State ex rel. Barber v. Parler

29 S.E. 651, 52 S.C. 207, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 S.E. 651 (State ex rel. Barber v. Parler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Barber v. Parler, 29 S.E. 651, 52 S.C. 207, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 71 (S.C. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

This is an action brought in the original jurisdiction of this Court by the plaintiffs above named, having already received such consent to do so as required by law, to test the right of the defendant to hold the office of county treasurer of Dorchester County, in this State, because it is alleged that under the Constitution of this State, adopted in the year 1895, there is no such county as Dorchester County, and, consequently, no such office as that of its county treasurer. The coinplaint must be reported. The answer of defendant need not be reported.

When the complaint was read before this Court, the defendant interposed the oral 'demurrur that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in two particulars: first, because it is not alleged that the defendant usurped, intruded into or unlawfully holds or exercises any public office, civil or military; second, because [213]*213the complaint does not allege any facts showing that the act of the General Assembly creating Dorchester County is unconstitutional and void.

After a full hearing of the respective counsel, and after a patient investigation of the matters involved, this Court passed the following order (omitting the caption): “The Court having reached the conclusion that there is no ground for the relief prayed for in the petition, and it being important to the public interests that this conclusion should be annonnced without further delay; it is ordered, that the petition be dismissed. The reasons for this conclusion will be stated in an opinion to be hereinafter filed.” Such being our conclusion, it only remains that the reasons therefor be now stated.

1 Counsel for the petitioner conceded that the defendant has been appointed by the governor to fill the office in question, and that he is exercising the duties thereof, but they contend that there is no such office as county treasurer of Dor-Chester County, for the reason that no such county as Dorchester County exists in this State, because the act of the General Assembly, passed on 25th February, 1896, was unconstitutional, and, therefore, void. We must, therefore, examine the constitutional provisions in question, and so much of the act of the General Assembly passed in 1896, and, it maybe, of the act of the General Assembly passed in 1897, as relate to this subject, to see if petitioner is correct in his premises. Art. VII. (sections 1 and 2 thereof) of the Constitution of this State are as follows: “Section 1. The General Assembly may establish new counties in the following manner: Whenever one-third of the qualified electors, within the area of each section of an old county proposed to be cut off to form a new county, shall petition the governor for the creation of a new county, setting forth the boundaries and showing compliance with the requirements of this article, the governor shall order an election, within a reasonable time thereafter, by the qualified electors within the proposed area, in which election [214]*214they shall vote ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ upon the question of creating said new county; and at the same election the question of a name and a county seat for such county shall be submitted to the electors. Section 2. If two-thirds of the qualified electors voting at such election shall vote ‘Yes’ upon such questions, then the General Assembly, at the next session, shall establish such new county: Provided, No section of the county proposed to be dismembered shall be thus cut off without consent by a two-thirds vote of those voting in such section, and no county shall be formed- without complying with all the conditions imposed in this article. An election upon the question of forming the same proposed new county shall not be held oftener than once in four years.” It is conceded that in the election ordered by the governor under the condition prescribed, to wit: under a petition signed by more than one-third of the citizens residing within the territory of the proposed new county, more than two-thirds of the voters voted for the establishment of the new county, and for “Dorchester” as its name; , but because a two-thirds vote at such election, for the name ' of a county seat, was not cast, therefore, one of the questions was not answered by the voters, as required by the Constitution. It is well to notice that the words of the second section, “and no new county shall be formed without complying with all the conditions of this article,” governs or requires a two-thirds vote of the citizens affected, as to the creation of such new county, but also section 3 requires that -no such county shall contain less than the 124th part of the whole number of the inhabitants of the State, nor shall it have less, assessed taxable property than $1,500,000, as shown by the last tax returns, nor shall it contain less area than 400 square miles; and also, that section 4 requires that no old county shall be reduced to less area than 500 square miles, to less assessed taxable property than $2,000,000, nor to a less population than 15,000 inhabitants. And also, section 5 provides that, in the formation of new counties, no old county shall be cut within eight miles of its court house [215]*215building. And also, by section 6 it is provided that all new counties formed shall bear a just apportionment of the valid indebtedness of the old county or counties from which they have been formed. In the case at bar, all the conditions have been complied with, unless the choice by a two-thirds vote at the first election of a county seat can be said to be a condition in the article to the formation of the. new county, Dorchester. Does the language itself of this article require such a construction of its terms? It is true, that the word “questions” is plural, but may not this word “questions” be construed, from the language itself, to mean the question propounded to the several pieces of territory which it was proposed should form the new county? Each had to vote separately. It is equally certain that in the minds of the Constitution builders — the delegates composing the convention which framed the new Constitution — there was present the idea that new counties would be made up of parts of two or more counties; and, therefore, might not the word “questions” be referable to the same question "being propounded to several distinct pieces of territory, separately, and thereby become “questions?” It is to be noticed, also, that while the copulative conjunction “and” is here used to connect the matter of voting “yes” or “no,” upon the question of creating the new county, with the words, “at the same election the question of a name and a county seat for such county shall be submitted to the electors,” the word “also,” importing “in like manner,” is absent. The petitioner, however, submits that the language in the second section, “If two-thirds of the qualified electors voting at such election shall vote ‘yes’ upon such questions, then the General Assembly, at the next session, shall establish such new county,” negatives any theorizing; that the language of the Constitution needs no explanation, for its meaning is so plain that it needs no interpretation. Is this so? How could a vote for a name and a county seat be ascertained by voting a ticket with “yes” or “no” on it? It is suggested that it could be so arranged on the ballots. This [216]*216suggestion admits the necessity for resorting to something outside of the language employed in the Constitution itself to accomplish this result.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 S.E. 651, 52 S.C. 207, 1898 S.C. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-barber-v-parler-sc-1898.