Wheeler v. Commonwealth

32 S.W. 259, 98 Ky. 59, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 9, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 32 S.W. 259 (Wheeler v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. Commonwealth, 32 S.W. 259, 98 Ky. 59, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 14 (Ky. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

delivered the opinion oe the court.

The question in this case is whether or not the appellant legally holds the office of city attorney of the city of Padu-cah,, to which he claims to have been elected by the city council on the 18th of December, 1893.

The proceeding to oust him was instituted by the Commonwealth through the attorney-general, as provided in, sections 483, 484 and 485 of the Civil Code. The section first named provides that “if a person usurp an office or franchise, the person entitled thereto or the Commonwealth, may prevent the usurpation by an ordinary action.” The second named section makes it the duty of the several Commonwealth’s attorneys to institute such actions against usurpers of county offices or franchises, and the next section provides that “for usurpation of other than county offices or franchises, the action by the Commonwealth shall be instituted and prosecuted by the attorney-general.”

While the point is not urged by the appellant it has been suggested that the law did not contemplate a prosecution by the attorney-general of actions to prevent usurpation of city or town offices. That for usurpation of offices of a county the action was to be instituted by the several attorneys for the Commonwealth in whose district the act was committed, and only where the office was one in a district larger than a county, or a State office, could the action be properly brought by the attorney-general.

We are disposed to construe the section literally. The language, “for usurpation of other than county offices,” refers to all offices save county offices, and especially do we so conclude as there seems to be no other appropriate remedy provided.

It is further suggested that as the office in question is [62]*62filled by the action of the council and the appointee is its adviser, and may be removed at its pleasure, there can be no usurpation unless the officer is holding over the objection or without the consent of the council; a state of case not alleged in the petition, or shown to exist in the record. It seems to us, however, that as the public is interested in the office, as it indeed was created not for the benefit of the council, but for the people, the usurpation is complete if the holding is illegal, without regard to what the council may think or do in the premises, short of legally electing or appointing him. Any other view of the matter would permit the council to aid in the usurpation or connive at it.

The question, however, is, was the appellant legally elected? The city of Paducah is one of the third class and the statute provides (section 3311 Ky. Stat.) that “each council shall, at its first regular meeting or within one month thereafter, elect a city attorney who shall hold his office for two years and until his successor is elected and qualified.” The statute further provides that the mayor “shall be the presiding officer of the council, shall decide all questions of order, and in case of a tie, shall cast the deciding vote.” (Section 3294.) Further (section 3270), that “the common council shall be composed of twelve members,” and (section 3271) “not less than seven members shall constitute a quorum to do business.” It is also provided (section 3272) that the council “may determine its own rules of proceeding,” etc. At the meeting of the council at which the alleged election of appellant, Wheeler, took place, the mayor and each member of the council were present and answered to the roll call.

When the time came for the election of a city attorney, the names of Wheeler, Husbands and Thomas were placed [63]*63in nomination, and nominations were then declared closed. The call of the roll disclosed a vote of six for Wheeler, five for Husbands and one for Thomas. The mayor declared that there was no election and directed the clerk to again call the roll. The result was the same. After another ballot to the same effect, a member “moved that after the next ballot, the hindmost candidate be dropped,” and upon a call of the roll, the vote stood six for and six against the motion. The mayor then voted “yea.”

Two other ballots followed with the same result — the same members continuing to vote for Thomas after the mayor had declared that he was dropped under the resolution. Whereupon, the mayor declared that that member’s vote could not be counted and announced that he thought Wheeler was elected. The member voting for Thomas then read section 3294, and the mayor then declared Wheeler elected. The member then appealed from the decision of the mayor, and upon a roll call the vote stood, for sustaining the mayor’s decision, six; against it, six, and there being a tie, the mayor voted “yea.” Thereupon, the appellant took the oath, executed bond as such attorney and has since been acting as such.

It is contended for the State that the alleged election of Wheeler was invalid because he did not get a majority of the votes of tho'se present and voting. It is insisted that the law requires, first, a quorum to be present, and second, a. concurrence of a majority of the quorum before any legal act can be done. And this, we are convinced, is the true rule, except that only a majority of the quorum present and actually voting in the election, under the prescribed rules and regulations of the board, is required. Those present, as shown by the roll call or otherwise, may be counted to make the quorum; but if they do not vote, they must be [64]*64deemed to acquiesce in the action of those who do vote. (Cooley’s Const., Lira., 6th Ed., p. 748n.) The decided weight of authority is to the effect that a majority vote need not be a majority of all those present if it has a majority of those voting, and a quorum is in fact present.

Thus in Morton v. Youngerman, 89 Ky., 505, the council was composed of twelve members, all of whom were present. Morton received three votes, three members refrained from voting and Youngerman received six votes. The latter was held to have been elected. And it was said that without the resolution, to which we will refer presently, Youngerman was elected “because he obtained a majority of the nine votes cast, the entire body being present.” So in Rushville Gas Co. v. City of Rushville (121 Ind., 206, 6 L. R. A., 315), it was held that “the refusal of half the members of a council to vote, when all are present, will not defeat action when a majority of those necessary for a quorum vote in favor of a measure.”

From these authorities it is clear that the six votes received by the appellant would have been sufficient if the five members who voted for Husbands and the one who voted for Thomas had refrained from voting. For we have seen that “it is not a majority of the whole number of members present that is required; all that is requisite is a majority of members required to constitute a quorum.” And so would the six votes have been sufficient if the other six or any one of them had been cast in blank; for it is equally well settled that blank voles are not to be counted. Mr. Cooley says that whether the election is by a plurality or a majority, “the blank votes, if any, are not to be counted, and a candidate may therefore be chosen without receiving a plurality or a majority of voices of those who actually participated in the election.” (Const. Lim., 3d Ed., section 14.)

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.W. 259, 98 Ky. 59, 1895 Ky. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-1895.