Juker v. Commonwealth ex rel. Fisher

20 Pa. 484, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 13, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 Pa. 484 (Juker v. Commonwealth ex rel. Fisher) 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
Juker v. Commonwealth ex rel. Fisher, 20 Pa. 484, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 72 (Pa. 1853).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered, by

Woodward, J.

The relators claimed to have been duly elected [492]*492Trustees of the Church of Holy Trinity, in the city of Philadelphia,- at a charter election held on the 9th day of June, 1851.

The respondents deny this claim, and maintain that they were the duly elected trustees.

This writ of quo warranto was sued out to test the rights of the respondents to the office they claim; and on the trial a verdict passed, and judgment of ouster was rendered against them. It comes before us on a writ of error to the opinion of the Court on the various questions raised in the bills of exception. The precise issue between the parties has ceased to possess any other importance than as it affects the costs of suit; for the tenure of the respondents expired in June, 1852, when a new board of trustees was chosen, who are now the incumbents. It is understood, however, that the root of discord remains and is productive of bitter fruits to the congregation of Holy Trinity; and it is expected that, in administering the justice due to the parties in respect to the subordinate question of costs, we may be obliged to express opinions on the construction of the charter of this church which will contribute to the extirpation of that evil root. Undoubtedly, if the plaintiffs in error have demonstrated that the Court of Common Pleas committed any error in law whereby they were injured, though it were only to the extent of a bill of costs, it becomes our plain duty to reverse the judgment.

Two elections for trustees were held on the 9th of June, 1851, one in the school-house near the church, the other in the. open yard. The respondents were elected at the poll in the school-house —the relators at the other poll. Which were duly chosen ?

In considering this question, I was at first impressed with the position assumed by the respondents in their 10th point, that they had a majority of all the votes cast at both polls, and were therefore duly elected. The fact is as they allege. In the school-room 150 votes were polled — in the yard 131 — making the total vote polled 281. The lowest vote received by any of the respondents was 148, leaving but 133 for the highest of the relators.

, But, notwithstanding this fact, the learned judge denied the conclusion of the respondents, and held that it was only those who were properly elected to conduct the election who could hold it; and, if those persons who held the election in the school-house were not duly appointed on the 5th June to conduct it, the Respondents were not legally elected. Was this a sufficient answer ?

The Act of incorporation is silent as to the mode of conducting charter elections. The fourth section requires the electors to meet “ on Monday immediately after Whitsunday in each year at such place as shall be appointed by the trustees, whereof notice shall be given in the church at the beginning of divine worship on Whitsunday, and then and there to choose by ballot eight lay trustees, by a majority of those members qualified to vote who shall so [493]*493meet between the hours of one and three o’clock in the afternoon but the Act nowhere directs who shall conduct the election. The duty of annual elections being enjoineij, the corporation had power to provide for the mode of its performance. This would have been a proper subject for a by-law, but no by-laws seem ever to have been adopted. The practice of meeting on Thursday before the election and appointing officers to conduct it, decorous and proper in itself as tending to guard'against confusion and disorder, is without any express warrant in the charter. Still, as it was a usage designed to facilitate a charter duty, had long prevailed, and especially as both the parties before us recognised it and attempted to conform themselves to it, we see no objection to the Court’s giving it the force of a by-law and holding them to it. It follows then that the only legal election on Monday after Whitsunday was that which was held by officers duly chosen to conduct it at the preliminary election of the Thursday previous. If the respondents had not a majority of the votes cast at that election, it avails nothing that a greater number of votes were cast in their favor at another irregular and unauthorized poll. It is indeed a general rule of elections that mere irregularities which do not tend to affect results are not'to defeat the will of a majority. The will of the majority is to be respected even when irregularly expressed. But where law has prescribed the time and place of election and designated the officers who are to conduct it, a majority may not set up other officers and hold a separate election, for majorities as well as minorities are bound by law. The answer made by the Court, therefore, to the respondents’ 10th proposition was correct.

The question then recurs, why was not the election in the school-house at which the respondents were elected the legal election ?

The answer of the relators is, that it was not held by the officers duly chosen on thé previous Thursday to conduct it. But the officers who conducted it were chosen on the previous Thursday by German Roman Catholics belonging to Holy Trinity, who had subscribed to the building of the church, or who had contributed not less than ten shillings annually to its support. To this it -is replied that, at that preliminary election, a large number of votes, sufficient to change the result, were excluded, and that another set of officers were thereupon chosen to conduct the election. This is met by the counter allegation that the only votes excluded were those of persons who had recently paid ten shillings into the treasury of the. church, and were not annual contributors to its support. This brings us to the very core of this controversy. What kind of pecuniary contribution qualifies a German Roman Catholic belonging to IToly Trinity to vote at her charter elections, and the preliminary meeting for the choice of election officers ? [494]*494This is the great question raised by the record, and the 4th section of the Act of incorporation must answer it.

That section prescribes that “all and every the members of the said church, having subscribed to building the same, or who shall hereafter contribute any sum of money not less than ten shillings annually towards the support of the said church, shall meet on Monday next after Whitsunday in every year, ****** and choose, by ballot, the said eight lay trustees by a majority of those members qualified to vote as aforesaid.”

„ The Court below held that persons who came to the election and paid ten shillings, with a bond fide intention of becoming members of the church, were entitled at once to vote, and of course the jury found, under this instruction, that the preliminary meeting of the 5th June, which excluded these votes, was not the legally conducted meeting, the officers chosen thereat not the proper officers to conduct the election, and the election held by them on the 9th June not the legal election, and so the respondents were ousted.

Was the instruction correct? Original contribution to the erection of the church, or contribution towards its support of not less than ten shillings annually are the statutory conditions of suffrage. Annually means year by year. How can a payment become at once a payment year by year ? A lease reserving rent quarterly, and a bond stipulating for annual payments look to a succession of periodical payments.

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

Related

Commonwealth v. Overholt
23 Pa. Super. 199 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Pa. 484, 1853 Pa. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juker-v-commonwealth-ex-rel-fisher-pa-1853.