State ex rel. Taylor v. French

96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 172
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1917
DocketNo. 15432
StatusPublished

This text of 96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 172 (State ex rel. Taylor v. French) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio 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. Taylor v. French, 96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 172 (Ohio 1917).

Opinions

Johnson, J.

The demurrants challenge the validity of Section 36-A of the charter of the city of East Cleveland, quoted in the above statement. They insist that a municipality is without authority to include in its charter any provision which extends the right of suffrage beyond the provisions of Section 1, Article V of the Constitution, viz.: “Every white male citizen of the United States, of the age of twenty-one years, * * * shall have the qualifications of an elector, and be entitled to vote at all elections.” They contend substantially that this section definitely fixes the class of persons who may vote at any election and that this class may vote at all .elections.

On the other hand it is contended that by the provisions of Article XVIII of the Constitution, as amended in 1912, which confers authority on any municipality to adopt a charter for its government and to exercise thereunder all powers of local self-government, the municipality of East Cleveland was authorized to include the provision in question in its charter.

Counsel for the relatrix contend that the case of State, ex rel. Mills, v. The Board of Elections et al., [176]*1769 C. C., 134, which was affirmed in 54 Ohio St., 631, on the authority of The State, ex rel., v. Cincinnati et al., 19 Ohio, 178, is decisive of the question. It was there held that the act of April 24, 1894, conferring upon women the right to vote and be voted for at any election held for the purpose of choosing any school director, member of the board of education or school council under the general or special laws of the state is valid, it being within the power to provide for the establishment and maintenance of common schools which the constitution confers upon the general assembly, and not within the limitation contained in Section 1 of Article V.

It is said by Shauck, J., in the opinion: “There seems to be no occasion to doubt that only those who have the constitutional qualifications of electors can participate in elections held to fill the offices which the constitution itself has created. This is, in some states, held to be the extent of the constitutional restriction.”

In referring to The State, ex rel., v. Cincinnati et al., 19 Ohio, 178, supra, Judge Shauck says: “In that case the court was called upon to determine whether an act which provided for colored schools in Cincinnati, and the election of colored directors by colored voters, was valid. Notwithstanding the provisions of article four of the constitution then in force, defining an elector to be ‘a white male inhabitant,’ the act was held valid, for the reason that The whole subject of organizing and regulating schools had been left to the general [177]*177assembly, in the exercise of its legislative powers.’

In Belles v. Burr et al., 76 Mich., 1, it was held that the legislature may confer upon women the right to vote for officers charged with the management of the affairs of the school districts. In the Belles case, at page 11, it is said: “The authority granted by the Constitution to the Legislature to establish a common or primary school system carried with it the authority to prescribe what officers should be chosen to conduct the affairs of the school-districts, to define their powers and duties, their term of office, and how and by whom they should be chosen.”

In Wheeler v. Brady, 15 Kans., 26, it is held that a person having all the qualifications of an-elector, as defined by Section 1, Article V of the Constitution, except that such person is a woman, has the right to vote at an election regularly held for the election of a school-district treasurer. It is pointed out in the opinion that the constitution of Kansas did not anywhere mention the election of any school-district officer and specifically provided that all officers whose election or appointment is not provided for in the constitution should be elected or appointed as may be prescribed by law, and the court remarked: “Now, if section 1 of article V of the constitution does not apply to school-district elections, then what is there to prevent the legislature from conferring the right of suffrage in school-district elections upon women ?”

Section 27, Article II of the Ohio Constitution, [178]*178contains a like provision, viz.: “The election and appointment of all officers, and the filling of all vacancies, not otherwise provided for by this constitution, or the constitution of the United States, shall be made in such manner as may be directed by law.”

In The State, ex rel., v. Cincinnati et al., 19 Ohio, 178, supra, the court say, at page 197: “Now a school director, although in some respects a public officer, is not even a township officer. He is merely the officer of a school district—a political organization unknown to the constitution—the mere creature of legislative enactment. And it seems to the court that the power creating the political organization might well define the qualification of its officers, if in so doing they do not violate any express provision of the charter under which they themselves act.”

The case of The State, ex rel., v. Constantine, 42 Ohio St., 437, is referred to by counsel for defendants. It was there held that “A statute authorizing the election of four members of the police board at the same election, but which denies to an elector the right to vote for more than two members is in conflict with article 5 of the constitution.”

The case was cited and considered by the court in the Mills case, supra. Judge Shauck said concerning it: “That act did not attempt to extend the right to vote to any who had not the constitutional qualifications of electors. The vice of the act, in the opinion of the court, was that in the election of municipal officers it denied the right of constitutionally qualified electors to vote for the [179]*179whole number of officers to be chosen. It is clear that the act now under consideration is not within the terms of that decision, whether within its principles or not.”

The court in the Constantine case point out that the qualifications of electors are not defined by the statute there involved.

This court did not regard that case as controlling the Mills case, supra. Acts of a similar character have, upon like reasoning, been sustained in State, ex rel., v. Cones, 15 Neb., 444; Opinion of Judges, 115 Mass., 602, and Huff v. Cook, 44 Ia., 639.

Counsel for the relatrix cite authorities in support of the proposition that as to offices not contemplated or provided for in the constitution the legislature in creating such offices may prescribe the qualifications of the voters who are to participate in filling them, viz.: Hanna v. Young, 84 Md., 179; State, ex rel., v. Hanson, 80 Neb., 724; State, ex rel., v. Dillon et al., 32 Fla., 545; Scown v. Czarnecki, 264 Ill., 305, and Spitzer v. Village of Fulton, 172 N. Y., 285. So far as the present case is concerned, in the view we take, it is not necessary for us to approve the proposition stated nor to hold that-Section 1, Article'V of the Constitution of Ohio, is limited in its application to elections of officers enumerated in the constitution.

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Gougar v. Timberlake
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Huff v. Cook
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Coggeshall v. City of Des Moines
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Hanna v. Young
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Belles v. Burr
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 Ohio St. (N.S.) 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-taylor-v-french-ohio-1917.