118 Ky. 481 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
Opinion of tub court by
Affirming.
This proceeding was instituted by the Attorney General, under section 485 of the Civil Code of Practice, against Thos. Stack, for usurpation of the office of councilman from, the fourth ward of the city of Dayton, for a term beginning on the 7th of December, 1903. The petition alleges that on the 3d of November, 1903, a general election was held in the fourth ward of the city of Dayton for the election of councilmen to represent the said ward for a term of two years, beginning on the 7th day of December, 1903, and that at the election Charles Thomas received 148 votes, F. A. Dietz 139 votes, and the defendant, Thos. Stack, 139 votes; that the defendant was not elected to the office of councilman in said city for said ward, beginning on the 7th of December, 1903, but that notwithstanding this fact he .had taken the oath of office and qualified as councilman from the fourth ward or the term beginning on the) 7th of December, 1903, and had usurped and entered upon, and! then was in the exercise of, the rights, powers, and duties thereof, wrongfully. The defendant answered that he was a candidate for the office of councilman from the fourth
In a proceeding of this character instituted by the Commonwealth, the burden of showing right or title to the office alleged to be usurped is upon the respondent. See 23 A. •£; E. Ency. of Law, 625, and authorities there cited. The rule is admirably stated in Mechem on Public Officers, section 491, as follows: “Where a proceeding is instituted by and on behalf of the State, in its sovereign capacity, to test the title of an alleged usurper, much more generality of allegation is tolerated than in cases where a private intlividual is the prosecuting party. The title to all offices being derived from the State, and it having an inherent right at any time to call upon one who assumes to exercise the functions of a public office to show his right to do so, it is evident that no specific allegation of right or 'title upon the part of the State can be necessary. It is often said,
The respondent in this case rests his claim to be a member of the board of councilmen of the city of Dayton for the term beginning on the 7th of December, 1903, solely upon a certificate issued to him on the 23d of November, 1903, by order of the board of councilmen of the city of Dayton, whose term of office expired on the very day on which the term of the council of which appellant claims to be a member began. It is true that he alleged that this certificate was approved by the mayor on the 24th of November, 1903, and that the action of the mayor was approved by the board of councilmen on December 7, 1903; but, construing the pleading most strongly against the defendant, as we must, all that this answer alleges is the approval of the mayor of the action of the council, and their ratification of his act before their term of office expired. Subsection 5 of section 1596a of the Kentucky Statutes of 1903 provides for the canvassing of returns of an election by the county board, and the issuing of certificates of election. It reads as follows: “On the next day, the said county board of election commissioners shall meet in the county clerk’s office between ten and twelve o’clock in the morning, open and canvass the returns of such election, and give triplicate or more written certificates of election over their signatures of those- who have received the highest number of votes for any office, exclusively within the gift of the voters of the county, one copy of the certificate to be retained in the clerk’s office, another delivered to each of the persons elected, and the other forwarded by the county clerk to the Secretary of State at
But it has been suggested that as the statute has made the board of common council of cities of the fourth class Judges of the eligibility and election returns of its members, and conferred upon them the power to fill vacancies* the courts are deprived thereby of jurisdiction to determine the question in proceedings under section 483 of the Civil Code of Practice, and it must be conceded that there are some decisions of courts which seem to approve this doctrine; but, after a very thorough examination of the question, we have reached the conclusion that the great weight of authority and the better reason is opposed to this doc
As the board of council of the c-ity of Dayton whose term began on the first Monday in December, 1903, has not passed upon the claim of appellant to be a member thereof, it ’s unnecessary for us to decide what effect might be given by the court to their determination of the question if they had in fact so acted.
For reasons indicated, the judgment is affirmed.