Marshall v. Burke

11 S.W.2d 688, 158 Tenn. 133, 5 Smith & H. 133, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 133
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 S.W.2d 688 (Marshall v. Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Burke, 11 S.W.2d 688, 158 Tenn. 133, 5 Smith & H. 133, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 133 (Tenn. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

(1) By chapter 465 of the Private Acts of 1921 the management of the Hamblen ¡County roads is intrusted to a commission of five. The term of office of* 1 2the commissioners is two years. Two commissioners are to be elected by the quarterly county court of said county one year and three commissioners the next year, then two, then three, etc. The Act further provides that not more than three of said commissioners shall belong to the same political party.

(2) At the April, 1928, term of the county court of Hamblen Oounty this road commission consisted of the complainant S. J. Marshall, Charles Garrison, and W. *136 P. McCullough, Democrat's, and Hubert Bell and A. T. Drinnon, Republicans. The term of the complainant Marshall, Democrat, and the term of Dirinnon, Republican, expired at this time. The county court took up the matter of the election of successors to these two commissioners at said term of said court.

Four candidates were placed in nomination for the two offices, namely, complainant Marshall and Reeves, Democrats, and Williams and Trobough, 'Republicans. The county court was composed of twenty members, all of whom appear to have been present and voting. Reeves, Democrat, received eleven votes. Complainant Marshall, Democrat, received ten votes. Williams, Republican, received ten votes. Trobough, Republican, received nine votes.

In this situation, the chairman of the county court conceived that there was a tie between complainant Marshall and Williams, and as such chairman, to break the tie, cast his vote for Williams, although he had, as a member of the court, already voted for Williams. Reeves and Williams thereupon appear to have been declared elected.

The bill herein was filed by complainant Marshall, upon the facts stated, challenging the validity of the so-called election of Williams as road commissioner. It, was charged that the action of the chairman of the county-court in voting twice, as above detailed, was illegal, that Williams had toot received a majority of the votes cast, and that so far as Williams was concerned his election was absolutely void. The bill proceeded in the theory that no successor to the complainant had been elected and that he was entitled to hold over until a successor was duly elected and qualified. It was conceded in the *137 bill that Beeves was lawfully elected. The prayer of the bill was that the action of the chairman of the county court “in casting a vote untying the tie” be declared null and void, that Williams be declared not to have been elected and that he be enjoined from acting or attempting to act as said road commissioner until a successor to the complainant had been elected .according to law. It Was prayed that complainant be declared to be still a road commissioner of Hamblen County and some other relief was asked, not now insisted on. The bill was answered and a motion made to dissolve the injunction which had been granted according to the prayer. On the hearing the Chancellor dissolved the injunction and dismissed the bill and the complainant'has appealed.

We think the Chancellor properly dismissed this bill. As before stated, the Hamblen County road law provides that not more than three of the commissioners shall' belong to the same political party. It is admitted that Beeves was duly elected as one of the commissioners by the county court. There were already two Democratic commissioners and the election of Beeves completed the Democratic quota. Neither the complainant nor any other Democrat is eligible to a place on this commission until the terms of one of the three Democrats now serving expires or one of the three dies or is removed from office.

(3) It is virtually conceded on the brief that such would be the effect of the statute but it is urged that the provision of the statute just quoted is unconstitutional and void. The section of the Constitution supposed to be contravened is:

“That no Political or Beligious test, other than an oath to support the Constitution of the United States, *138 and of this State, shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under this State. ’ ’ Article I, sec. 4.

We do not think the statutory provision noted undertakes to require a political test as a qualification to the office of road commissioner of Hamblen County. It is merely prescribed that not more than three of said commissioners shall belong to the same political party. Any citizen, otherwise qualified, is eligible to this office, whether he be Democrat, Republican, ¡Socialist, or without party alignment. To keep the commission as free as possible from political bias, it was enacted that it should not be filled with commissioners of one political faith. No political test, however, was imposed as a qualification for a place on the commission. Political affiliation does not stand in the way of anyone seeking this office.

Such a legislation as this is common in all of the States and in the Federal Grovernment. When the provision is framed as is this provision of the Hamblen County road law, we believe it has been uniformly upheld.

Protection from discriminatory legislation favoring political parties is secured by constitutional provisions that no citizen shall be deprived of any rights or privileges unless by the law of the land or judgment of his peers or by the equal protection of the law clause. 22 R. C. L., 409.

Considering a statutory provision for the selection of three civil service commissioners, not more than two of whom should be adherents of the same party, the New York Court of Appeals expressed the opinion that such statute did not violate any constitutional right of1 the individual. The court said:

*139 “We think his right to be regarded as eligible to hold office under this Statute is fully recognized when he stands on an equal footing with others of his class, all of whom are eligible. Where there are two offices which members of the same party may fill, if he, being a member of' such party, is equally eligible with any other member of that party to fill either, his constitutional privilege to hold office is fully recognized and vindicated. It must be remembered that there is nothing in this Statute which compels the appointment of even one member of any political party. It simply prevents the appointment of more than two from such party. With the appointment of' the third, another condition arises, and that condition prevents the selection being made from the ranks of the same political party from which the other-two appointments have been made.

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 688, 158 Tenn. 133, 5 Smith & H. 133, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-burke-tenn-1928.