meant just what it did mean with the word included, for only male persons were then qualified to hold the office. If the statute had read, “There shall be elected some person to serve as county auditor,” etc., the constitutional qualifications would have been read into it, thereby completing the Act.

If the word “male” was inserted designedly, it could not have meant anything but a general elector — a person qualified to vote at general elections and for state officers, for no one else was eligible to the office of county auditor at that time. If it was inserted intentionally for the purpose of emphasizing [3] the fact that only a male person could hold the office, it is sufficient to say that it became innocuous as soon as the suffrage amendment was adopted, for when that amendment was adopted and the word “male” was dropped from section 2, Article IX, of our Constitution, every political distinction based upon the consideration of sex was eliminated from the Constitution and laws of this state, and the will of the people was declared to be that every woman shall be qualified to vote at general elections and for state officers, who is of the age *485of twenty-one years or over, a citizen of the United States, a resident of this state for one year immediately preceding the election, and of the town, county or precinct for such time as may be prescribed by law. By the adoption of that amendment the sex attribute was eliminated as a qualification to vote, and by force of the language employed in section 11, Article IX, it was also eliminated as a qualification to hold any office under the Constitution or laws of this state. The purpose was not merely to confer the elective franchise upon women, but to place them upon a plane of absolute equality with men, so far as their political rights and privileges are concerned.

Motion fiar rehearing denied December 8, 1919.

Appellant’s contest, based solely upon the ground that the successful candidate is a woman, is without merit, and the judgment'dismissing it is affirmed.

'Affirmed.

Mr. Chief Justice Brantly and Associate Justices Hurly *uid Cooper concur.
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