In re Contested Election of Barber

86 Pa. 392, 1878 Pa. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 25, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 86 Pa. 392 (In re Contested Election of Barber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Contested Election of Barber, 86 Pa. 392, 1878 Pa. LEXIS 82 (Pa. 1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Woodward

delivered the opinion of the court,

Proceedings to contest the election of Barber as prothonotary of [397]*397the Court of Common Pleas of the county of Luzerne, were begun on the 6th of December 1876, twenty-nine days after the date of the election. On the 7th of December notice of those proceedings was given to the governor, who issued a commission to Barber the same day. . The question of the effect of the commission is presented by this record. S. W. Trimmer, in pursuance of a previous election, had been commissioned as prothonotary until the first Monday of January 1877, and until his successor should be duly qualified. In a case stated in the nature of a quo warranto, beT tween Barber as plaintiff and Trimmer as defendant, the Common Pleas decided that Barber was entitled to hold and exercise the office pending the contest, and entered judgment of ouster against Trimmer.

In the determination of this question the construction of the provisions relating to contested elections of the Act of the 2d of July 1889, of the constitution of 1873, and of the Act of the 19th of May 1874, is necessarily and directly involved. ' The 3d section of the Act of 1839 prescribed the manner in which returns of the election of county officers should be made out, filed in the prothonotary’s office, transmitted to the secretary of the Commonwealth, and delivered to the successful candidate. Thereupon, commissions by the governor were required to be issued. The proviso to the section contained this explicit direction: “ No commission shall issue within the lapse of thirty days after the election, and shall commence and take effect from the 1st day of December next after such election, unless when the same is suspended by reason of a contest under the .oth section of this act, in which case the commission shall take effect from the time of the legal qualification of the officer under the same, and expire on the 1st day of December, as in other cases.” This direction "was repeated in the concluding .clause of the 5th section of the act, which regulated the mode in which election contests should be heard and determined! The language was: “ In such case no commission shall be issued until the court shall have determined and adjudged on such complaint as aforesaid.”

By the 3d section of the sixth article of the constitution of 1838, it was made the duty of the governor to commission the prothonotaries and clerks of the courts elected in the several counties and districts of the Commonwealth. No such provision is contained in the constitution of 1873. Whether the omission was casual or designed, direct authority is given to issue commissions to no officers except justices of the peace and aldermen, by the 11th section of the 5th article ; judges of the Supreme Court, when two or more shall be elected at the same time, by the 17th section of the same article; the president judge of the court of criminal jurisdiction for.the counties of Schuylkill, Lebanon and Dauphin, as a judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Schuylkill county, by the 15th section of the schedule ; and associate judges not learned [398]*398in the law, by the 16th section of the schedule. The duty to commission judges of the Supreme Court would seem to he implied, however, from the provision of the 2d section of the 5th article, that “each judge whose commission shall first expire, shall in turn be chief justice.” The directions contained in the 16th, 18th and 19th sections of the schedule, that of the law judges of the several Courts of Common Pleas of Philadelphia and Allegheny, and throughout the state, the oldest in commission shall be president judge, also indicate an intention on the part of the convention to make no change in the mode by which the title of these officers had immemorially been authenticated. The constitution made no provisions whatever for commissions to the judges of the separate Orphans’ Courts, the police magistrates of Philadelphia, or county officers of any grade. The omission in the case of the judges, however, has been supplied by the Act of the 19th of May 1874, relating to the organization and jurisdiction of Orphans’ Courts; and commissions to the Philadelphia magistrates have been authorized by the 6th section of the Magistrates’ Courts Act of the 5th of February 1875. The 2d section of the schedule maintains in force all laws not inconsistent with the constitution. For granting commissions to prothonotaries and other county officers there is sufficient warrant to the governor in the Act of 1839, which, for this purpose, the constitution and the legislation under it have left entirely unimpaired.

Upon this subject the Act of the 19th of May 1874 is equally silent with the constitution. It transfers the jurisdiction to hear and determine contested elections from the Common Pleas to the Quarter Sessions; it authorizes a petition by twenty-five qualified electors instead of the thirty required by the Act of 1839; it requires the verification of the petition by the oaths of five instead of two qualified electors; it extends the time allowed for filing the petition to thirty days instead of ten; it omits the direction to transmit a certified copy to the governor; and it makes no provision that, pending the contest, the commission shall be withheld. It was insisted at the argument on behalf of Barber that this statute supplied and replaced the fifth section and the proviso to the third section of the Act of 1839 ; that the commission to him was regularly and providently issued; and that it gave him the right to be installed in the office of prothonotary.

The Act of the 19th of May 1874 was limited to a single subject-matter. It was enacted to carry into effect the requirements of'the 17th section of the eighth article of the constitution, that “the trial and determination of contested elections of electors of president and vice-president, members of the General Assembly, and of all public officers, whether state, judicial, municipal or local, shall be by the courts of law, or by one or more of the Jaw judges thereof.” The object in view was to replace a mass of incongruous and [399]*399uncertain legislation by a speedy, symmetrical and uniform plan for the settlement of peculiarly difficult, exciting and angry controversies. The title of the act described it as “ designating the several classes of contested elections in this Commonwealth, and providing for the trial thereof.” It did not profess to regulate elections, or to define the duties of public officers, or to impose any duty or confer any power on the governor to interpose between the candidate shown by the face of the returns to be elected, and the candidate shown by the face of the returns to be defeated. A right so to interpose could only be derived from a legislative intention somewhere Or in some way expressed. It has been settled that a proceeding instituted to contest an election cannot be frustrated by a commission issued afterwards: Ewing v. Filley, 7 Wright 384. The legal provisions made necessary by the general requirements of the eighth article of the constitution, were embodied in an act entitled “ A further supplement to the act regulating elections in this Commonwealth,” passed on the 30th of January 1874. By the 13th section of that supplement, the duty ivas imposed on the judges of the Courts of Common Pleas, of opening and computing the returns made by the election officers. But nothing in that section, or in the residue of the act, demanded any action of the court that could affect the rights of the parties in such a contest as this. Indeed, those rights were expressly preserved.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lawrence County v. Horner
4 Pa. D. & C. 374 (Lawrence County Court of Common Pleas, 1923)
Uhler v. Moses
50 A. 231 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 Pa. 392, 1878 Pa. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-contested-election-of-barber-pa-1878.