Dorain v. Walters

116 S.W. 313, 132 Ky. 54, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 99
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 11, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 313 (Dorain v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dorain v. Walters, 116 S.W. 313, 132 Ky. 54, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 99 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge O’Bear

Reversing.

Appellant was elected treasurer of tire city of Paducah', a city of the second class, at the regular election November, 1903, for the term of four years;, his term expiring January, 1908. He qualified and served the term. At the November election, 1907, he was again elected for another term of four years beginning January, 1908. Conceiving that he was ineligible for re-election, the authorities called an election to fill the vacancy in the office at the No[58]*58vember election, 1908, which was the proper time for filling the vacancy by election, if the vacancy existed. Appellee was elected to the office at that election. He was given the certificate by tlxe canvassing board, executed bond, and took the oath of office. Appellant refusing to give up the office, but persisting in discharging his duties, appellee brought this suit against him to recover possession of the office, and to restrain appellant from interfering with him in the discharge of its duties. By statute the office of city treasurer of cities of the second class is created, with a term of four years, to be elected by the popular vote at the regular quadirennial elections held beginning with the year 1895. The treasurer receives and holds the public money of the city. Section 3132, Ky. St. Section 160 of the Constitution, treating of the election of municipal officers and their terms and qualifications, provides that mayors and police judges and members of the legislative boards of cities of the first, second, and third classes shall be elected by the people, but allows such officers, except the legislative boards of cities of other classes, to be elected by the people or appointed as may be provided by statute. The section continues.: “Other officers of towns or cities shall be elected by the qualified voters therein, or be appointed by the local authorities thereof, as the General Assembly may, by a general law, provide; but when elected by the voters of a town or city, their terms of office shall be four years, and until their successors shall be qualified. No mayor or chief executive or fiscal officer of any city of the first or second class, after the .term of office to which he has been elected under this Constitution, shall be eligible for the. succeeding term. ‘Fiscal officer’ shall not include an auditor or assessor, or any other [59]*59officer -whose chief duty is not the collection or holding of public moneys. The General Assembly shall prescribe the qualifications of all officers of towns and cities, the manner in, and causes for, which they may be removed from office, and how vacancies in such office may be filled.” If appellant was ineligible for re-election in 1907, the fact that lie received a majority of the votes and the certificate ■ of election conferred ,no right upon him. . The certificate was void; and, there having been no one elected to fill the office, a vacancy existed, although he was permitted by the Constitution to continue to exercise the duties of the office until his successor qualified.

Appellant contends that he was not ineligible because the office of treasurer of a city of the second class is not one filled by “election under this Constitution.” Section 160, supra, meant to disqualify two of the municipal officers of first and second class cities for re-election. One was the chief executive by whatever name he might be called, the other was the “fiscal officer,” by whatever name he might be called. That no doubt might arise as to what that term included the section excludes from its meaning assessing and auditing officers, and specifically, by elimination of all others, confines it to such officers only as collect or hold the public money. The namq of the officer was not given because the Legislature or the municipal board might confer upon some other office than treasurer by name the duty of collecting and holding the public money. It was intended to disqualify the person who discharges those functions, so he was described instead of named. A fiscal officer is one who officially is the custodian of the public treasure. Unless the words of the section apply to a city treasurer who collects and holds the public [60]*60money collected for the city, then there is no one to whom they could apply. There is a suggestion in argument that, as a statute requires the treasurer to deposit daily the public money in a designated depository, he does not hold the public money; but we think he does. Requiring him to deposit it in a selected depository merely directs how he shall hold it. Besides-, he undoubtedly collects or receives the public money, and that act brings him -within the terms of section 160 of the Constitution.

But appellant’s main contention is that the city treasurer is an officer created not by the- Constitution, but by statute, and that it is only such fiscal ■officers as are “elected under this Constitution” that are ineligible for reelection; it being argued that, unless the office i's created by the Constitution, an election to fill it is not an election to an office under the Constitution. The section does not nor does any other provision of the Constitution create any municipal fiscal office. If appellant’s argument is sound, it would follow that the provision of section 160, disqualifying fiscal officers of cities of the first and second classes for re-election would fail of application in any state of. case. Such a construction cannot be favored. The Constitution was intended to be applied to actual conditions. If the words “elected under this Constitution” be left out of view for the moment, it would be perfectly clear that the disqualification applied to all fiscal officers of the first and second class cities, whether such officers were created by the Constitution or by statute. Looking to the purpose of the convention in adopting that provision, we know it was to prevent those public servants who were, custodians of the public money from continuing so long in office as to make it pos[61]*61sible for them to steal large sums. It was to provide a check by fixing short terms and rotation in incumbents; it being known that such course did operate to minimize official embezzlements. There appears no reason why such a precaution should have been applied only to fiscal officers provided by the Constitution instead of to all fiscal officer, whether provided expressly by the Constitution or allowed by it. With this view of the situation, we look again to the expression “elected under this Constitution,, to d'etermine what qualification of the preceding clause was intended by it. There were several cities in this Commonwealth which would fall under the allotment of first and second classes of cities in the classification of cities and towns required by the Constitution of 1891 when it was adopted. Those cities then had mayors, as well as treasurers, or other fiscal officers. Theretofore such officers were not by the Constitution then in force ineligible for re-election. Each city and town had then its own special charter. The officers provided for each were selected in different ways, and for different terms, perhaps. A number of the provisions of the new Constitution were suspended by it as to the then official incumbents. The convention intended to make the inhibition against re-election of certain municipal officers apply to those officers who were elected after' the adoption of the present Constitution, and not to all such officers. It was meant to except mayors and chief executives and fiscal officers then in office, some of whom might have been elected only a short while before.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 313, 132 Ky. 54, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorain-v-walters-kyctapp-1909.