83 W. Va. 785 | W. Va. | 1919
The City Clerk of the City of Charleston having refused to deliver to a properly designated and accredited commissioner of election for an election to be held in said city, under its charter as amended by an act passed by the Legislature, Feby. 14, 1919, one of the two registration books of the pre-•einct represented by the applicant for the election supplies for said precinct, under the impression and advice that the law authorized delivery of only one of said books, the commissioner made an informal application here for a writ of mandamus, to which said clerk appeared.
The act amending the charter provides that, except as therein ‘‘otherwise set out,” the general law governing registration and elections shall apply in the city elections to be held, under the charter. That law specifically provides that ■one registration book shall be sent to each precinct. The amended city charter says: “The registration books shall be sent to the polling place along; with the ballots.” If the Legislature intended the general statute to govern as to the ■number of registration books to be sent out, this provision •of the charter was unnecessary, and, though statutes often unnecessarily repeat provisions of others literally or substantially, there is, nevertheless, a presumption of a legislative purpose in the use of every word, phrase and clause found in a statute. Tested by its, terms, this amendment clearly contemplates delivery of both registration books for ■each precinct to the election officers, and the words indicate intent to alter the general election statute as to the registration books, in so far as it applies to city elections held in the ■City of Charleston.
But. the words indicating such purpose are general and indefinite, and the courts sometimes read into statutes
Another untenable position is that the law contemplates unbroken custody of at least one book by the clerk, to avoid danger of loss by fire or other accident. Nothing in either the general statute or the charter expressly so provides.' In so far as such intent may arise by implication from the terms of the general statute, it furnishes no -weighty reason for an implied limitation of the express terms of the charter act. Mere unnecessary implications never restrain the meaning and operation of express legislative terms used in a statute.
1 Upon these principles and conclusions, the writ applied for was awarded.
Writ awarded.