18 S.W.2d 316 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1929
Affirming.
At the regular November, 1925, municipal election, Arthur A. Will was awarded the certificate of election as mayor of Louisville. A contest ensued and that election was declared void and the office of mayor adjudged to be vacant. See Taylor v. Nuetzel,
A preliminary question is raised as to appellant's right to maintain this appeal, but it is without merit. *3
True, actions upon the part of candidates relating to the preparation of ballots in primary elections are restricted to the circuit court, which in relation thereto is made the court of last resort. See sections 1550-27, Ky. Statutes. But the provisions of that section do not abridge the right of voters and taxpayers to maintain such actions. See Hager v. Robinson,
The sole question is as to the proper construction of section 160 of the Constitution which, so far as applicable, reads:
"The terms of office of Mayors . . . shall be four years, and until their successors shall be qualified. . . .
"No mayor . . . of any city of the first . . . class, after the expiration of the term of office to which he has been elected under this constitution, shall be eligible for the succeeding term."
By the provisions of section 167 of the Constitution, the first election for mayor under the new Constitution was held at the regular November, 1893, election and chronologically the November, 1925, election was the date for electing a mayor for the full term, and the inquiry is: When Harrison was elected in November, 1927, to fill the vacancy in the mayor's office, was this an "election to the (a) term" within the meaning of the law?
1. Does the word "term" mean four years, or does it mean any other period of time for which one may be elected and hold the office? Differently stated, is the "term" which disqualifies a fixed and certain period, specified and designated in the Constitution, or is it an uncertain and movable period? The answer is found in the first paragraph quoted supra. "The term of office of mayor shall be four years." "Term" is thus identified and defined as a certain and fixed period of four years. It commences when the mayor is elected and inducted into office, and ends at the end of the four years for which he was elected. One or several persons may discharge the duties of the office during this period, but the term is not divided into smaller terms by the number of persons who may fill the office. It remains one and indivisible, and term follows term in successive cycles of four years each. Nor does it die with the incumbent. On the contrary, *4 if the incumbent or the one elected to the office should resign, refuse to qualify, or be impeached or removed from office, the term would remain unbroken until the recurring election for that office. When so considered, the words, "No mayor, after the expiration of the term of office to which he has been elected . . . shall be eligible for the succeeding term," evidently refer to a term of four years, and mean that a mayor who is elected to a full term may not be re-elected within eight years.
In this respect it will be observed that aside from a reference in section 161 to be presently noticed, no mention is made of the "term" of mayor in any other part of the Constitution. Provision is made for filling vacancies in all elective offices, save those of Governor, Lieutenant Governor, and Members of the General Assembly in section 152. The words "vacancy" "unexpired term," and "part of term" are used repeatedly in that section. But nowhere does the word "term" appear without qualification. It provides: "Vacancies in all elective offices shall be filled by election or appointment, as follows: If the unexpired term will end at the next succeeding annual election at which either city, town, county, district or state officers are to be elected, the office shall be filled by appointment for the remainder of the term. If the unexpiredterm will not end at [such described election], . . . theoffice shall be filled by appointment until said election, and then said vacancy shall be filled by election for the remainderof the term." If three months do not intervene between the happening of the vacancy and the character of election named supra, the office is to be filled by appointment until the second succeeding election of that character, and then, "if anypart of the term remains unexpired, the office shall be filledby election until the regular time for the election of officersto fill said offices." (Our italics.) This section demonstrates that the members of the convention had in mind a distinction between "a term of office" and "a part of a term" and understood how to use words to express this distinction. And the meticulous care they exercised in qualifying the word "term" wherever used therein indicates that they understood the word "term" to mean a full term of four years. It is also a significant fact that, though that section deals fully with the subject of elections to fill vacancies, it nowhere suggests that a person filling a vacancy is ineligible to *5 succeed himself. The same thought was carried into other provisions of the Constitution, thus:
Section 70 provides that the Governor "shall be elected for a term of four years." Section 71 provides, "He shall be ineligible for the succeeding four years after the expiration of the term for which he shall have been elected." Sections 82 and 83, relating to Lieutenant Governor, are similar. Sections 84 and 85 take care of vacancies in the office of Governor. It being specifically provided in section 85, "Whenever a vacancy shall occur in the office of governor before the first twoyears of the term shall have expired, a new election forgovernor shall take place to fill such vacancy." Also as to other state officers section 91 provides for "a term of four years," and section 93 provides that these officers shall be ineligible for re-election "for the succeeding four years after the expiration of the term for which they shall have been elected."
The exact question here involved has not been passed upon by this court. But similar words appearing in other provisions of the Constitution have been considered, and the above definition of the word "term" adopted, though in some situations the application given it is not in entire harmony with the views above expressed. Thus, section 235 of the Constitution provides, "The salaries of public officers shall not be changed during the terms for which they were elected," and a similar provision in reference to city, county, town, and municipal officers is found in section 161 of the Constitution
In Bosworth v. Ellison,
In Pinkston v. Watkins,
In Kratzer v. Com.,
2. The remaining question is: Does the four-year term as so used refer to the office or to the officer? We have seen that in Bosworth v. Ellison the words "during his term of office" appearing in section 161, and the words "during the term for which they were elected," are construed to refer to the office and not to the officer, or, as stated by the learned chancellor, "to mean the four year term of office, and not the four year term to which the individual had been elected." For this reason Ellison, who was filling a vacancy in the office of jailer, was denied an increase in the compensation made during his predecessor's incumbency because such increase was made during the four-year term of the office which was partly filled by each incumbent.
Appellant insists that a person may be elected "for" a term of office, but that he cannot be elected "to" a term of office, and that inasmuch as the word "to" and not "for" is used in the disqualifying phrase "after the expiration of the term of office to which he shall have been elected," the word "to" modifies office and not term, so that if the word "term" means a period of four years, the real meaning of the sentence is "after the expiration of the four year term of the office to which he has been elected." And as Harrison was elected to a particular term of four years he was ineligible to succeed himself, even though he served but two years.
He also insists that if a term is to be defined as four years, and construed to refer to the office and not to the officer as held in Bosworth v. Ellison, supra, Harrison is in the same situation as was Ellison, and, as Ellison was denied increased compensation because he was elected to the four-yearterm of office, by a parity of reasoning Harrison was elected to a four-year term of office and is ineligible for re-election. In reference to the first suggestion the chancellor aptly stated: "The answer to this somewhat refined argument is that if the makers of the *8 Constitution had intended to qualify the word 'office' they would have inserted the definite article 'the' before 'office' so that the phrase would have read: 'After the expiration of the term of the office to which he has been elected.' " — an answer is which we concur.
However, the point raised by appellant, based on the ruling in the Ellison case, presents a more serious question. In Constitutions, a consistent terminology is to be expected, and if practicable a consistent definition of the words used should be given, as conflicting constructions of similar language appearing in different parts of the same instrument are confusing. Yet if a strained definition is rendered necessary to meet a particular situation, such definition is not thereby made conclusive in other situations to which it does not apply.
Sections 161 and 235 of the Constitution prohibit the compensation of an officer from being increased during his term. The indicative words being to "his term of office" (section 161), and "during the terms for which they were elected" (section 235). In the Ellison case the court held both sections to have the same meaning and to refer to a full four-year term. But in the light of the peculiar situation involved the court could not follow what we shall presently show to be the plain and reasonable meaning of these words, and at the same time effectuate the uniformity purpose of the provisions. And in view of the exigency of the situation emphasized the uniformity purpose, saying: "It is manifestly the intention of this section that all persons holding office of the same character and class shall receive during the terms for which they were elected uniform compensation or salary, whichever it might be. . . . Within the meaning of section 161 of the Constitution, Ellison occupied precisely the same position that Morgan would have if he had not resigned." The inference being that the construction there given was to have special application to these sections. No such situation is here presented. Section 160 declares certain incumbents ineligible for reelection regardless of their fitness otherwise. This qualification abridges the right of the people to select their own officials and is to be liberally construed in favor of eligibility, 46 Cow. L. p. 938. Also inasmuch as Constitutions are adopted by the people, a favorite canon of construction of such instruments is that the language used should "receive its plain and ordinarily understood meaning by the generality of the people." Crick v. Rash, *9
3. Aside from the reasons for affirmance above set out, a decision of the case may be rested on the rule of contemporaneous construction as applied both to section 160 and to sections 82, 84, and 85, quoted above. The question has been acute in two mayorality races and one gubernatorial race. In January, 1896, Mr. Tyler, the then mayor of Louisville, died. Mr. Todd was appointed to fill the vacancy, and in the fall of that year was elected to fill out the unexpired term. At the expiration of that term and while exercising the duties of the office, he was again nominated as the Republican candidate and ran for that office for the succeeding term. In 1905 Mr. Barth received the certificate of election as mayor of Louisville. In a contest the election was set aside. The vacancy was *10 filled by appointment, and in the November, 1907, election Mr. Grinstead ran as the Republican nominee for that office for the succeeding term.
Governor Goebel died early in 1900. Lieutenant Governor Beckham assumed the duties of the office of Governor. In the fall of that year Governor Beckham was elected to fill the unexpired term and at the end of that term, in 1903, became a candidate for the succeeding full term. The governing authorities of the Democratic party refused to place his name upon the ballot as a candidate for the party nomination in the primary. In a mandamus proceeding in the circuit court they were required to do this. Appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals and the judgment there affirmed, though the court based its judgment upon other grounds and did not determine the question of eligibility. See Young v. Beckham,
The rule is thus stated in 12 C. J. p. 715: "Legislative or executive construction of constitutional provisions adopted and acted upon with the acquiescence of the people for many years are entitled to great weight with the courts and where not manifestly erroneous it will not be disturbed. The injustice that would inevitably result by the disturbing of such construction after a long period *11 of acquiescence therein, during which many rights will necessarily have been acquired, is a very strong argument against it."
We are unable to find any reason for declaring Mr. Harrison constitutionally ineligible to succeed himself, and the judgment of the chancellor is therefore affirmed.
Whole court sitting.