State ex rel. Connolly v. Haverly

87 N.W. 959, 62 Neb. 767, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 287
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1901
DocketNo. 12,322
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 959 (State ex rel. Connolly v. Haverly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Connolly v. Haverly, 87 N.W. 959, 62 Neb. 767, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 287 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

The relator by -mandamus proceedings seeks to compel the respondent, as county clerk, to place his name on the official ballots as a candidate of the democratic and people’s independent parties for the office of county commissioner of the second commissioner district of Douglas county. Douglas county has over 125,000 population and is and has been for several years divided into five commissioner districts under the law applicable to such counties. Compiled Statutes, 1901, ch. 18, art. 1, sec. 54. In June of the present year, the board of county commissioners by resolution duly adopted, changed and altered the boundary lines of the several commissioner districts for the purpose, as claimed, of more equitably adjusting the districts so.as to conform to changes in population of the county since the formation of the several districts theretofore existing. It is practically conceded that the changes thus made in the boundary lines of the districts as then existing were a valid exercise of the power conferred on the board of county commissioners by the legislature, which under certain conditions authorizes action in relation to such matters. The power is, we think, clearly conferred — if not expressly,' by unmistakable implication— in the section referred to, wherein is found provision for the districting of a county into five commissioner districts, and for the election of commissioners therefrom. And it is also provided that such districts “-shall consist [769]*769of two (2) or more voting precincts, comprising compact and contiguous territory and embracing as near as may be possible, an equal division of the population of the county, and not subject to alteration of tener than once in three (3) years.” The section cited and those immediately connected therewith provide further that the commissioners elected from the different districts shall have the qualifications of electors, and shall be elected in their respective districts at the annual general election and shall hold their office for three years, and until their successors are elected and qualified. By reason of provisions as to the length of office of the several commissioners when first elected after the act has become operative in any county, the terms of the five commissioners do not expire in the same year, and at each general election thereafter one or two of the five members constituting the board are to be elected for a term of three years, beginning in January following. It is not required of us, for the purpose of this case, to refer to or consider the action of the county board in changing the lines of but two of the commissioner districts of Douglas county, and the effect of such change on the members of the county board elected therefrom, as this will cover all matters involved in the controversy.

The direct question involved is whether it is legal and proper at the general election this year to elect a successor to the relator, James P. Connolly, whose term expires in January following. The relator is at present holding and filling the office of county commissioner, having been elected thereto from commissioner district number 2, in which he has been at all times and now is residing, and is a candidate for re-election. One Harte is also a member of the board of county commissioners, having been elected from commissioner district number 1, and was elected at the last general election for a term of three years, beginning January, 1901, or until January, 1904. Prior to the alteration of the boundary lines of the several districts made by the commissioners in June last, [770]*770which has been heretofore mentioned, the First commissioner district, from which Harte was elected, comprised the Second, Fourth and Seventh wards of the city of Omaha, while the Second district, from which Connolly was elected, included the Third, Eighth and Ninth wards of the city. By the change of boundary lines made by the commissioners, ward number 2, in which Harte resided, was dropped from the First district, and ward number 8 included within the new boundary lines, so that by the change of lines thus made, new commissioner district number 1 includes in its boundaries the Fourth, Seventh and Eighth wards. The boundary lines of the Second commissioner district were altered so as to include within the new district the First, Second and Third wards. It will be noticed that by the new alignment the Second ward, in the First district, is transferred to the Second district, and in lieu thereof the Eighth ward is transferred from the Second to the First-district; that the Ninth ward is eliminated from the Second district, and the First ward included therein. Both Connolly, who resides in the Third ward, and Harte, in the Second, it will be seen, are now residents of the territory included within the boundaries of the new Second commissioner district. If we understand counsel aright, it is agreed on all sides that% the act of the county commissioners in altering the boundai’y lines of the several districts by the adoption of the resolution referred to was a legitimate exercise of authority conferred on that body by the legislature. It is also agreed, and the argument on both sides is predicated on the theory, that by such rearrangement and change of boundary lines none of the commissioners then holding office could by such action be deprived of their office, or legislated therefrom, for and during the term for which they respectively were elected. It is argued, and we are disposed to think correctly, that the resolution changing the boundary lines was prospective in its operation and effect, and because thereof operative only at the expiration of the several terms of office of the dif[771]*771ferent county commissioners then constituting the board. It is true that respondent’s counsel argue that unless the act of altering the boundary lines can be construed in such a way as to give the new First district the right to elect a commissioner whose term is to begin when Connolly’s ceases, and permit Harte, for the'remainder of his term, to represent the new Second district, that the resolution of the county board ought to be declared invalid, because it is depriving the First district of representation on the board, and is, therefore, contrary to the spirit of the statute authorizing alterations, when considered with other provisions for representation on the board by districts. But it is contended that Harte, ever since the passage of the resolution changing the boundary lines, is representing, and will, until the expiration of Connolly’s term of office, continue to represent, the district from and by which he was elected, or, in other words, that he is filling and will continue to fill the office, and perform the duties thereof, to which he was elected, notwithstanding the change in boundary lines, until an opportunity arises, when, presto! change! he is to become the com. missioner for and from the Second district, and a new commissioner will succeed him in the office to which he was elected before his term to that office has expired. That is, it is argued that until there is a vacancy in some other district in which he resides, by the change of boundary lines, Harte occupies the office and represents the district by and from which he was elected, but, when a vacancy arises in the new district to which he has thus been transferred, he then ceases to fill the office to which he was elected, and becomes a commissioner from the Second district to succeed Connolly, whose regular term has expired.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 959, 62 Neb. 767, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-connolly-v-haverly-neb-1901.