Jeffries v. Rowe

63 Ind. 592
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 63 Ind. 592 (Jeffries v. Rowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffries v. Rowe, 63 Ind. 592 (Ind. 1878).

Opinion

Biddle, J.

Proceedings to contest an election to the office of township trustee.

The appellant, who is contestor, filed his written statement against the appellee, who is contestee, before the county auditor, stating the grounds of contest.

After alleging the facts showing his eligibility to hold the office, he avers, that, at the April election, in the year 1878, the contestor and contestee were opposing candidates for the office of township trustee for Black township, in said county ; that the contestee at said election received five hundred and ninety-one votes, and the contestor received five hundred and eighty votes; that the inspectors of said election declared the contestee duly elected; that the contestee at the time was ineligible to hold said office, for the reason that he had held the said office in said county and State during two consecutive terms, before the 1st day of April, 1878; that said contestee was duly elected trustee of said township on the 8th day of October, 1872, and was duly quali[593]*593lied as such trustee, under said election ; that said contestee was duly elected to the same office on the 13th day of Ocher, 1874, and was duly qualified accordingly; that said contestee was again duly elected to said office on the 10th day of October, 1876, and was duly qualified; and that said contestee, since the 21st day of October, 1872, has held, enjoyed and exercised the duties of said office of trustee of said Black township, up to the filing of this statement, and still holds and claims said office by virtue of said election so held on the 1st day of April, 1878.

Prayer that the eontestor be declared duly elected to said office, and that the same be certified accordingly.

Before the board of commissioners, the contestee filed his demurrer to the statement of the eontestor, upon the ground of the insufficiency of the facts stated to constitute a cause of contest, which demurrer was overruled. The contestee declined to answer further, and the board of commissioners adjudged that the eontestor was duly elected to said office, and was entitled to his certificate of election as such trustee.

From this judgment the contestee appealed to the circuit court, wherein the demurrer was sustained, and the. contestee adjudged duly elected to said office, and that a-.certifieate of his election be issued accordingly; to all of which the eontestor excepted, and appealed to this court.

The eligibility of the contestee to hold the office in contest depends on the construction of the acts of ’ March 3d, 1877, and March 12th, 1877. Acts 1877, Reg. Sess., p. 58, and Spec. Sess., p. 79.

Section 1 of the act of March 12th is in the following-words :

“ That any person who has held the office of trustee of' any township in this State for two terms consecutively, at the date of the next general election in October, 1878, shall not be eligible to said office for the next ensuing [594]*594term, and that hereafter no person shall .be eligible, to the office of township trustee, more than four years in any period of six years.” Acts 1877, Spec. Sess., p. 79.

Township trustees are not created by the' constitution. They are the creatures of the law. Constitution, art. 6, sec. 3.

Offices created by the Legislature may be abolished by .the Legislature. The power that creates can destroy. The creator is greater than the creature. The term of an office may be shortened, the duties of the office increased, and the compensation lessened, by the legislative will. Gilbert v. The Board of Commissioners, etc., 8 Blackf. 81 ; Ellis v. The State, 4 Ind. 1; Walker v. Dunham., 17 Ind. 483; Walker v. Peelle, 18 Ind. 264.

By these principles and authorities, the question before us must he tested.

Statutes are generally to be construed prospectively, but they may have a retrospective effect, when the legislation plaiuly intends they should, and no vested rights are disturbed thereby.

But the statute before us has no retrospective effect, wdien applied to the agreed statement of facts. It acts- upon facts in existence at the time it went into effect. The plain meaning of it is, that any person who had, at the date of the general election in October, 1878, held the office of township trustee two consecutive terms, immediately before, should not- be eligible to hold the office the next ensuing term. The fact, that the time of holding the election for township trustees had been changed from the month of October to the month of April, can make no difference ; and the fact, that the contestee was eligible to hold the office at the time he was elected, will not authorize him to hold it after he became ineligible, although it shortened his official term. Offices are neither' grants nor contracts nor obligations which [595]*595can not be changed or impaired. They are subject to the legislative will at all times, except so far as the constitution may protect them from interference. Coffin v. The State, 7 Ind. 157.

The appellee makes three propositions in his brief:

“ 1st. The causes necessary to create the ineligibility prescribed in the first clause of the act of March Í2th, 1877, have no application to the terms of office previously held by the appellee;
“ 2d. If the causes necessary to create such ineligibility apply to the terms of office previously held by the appellee, such ineligibility, itself, has no application to the term of office in contest;
“ 3d. If the two acts, of March 3d and March 12th, 1877, are not construed in pari materia, so as to render all their provisions valid in accordance with either our first or second propositions, such acts are inconsistent with each other, and one of them must necessarily beheld inoperative, in some of its provisions; and, in order to reconcile that inconsistency, the first clause of the latter act, providing for an impossible event in the future, as well as being retrospective in its character, should be held null and void/'

The affirmative of these propositions is ingeniously supported by the counsel for the appellee, in an elaborate argument.

To answer the third proposition:

1st. We do construe the acts of March 3d and March 12th as one act, the same as if the latter was inserted as a section m the former act. But we can perceive no conflict between them The former act provides for the election of township officers, amongst them a township trustee, on the first Monday in April, 1878, and every second year thereafter, and provides that the certificate of the board of judges “ shall entitle the holder to qualify and en[596]*596ter upon the discharge of the duties of the office to which he is elected, at the expiration of ten days from the day of such election,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
63 Ind. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffries-v-rowe-ind-1878.