In Re Election of Sheriff

102 A. 802, 41 R.I. 79, 1918 R.I. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 31, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 102 A. 802 (In Re Election of Sheriff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Election of Sheriff, 102 A. 802, 41 R.I. 79, 1918 R.I. LEXIS 13 (R.I. 1918).

Opinion

To His Excellency B. Livingston Beeckman, Governor of the State of Bhode Island and Providence Plantations:

We have received from Your Excellency a request for our opinion upon the following statement of facts and question based thereon, viz.:

“At an election held under the provisions of Section 2 of Article XI, of the Amendments to the Constitution on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, A. D. 1916, Jonathan Andrews was elected a Representative in the General Assembly from the First Representative District of *81 Woonsocket, and qualified and continued to serve as such Representative until January 17,1918, when during a session of the House of Representatives, he tendered in writing his resignation as such Representative to take effect at once, as follows:

“Woonsocket, R. I.

January 17, 1918.

House of Representatives,

State of Rhode Island:

I hereby resign the office of Representative from the First Representative District of Woonsocket, and request that this resignation take effect at once.

(Signed) Jonathan Andrews.

And thereupon the House voted to accept the same and declared the seat of the said Andrews vacant as follows:

The record being, 'That the resignation of Jonathan Andrews be accepted, and that this House of Representatives does hereby declare his seat vacant.’

And since that time said Andrews has not participated in the business of the General Assembly.

On January 18, 1918, a meeting of the Grand Committee of the General Assembly was held for the purpose of electing a sheriff of the County of Providence, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Andrew J. Wilcox, and at said meeting, said Jonathan Andrews was chosen to fill said vacancy, receiving for said office seventy-nine votes, a majority of the votes cast, and was declared elected.

At the time of the balloting for the office of sheriff, no successor to Jonathan Andrews had been elected to his seat in the General Assembly. Prior to said meeting of the Grand Committee, said Jonathan Andrews filed with the City Clerk of the City of Woonsocket, notice of his resignation from the General Assembly, and on the 19th day of January, 1918, the City Clerk of Woonsocket issued notices of an election to be held in the First Representative District *82 of Woonsocket on February 12, 1918, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of said Andrews.

Section 1 of Chapter 282 of the General Laws of Rhode Island provides:

'Section 1. No person shall be eligible to the office of sheriff who shall, at the time of his election, be a member of the General Assembly, or who shall not at such time be an inhabitant of the county for which he shall be elected.’

On the above facts, was said Jonathan Andrews legally elected to the office of the Sheriff of Providence County, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Andrew J. Wilcox?”

In answer to this question, we are of the opinion that the said Jonathan Andrews was not legally elected to the office of Sheriff of Providence County, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Andrew J. Wilcox.

The answer to this question requires a consideration, first, of the legal right of a member of the General Assembly to resign his office; second, the method of making such resignation, if the same be permissible; and third, the time when such resignation if permissible becomes effective.

First, as to the legal right of such member to resign his office. The question has frequently arisen as to the right of a person who has assumed public office to voluntarily lay down that office in the absence of express authority so to do, and it has generally been held that he cannot. We must examine the Constitution and the construction which has been placed upon it in order to determine whether such authority has been given to members of the General Assembly. By Article XI, Section 6 of Amendments to the Constitution it is provided that when a senator or representative elect shall refuse to serve a new election shall be held; but nowhere in the Constitution or its amendments is provision explicitly made for the resignation of one who has entered upon the duties of such office.

By Section 9, Article VIII of the original Constitution of this State it was provided that “vacancies from any cause *83 in the senate or house of representatives may be filled by a new election.” This provision appears in nearly identical language in Section 6 of Article XI of Amendments to the Constitution. This provision, however, is of little assistance in the determination of whether or not a member of either of these bodies can create a vacancy or a prospective vacancy in his office by resignation.

In Section 25, Chapter 26, Revised Statutes, 1857, the provision in regard to vacancies was as follows: “Sec. 25. If any person elected senator or representative, shall at any time between his election and the expiration of his term, refuse to serve, and shall declare the same to the town clerk of the town for which he is elected, or shall die, resign or remove out of the state, the town clerk shall forthwith issue his warrant for an election to fill such vacancy, unless a special election for that purpose shall be ordered by the house in which the vacancy may occur.” The above statute continued in effect until the adoption of Article XI of Amendments to the Constitution in 1900.

*84 (1) *83 This law thus recognizing the right of a member'of either branch of the General Assembly to resign and create a prospective vacancy in his office remained upon our statute books for over forty years. Its constitutionality, as appears from an examination of our reports, was never questioned before the court. In accordance with its provisions many members of the General Assembly resigned and the prospective vacancies created by such resignations were filled by new elections in various cities and towns of the state. A partial list of such resignations appears in the opinion, In Re the North Smithfield Election, 18 R. I. 817. If under the Constitution the right to resign did not exist such right could not be created by statute; but the enactment of the law referred to, recognizing the right and laying down the form of procedure for its exercise, and the acquiescence in the provisions of this law for so many years by the legislature, the people, and the courts, may properly be regarded as a practical construction given to the Constitution in that *84 regard, and the recognition of the constitutional right of a member of the General Assembly to lay down the duties of his office if he have due regard for other provisions as to the tenure of such office contained in the Constitution. We think that this practical construction of the Constitution must prevail.

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Related

DeLuca v. Rhode Island State Board of Elections
376 A.2d 326 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1977)
State v. Levy Court
140 A. 642 (Superior Court of Delaware, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 A. 802, 41 R.I. 79, 1918 R.I. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-election-of-sheriff-ri-1918.