State v. Kellaher

177 P. 944, 90 Or. 538, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 5
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 177 P. 944 (State v. Kellaher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Kellaher, 177 P. 944, 90 Or. 538, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 5 (Or. 1919).

Opinions

McBRIDE, C. J.

We consider these matters in their order.

1. The joint resolution proposing the amendment designated as Section 14-a was signed by the speaker of the House and president of the Senate on February 19, 1917, and on February 20th was filed with the Secretary of State. Subsequent to the passage and signature by the presiding officers of the joint resolution but upon the same day (February 19, 1917) Senate Bill 318, providing for submission, was passed by the Senate, sent to the House and there amended and returned to the Senate, which concurred in the amendments, and the act was signed by both presiding offi[543]*543cers, and on February 21, 1917, was presented to the Governor for Ms approval and by him approved, and became a law on that date. It is the last expression o,f the legislative will on the question of the submission of this measure and seems to be in accord with Section 1, Article XVII, of our Constitution, and we hold that the amendment was properly submitted and passed.

2. This being settled the next question that confronts us is as to the effect of the amendment upon that section of the existing charter of the City of Portland, which provides for the time of holding city elections. A constitutional provision may be self-executing as to part of its provisions and require the aid of legislation as to others. So far as it relates to the date upon which elections are to be held the amendment is definite, self-executing and mandatory. “Incorporated cities and towns shall hold” their elections; at the time therein specified. And again, “All provisions of the charter and ordinances of incorporated cities and towns pertaining to the holding of elections, shall continue in full force and effect except so far as they relate to the time of holding such elections. ” The implication being that as to the time of holding such elections such charters were repealed. There can be no logical escape from this conclusion. The requirement that cities and towns should enact such supplementary legislation, as might be necessary to carry the provisions of the amendment into effect, is. also mandatory and was no doubt passed so as to require such corporations to provide the machinery necessary to carry on the election at the date specified. To prevent a vacancy occurring in any elective office between a possible earlier date for city election and the time for holding the general state election, it was [544]*544provided that elective officers then in office should hold until their successors were elected and qualified; so that, if in a city theretofore holding its election, say in June, there were elective officers whose terms expired in June, such terms were by force of the amendment extended until November 5th, and until their successors had qualified.

The power of the council to appoint a person to fill a vacancy in the office of commissioner is limited by Section 30 of the charter to an appointment to hold “until the next general municipal election.” Under the charter as it stood before the change made by the amendment, that election would have been held in June, 1919, but this period was abridged by the amendment, as well as by Ordinance No. 34,638 of the City of Portland, so that the city election occurred on November 5, 1918, instead of June, 1919, thus, apparently, leaving a hiatus or vacancy in the office of the appointive commissioner from November 5,1918, until July 1, 1919. There is nothing in the charter or ordinances of the city authorizing an election to fill out any portion of an unexpired term of a commissioner, excepting the provision authorizing an appointment by the council to be effective until the next regular municipal election. This provision was evidently drawn upon the theory that elections would continue to be held in June and in the event of the occurrence of an unexpired term, the place of a person serving for such unexpired term by appointment would be filled by a commissioner elected at the municipal election, who, by the provisions of tlie charter, would hold for four years, such term beginning July 1st. When the council made provision by Ordinance 34,638 for a general municipal election, it made no provision either by a proposed amendment to the charter, or otherwise, [545]*545for an election to supply the hiatus between November 5, 1918, and July 1, 1919, and it is a significant fact that while no provision is made for filling an unexpired term of a commissioner by election by the people, Section 64 of the charter, which relates to the office of city auditor, provides that he shall be elected and serve for a term of four years; that if a vacancy shall occur in his office, it shall be filled by appointment by the council until the next general election, when it shall be filled by election for the remainder of the unexpired term. So it appears that the question of “unexpired terms” was in the legislative mind at the time the charter was adopted, and this being so the fact that the framers provided for an election to fill the unexpired term of the auditor and omitted to make such provision in respect to such terms in the office of commissioner, must be taken under the maxim “inclusio unius exclusio alterius” to indicate that it was not the intention of the framers of the charter to provide for an election to fill an unexpired term in the office of commissioner. The date of election was fixed by the charter upon the first Monday in June of each year. Section 123 of the charter of 1913 provided that the mayor and the two commissioners first elected should hold office until the first day of July, 1917, and that the other two commissioners should hold office until July 1, 1915, and thereafter every such official should hold office for the full term of four years. A strict literal construction of the last clause would leave a vacancy in the office of commissioner at every subsequent election from the first Monday in June until July 1st, but a fair construction of the section we think indicates an intention on the part of the framers of the charter that the commissioners in office [546]*546should hold until July 1st following the election. Indeed this would seem to be the necessary result from the provisions of Section 1, Article XV, of our Constitution, which provides that:

“All officers, except members of the legislature, shall hold their offices until their successors are elected and qualified. ”

This provision is discussed in State ex rel. v. Simon, 20 Or. 366 (26 Pac. 170), and there held applicable to offices created by city charter. It is true the charter there considered was one granted by the legislature before the adoption of the present amendment to Section 2, Article XI of the Constitution, commonly called the Home Eule Amendment, and that the present charter was one enacted by the people of the City of Portland subsequent to such amendment. The amendment expressly provides that charters enacted thereunder shall be ‘ ‘ subject to the Constitution and criminal laws of the State of Oregon,” so that it is conceived that Section 1 of Article XV of the Constitution is just as applicable to city offices created by initiative charters as to those created by legislative fiat.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P. 944, 90 Or. 538, 1919 Ore. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kellaher-or-1919.