Ekwall v. Stadelman

30 P.2d 1037, 146 Or. 439, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 68
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 30 P.2d 1037 (Ekwall v. Stadelman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ekwall v. Stadelman, 30 P.2d 1037, 146 Or. 439, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 68 (Or. 1934).

Opinions

RAND, C. J.

This is a mandamus proceeding brought in this court to compel the secretary of state to accept and file the declaration of candidacy of W. A. Ekwall, a judge of the circuit court for Multnomah county, for the office of representative in Congress for the third congressional district of this state. Judge Ekwall, the relator, was elected to the office of circuit judge for a term which will not expire until January, 1939, and, before entering upon his duties as such, he took, subscribed and transmitted to the secretary of state an oath which contained the declaration: “I will not accept any other office, except judicial offices, during the term for which I have been elected.” His declaration was refused and the above facts are now urged as the sole grounds for sustaining a demurrer which the defendant has interposed to the writ.

It is contended on behalf of the writ, (1) that there was no provision of law which required the relator to take such an oath before entering upon his duties as a circuit judge and that, since the oath was taken without authority of law, it was extrajudicial only and, therefore, of no legal force or effect, and, (2) that if the oath was one which the law required to be taken, then the declaration is null and void because in conflict with the federal constitution.

The first contention is based upon the fact that prior to the 1910 amendment of Article VII of the state constitution circuit judges were required by section 10 thereof to take and subscribe to the same oath *441 that justices of the supreme court were required to take by section 21 thereof. Said section 21 prescribed the form of the oath and included the very language objected to. As so amended, Article VII omitted section 10 but by section 7 thereof included section 21, merely omitting therefrom the words “and circuit courts”. But section 2, Article VII, as amended, provides that “the courts, jurisdiction, and judicial system of Oregon" except so far as expressly changed by this amendment, shall remain as at present constituted until otherwise provided by law”. This latter provision has the effect, as held in Holman v. Lutz, 132 Or. 185 (282 P. 241, 284 P. 825), and many other decisions of this court, of continuing the provisions of said section 10 in full force and effect until changed by some subsequent legislation, although section 10 had been omitted from the amended Article. There has been no such enactment and those provisions are in full force and effect and, hence, the relator was required to take this particular oath before entering upon the discharge of his duties as a circuit judge. Again, by section 3 of Article XV of the state constitution, every person elected or appointed to an office under the constitution is required, before entering upon the duties thereof, to “take an oath or affirmation to support the constitution of the United States, and of this state, and also an oath of office”. No other oath is prescribed for circuit judges, either by the constitution or by any statute of this state and, for that reason also, the relator was required to take this particular oath.

Nor do we find any merit in the contention argued by counsel for the relator that, because the oath taken contains the word “accept” in its application to other offices, it applies only to the acceptance of the office *442 after election and has no application to the steps necessary to be taken to secure such an election. The right to accept an office implies the right to be chosen for that office and it would seem to follow as a necessary consequence that, if a person was ineligible to hold a particular office, he would be ineligible to become a candidate for that particular office at a primary election under the laws existing in this state.

This leaves for decision the question of whether, by reason of having taken the oath, the relator is disqualified from holding the office of representative during the term for which he has been elected as circuit judge.

The constitution of the United States creates the office of representative and prescribes his qualifications. By Article I, section 2, no person can be a representative until he has attained the age of twenty-five years and has been seven years a citizen of the United States and is at the time of his election an inhabitant of the state from which he is chosen. The qualifications thus enumerated are the only qualifications prescribed by the constitution for the office of representative, section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment being, of course, inapplicable. If no person can be elected to that office who does not possess these qualifications, it follows by a familiar rule of interpretation that any person who does possess them may be elected. The very enumeration of them excludes the idea that, in the adoption of the constitution, the people intended that there should be any other qualifications. As was said by Madison in the convention which framed the constitution (see 5 Elliot’s Debates, 404):

“The qualifications of electors and elejcted are fundamental articles in a republican government, and ought to be fixed by the Constitution. If the legislature *443 could regulate those of either, it can by degrees subvert the Constitution.”

Again, as said by Senator Foote in his argument in the United States Senate in the Trumbull case:

“It comes within a familiar principle, that the enumeration of certain requisites of qualification, or of certain disabilities to election, is the negation of all others, and is equivalent to a positive prohibition of all authority to impose any others.” 3 Am. Law Rev., p. 417.

And Judge Story, in his Commentaries on the Constitution, section 625, says:

“It would seem but fair reasoning upon the plainest principles of interpretation, that when the Constitution established certain qualifications, as necessary for office, it meant to exclude all others, as prerequisites. From the very nature of such a provision, the affirmation of these qualifications would seem to imply a negative of all others. * * * A power to 'add new qualifications is certainly equivalent to a power to vary them.”

Kent, in his Commentaries, vol. 1, p. *229, note (f), says:

“The question whether the individual states can superadd to or vary the qualifications prescribed to the representatives by the Constitution of the United States is examined in Mr. Justice Story’s Commentaries on the Constitution, ii, 99 to 103, but the objections to the existence of any such power appear to me to be too palpable and weighty to admit of any discussion.”

Again, as said by Cooley in his General Principles of Constitutional Law (3d Ed.), pages 285, 290:

“The Constitution and laws of the United States determine what shall be the qualifications for federal offices, and state Constitutions and laws can neither *444 add to nor take away from them. This has been repeatedly decided in Congress in the case of persons elected to seats therein, when provisions in the state Constitution, if valid, would render them ineligible. Legislative elections are determined by the body for a seat in which the election is had.

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Bluebook (online)
30 P.2d 1037, 146 Or. 439, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ekwall-v-stadelman-or-1934.