Graham v. Roberts

85 N.E. 1009, 200 Mass. 152, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 1018
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 85 N.E. 1009 (Graham v. Roberts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Roberts, 85 N.E. 1009, 200 Mass. 152, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 1018 (Mass. 1908).

Opinion

Knowlton, C. J.

The only question presented by the report of the single justice upon these petitions is whether the statute of 1908, c. 574, which is an act to amend the charter of the city of Haverhill, is constitutional. The statute prescribes a very radical departure from the methods of municipal government which hitherto have been practised in Massachusetts and in most of the cities of the other States. It is at least very doubtful whether the practical working of this system, which appears in our legislation of this year for the first time, will be satisfactory to the people who have voted to adopt it; but the question before us is not whether the provisions of the statute are well adapted to conditions existing in the city of Haverhill and likely to give the people a beneficent and well ordered government, but whether they are within the constitutional power of the Legislature to enact.

The principal contention of the petitioners is that they are in conflict with Article 9 of the Declaration of Rights of the Constitution of Massachusetts, which is as follows:

All elections ought to be free; and all the inhabitants of this Commonwealth, having such qualifications as they shall [154]*154establish by their frame of government, have an equal right to elect officers, and to be elected, for public employments.”

The petitioners seem to construe this article not only as applying generally to elections of municipal officers, but as meaning that the inhabitants of different cities in different parts of the Commonwealth shall all have an equal right to elect the same number and kind of municipal officers, and to be elected to the same offices, as the inhabitants of any other city in the Commonwealth. This is not the true construction of the article. While all inhabitants having the prescribed qualifications have absolutely equal rights in reference to the election of the officers of the State government, the Constitution recognizes the fact that a proper application of the principle of local self-government may call for the election of different officers, and for their election in different ways, in different cities of the Commonwealth.

Article 2 of the Articles of Amendment is in part as follows: “The General Court shall have full power and authority to erect and constitute municipal or city governments, in any corporate town or towns in this Commonwealth, and to grant to the inhabitants thereof such powers, privileges, and immunities, not repugnant to the Constitution, as the General Court shall deem necessary or expedient for the regulation and government thereof, . . . Provided, that no such government shall be erected or constituted in any town not containing twelve thousand inhabitants, nor unless it be with the consent, and on the application of a majority of the inhabitants of such town, present and voting thereon,” etc. '

This recognizes the right and duty of the General Court to determine what powers, privileges, and immunities should be granted to any city for the regulation and government of it, and secures to the inhabitants the right to give or withhold their consent to the establishment of the new municipal government. This makes it plain that different cities may be established with different kinds of government, different officers, and different modes of electing them. As was said in Larcom v. Olin, 160 Mass. 102, “ the number of the population, the territorial situation, the pursuits and character of the people, their traditions and peculiar town institutions, as well as the probable future [155]*155growth of the town, all may well be considered by the General Court, not only in deciding whether a city government should be established, but, if established, what the provisions of the charter should be.” So in the Opinion of the Justices, 138. Mass. 601, 603, we find this language: “ The power of the Legislature to make or to authorize local laws for the administration of local affairs is beyond question. It has the right to make local laws to meet the peculiar exigencies of any part of the community. The qualifications required to fill an office in one place may be different from those required for a similar office in other places,” etc. In Cole v. Tucker, 164 Mass. 486, 489, 490, the court says: “ There is nothing in the Constitution which requires that the laws regulating elections for city and town officers shall be uniform throughout the Commonwealth, and in some respects the laws regulating elections in cities for city officers have always been different from those regulating elections in towns for town officers. ... In matters which concern the form of holding elections for city and town officers, in the absence of anything in the Constitution prescribing the manner in which such elections shall be held, we are of opinion that the provisions need not be the same for all the cities and towns of the Commonwealth.” The statute before us does not assume to give the voters of Haverhill the right to vote for the same officers, and in the same way, as the voters of other cities in the Commonwealth, but the right to vote for such officers, and to vote for them in such a manner, as the Legislature and a majority of the voters of Haverhill have determined to be for the best interests of the inhabitants of that city. It gives to all the voters of that city absolutely equal rights to elect others to offices, and to be elected themselves, in accordance with the system of municipal government which is established there for all alike.

The petitioners contend that the rights, of inhabitants of Haverhill are not equal to the rights of other inhabitants of the Commonwealth in the following particulars, namely :

“ 1. Restricting printed names on the ballot to the two highest candidates for an office in a preliminary election for nomination.
“ 2. Denying right to have printed on the ballot the name of the candidate nominated by the caucus of a political party.
“ 3. Denying right to have printed on the ballot the name of [156]*156the candidate nominated independently of a party caucus by nomination papers.
“4. Denying right to have printed on the ballot a specification of the candidate’s ‘ party or political principle which he represents, expressed in not more than three words.’
“ 5. Requiring the man to seek the office — no longer can the office seek the man — and to request and swear before his name can go on the ballot, and to have a petition of qualified voters in which they certify that they believe him to be of good moral character and qualified to perform the duties of the office.
“ 6. Requiring men to accept an office of uncertain tenure with liability to be recalled at any time without just cause, or for a legislative, executive or judicial act.”

The first five of these particulars are merely regulations of the methods of voting. First, for the final election, an official ballot is prescribed. Then a preliminary election for nomination is provided, to determine what names shall appear on the final official ballot. General provisions for a similar object are found in our law for voting by the Australian ballot, the constitutionality of which has been affirmed. Cole v. Tucker, 164 Mass. 486.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 N.E. 1009, 200 Mass. 152, 1908 Mass. LEXIS 1018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-roberts-mass-1908.