146 Ky. 798 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1912
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
What persons are entitled to act ,as trustees of the town of Island, is the only question involved in this case.
Island is a town of the .sixth class, and under the
■ Afterwards, this action was brought by tbe two Gil-lians, Redfern and Howard against Shacklett, Morton, Kittinger, Flanagan and Hinant to recover from them tbe books and records of tbe town, upon tbe ground that tbe plaintiffs were the legally elected and duly qualified and acting trustees of tbe town, and as such entitled to all tbe books and records which were wrongfully withheld from them by tbe defendants, who were bolding tbe office of trustees and assuming to act as such.. A general demurrer was filed to tbe petition and overruled, and, tbe defendants declining to plead further, a judgment was entered declaring that R. II. Redfern, William Howard, Dan Gillian, Albert Gillian and J. N. Hinant were tbe regular qualified and acting trustees of tbe town and entitled to the possession of all tbe books, papers and records of tbe town, in tbe possession of tbe defendants Shacklett, Morton, Flannagan and Kittinger.
It will be observed that under tbe averments of tbe
“When a vacancy occurs in any of the elective offices provided for in this chapter, the board of trustees shall fill such vacancy by appointment for the time fixed in the Constitutionand if a vacancy occurs in an appointive office, the board of trustees shall appoint a successor for the balance of the unexpired term, and if from failure to elect at the time fixed by law or other cause there shall be-a vacancy in the entire board of trustees, then the County Court of the county shall have power to appoint five trustees who shall hold their office until the next regular election. Provided, that when a vacancy occurs in the board of trustees, the County Judge may fill said vacancy by appointment until the next regular election.”
Under this statute, when from any cause there is a vacancy in the entire board of trustees, the County Court alone has the authority to fill the vacancy by the appointment of five trustees; but if there is a vacancy in less than the whole board, the County Judge alone has the authority to fill the vacancy. Chapman v. Horton, 22 Ky. L. R., 1022; Hill v. Anderson, 122 Ky., 87; Lewis v. Town, 105 Ky., 14; Yancy v. Town, 23 Ky. L. R., 2087.
Section 1530 of the Kentucky Statutes provides that:
*801 “All resignations of office shall be tendered to the court or officer who is required to fill the vacancy. All such resignations shall be in writing, and received and recorded by said court or officer. When it is required to be filled by the Circuit Judge, h'e shall cause a record to be made of the resignation in the court of the county in which the officer lives; and when by the County Court; it shall cause a record of the fact to be made; and when by the Governor he shall cause the same to be recorded in the executive journal.”
Under this section, the resignation of an elective or appointive officer must be tendered in writing to the person who has the power to appoint his successor, and a resignation tendered to any other person or body is a nullity. Fryer v. Norton, 67 N. J. Law, 537; Vaughn v. School District, 27 Ore., 57; State v. Popejoy, 165 Ind., 177, 6 Am. & Eng. Annotated Cases, 687; State v. Augustine, 113 Mo., 21, 35 Am. St. Rep., 696; State v. Kitsap County Superior Court, 46 Washington, 616, 12 L. R. A., n. s., 1010; Reiter v. State, 51 Ohio St., 74, 23 L. R. A., 681.
It follows from these views that when this action was brought and the judgment appealed from entered, Hancock, James, Mattingly and Hinant, the four trustees elected a.t the November election in 1909, were entitled to hold their offices until their successors were duly elected and qualified; and as neither of them resigned to the proper officer, and as no person was appointed to succeed either of them by the proper officer, they were the only persons authorized to act as trustees when this suit was brought and determined in the lower court. No one of the appellants or appellees, except Hinant, ever was a trustee de jure, or entitled to have possession of the books and records of the town.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed with directions to dismiss the petition, the appellants and appellees each to pay one-half the costs in this court.