State ex rel. Weber v. Hathaway
This text of 28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 481 (State ex rel. Weber v. Hathaway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The ouster of a village councilman from his office is sought-by this proceeding, the turning point of which is whether a vacancy therein was caused by the removal from the village or by the subsequent resignation of the prior incumbent. In the' former case the relator, who is the mayor’s appointee, is entitled to the office. In the latter ease the defendant, who is incumbent under the council’s appointment is entitled to it.
We intimated our possible conclusion at the close of the hearing this morning, but we took the case under advisement for the sole purpose of confirming our prima facie impression, that the removal from the municipality contemplated by Sec. 1536-613 R. S. (Sec. 4207 G-. C.), had not been made by councilman Wagner in such manner as to render his office vacant.
We have examined some of the authorities, and have paused to look again over the brief of counsel, or citation of authorities, handed us a few moments ago, to determine whether or not there were any cases there that put a different complexion on the matter, other than the cases we had already examined; and we are prepared now to confirm the intimation we gave this, morning upon the subject.
The section so far as it bears upon the narrow question on which we had evidence this morning, is:
“Gouneilmen at large shall have resided in their respective cities, and councilmen from wards shall have resided in their respective wards, for at least one year next preceding their election. Every member of council shall be an elector of the city. Any member who shall cease to possess any of the qualifications therein required, or shall remove from his ward, if elected from his ward, or from the city, if elected from the city at large, shall forthwith forfeit his office.”
Our impression this morning was, and it is confirmed by our subsequent inquiry, that the residence which is required by this section of the statutes, for the purpose of maintaining the right to hold the office of councilman, is precisely the residence which is required to qualify a person as an elector. There is a hint, of course, of tautology in the language of the statute, “Any member who shall cease to possess any of the qualifications [483]*483therein required,” that is, ceasing to be an elector of tbe city, and tbe other requirement in the same sentence, “ or shall remove from his ward, if elected from his ward, or from the city, if elected from the city at large.” That is to say, there is a hint in this language, that possibly the same thing is said twice, 1hat it was unnecessary to say anything about removal, if the requirement of being an elector were ■ observed; and the argument is suggested from that hint of tautology, that possibly the-legislature meant something different when it undertook to say that removal from the ward or city would also work a vacancy in the office. But on further investigation, it appears that this language is not open to the charge that it is tautological, on the interpretation .we place upon it. for the reason that we must consider this statute .as applying not only to villages where all the eouneilmen are elected at large and where the question of residence in a ward is of no account, but also to cities divided into wards, where residence in a given ward is one of the qualifica-. tions of a councilman. In other words, applying this section to the case of a city, it may well be true that one holding the office of councilman might continue to be an elector of the city, though removal from the ward would work a vacancy in his office as councilman.
Now what are the qualifications which an elector must possess in regard to residence? What has been the history of our legislation on this subject, as bearing upon removal? In this connection, holding as we do that the qualifications of coun-eilmen in respect of residence resemble those of electors, we refer to the case of Lehman v. McBride, 15 Ohio St. 573, where,, in the opinion of the court, at pages 600 and 601 reference ismade to the act of 1841, being an act “to preserve the purity of elections.” wherein the word “residence” is thus defined:
‘■‘First: That place shall be considered and held to be the residence of the person, in which his habitation is fixed, without any present intention of removing therefrom; and to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention of returning. ’ ’
We note particularly the use of that word “removing,”' which is exactly the wmrd we are discussing and to which our* [484]*484attention has been called. And again, in the same opinion, further quoting from the act of 1841, this language is used:
“A person shall not be considered or held to have lost his residence who shall leave his home and go into another state or county of this state for temporary purposes merely, with an intention of returning.”
Now the evidence which was adduced this morning is, of course, somewhat in conflict. It is noticeable that Mr. Wagner does not undertake to contradict (perhaps on account of lack of memory on his part) the testimony of the witness in whose home he used the telephone as to said Wagner’s language both then and after the telephone conversation was finished. Moreover it is, to say the least, left in very grave doubt whether he had ever formed any intention whatever different from that which the law imputes to him in regard to where his residence was fixed when he left the state of Ohm to go into the service of the electric railroad which operates between Baltimore and Annapolis. Employment is not presumptively permanent, nor was this by any means certainly so. All the circumstances go to show that while he entertained some doubt in his mind as to •what his future might be, still he did not form any definite intention, as we view the evidence, of renouncing this then existing residence and acquiring a new and definite residence elesewhere. If he had presented himself as an elector at the polls at the election next following his return, supposing the same conditions existed as at the time he returned to his mother’s home, can it be doubted that he would have had-the right to cast his vote; that his vote would have been received? We think not. We think that clearly under these circumstances, his vote would have been allowed, unless some different evidence had been produced to the election officers from that which has been produced to us.
We are not unmindful of all that counsel urge regarding the rule as éxpressed in Sturgeon v. Korte, 34 Ohio St. 534 and 535. We appreciate that though a person may not have any fixed determination to renounce his previous home, when he leaves the home where he has theretofore lived, yet, he may, by forming a determination in that behalf, after he leaves, accom[485]*485plish the same result; that is he may change his residence definitely by a determination conceived and fixed in his mind after his departure. But there is no evidence here as to what bis state of mind became after he left Ohio, except this letter of resignation; outside of this we have absolutely no light cm thfe subject at all. In his letter he expresses some doubt as to whether or when he will return. Certainly it is not indicated that he had theretofore come to a fixed determination to renounce his former home .and to acquire a new one. We do not attach any specific importance to the use of the word “home”’ because that is the most natural word to use, in common parlance, when referring to the home of one’s parents.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
28 Ohio C.C. Dec. 481, 22 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 314, 1908 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-weber-v-hathaway-ohcirctcuyahoga-1908.