Judges: Faikcloth
Filed Date: 4/5/1898
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
"This case coming on for trial and a jury trial being waived, after finding the facts, and the Court being of the opinion that the duties of a member of the Board of Education are not incompatible with the duties of a member of the Board of County Commissioners, and that the defendant did not forfeit his office of county commissioner by subsequently accepting and qualifying as a member of the Board of Education of Bladen County, it is therefore adjudged that the defendant go without day and recover his costs of the relator, to be taxed by the (494) clerk." From this judgment the plaintiff appealed.
The facts in this case were found by his Honor, by consent, and are as follows: "The defendant was duly elected a county commissioner for Bladen County at the general election held in 1896 and duly qualified as such on the first Monday in December, 1896, and has since continued to hold the office, and now holds and exercises the duties thereof. On the first Monday of June, 1897, the defendant was elected by the duly constituted election board a member of the Board of Education for Bladen County and qualified as such member by entering upon the discharge of the duties thereof and still continues to exercise the same. An action was brought to Fall Term, 1897, of Bladen Superior Court by the Attorney-General on the relation of one L. P. Cromartie against the defendant and others, to turn said defendant out of the office of county commissioner. The Superior Court sustained the defendant's demurrer and gave judgment dismissing the action, and the relator appealed to the Supreme Court, and at September Term, 1897, thereof the said judgment was affirmed (Cromartie v. Parker, *Page 305
It is also admitted that the plaintiff is a citizen, property owner and taxpayer of Bladen County, and that in June, 1897, the defendant Thompson and C. W. Lyon and John F. Croom proceeded to elect themselves members of the board of education for the county. The plaintiff institutes this action in the nature of quo warranto, which he may do (Hines v. Vann,
In obedience to that section, and in order to observe and perpetuate the "fitness of things," the defendant and his two associates proceeded to elect themselves as members of the board of education, and the defendant accepted and entered upon the discharge of the duties thereof.
One ground of defense is that the board of education is not an office. This was not seriously urged by the defendant's counsel in this Court. An office is defined by good authority as involving a delegation to the individual of some of the sovereign functions of government, to be exercised by him for the benefit of the public, by which it is (496) distinguished from employment or contract. Mechem on Public Officers, secs. 1, 4; U.S. v. Martwell, 6 Wallace, 385, 393; Eliason v.Coleman,
At common law there was no limit on the right of a citizen to hold several offices, except the incompatibility of the duties of the several offices, and much learning was invoked in England and in this country on the question of "incompatibility." We are relieved, however, from much labor on that subject by our Constitution, Article XIV, section 7: *Page 306 "No person, who shall hold any office or place of trust or profit under the United States, or any department thereof, or under this State, or under any other State, or government, shall hold or exercise any other office or place of trust or profit under the authority of this State, or be eligible to a seat in either House of the General Assembly: Provided, that nothing herein contained shall extend to the officers in the militia, justices of the peace, commissioners of public charities, or commissioners for special purposes."
This provision is plain and leaves no room for construction, whenever the two places under consideration are found to be public offices.
Another position of the defendant is that his acceptance of the second office does not forfeit or vacate the first office. This is true in one class of cases, that is, where the officer holds a Federal office and (497) accepts a State office, and the reason is that the State court has no authority to declare the Federal office vacant. The general rule, however, is otherwise in the States. It is the acceptance of the second that vacates the first. Throop on Public Officers, sections 39, 31.
"Where, however, it is the holding of two offices at the same time which is forbidden by the Constitution or the statutes, a statutory incompatibility is created, similar in its effect to that of the common law, and, as in the case of the latter, it is well settled that the acceptance of a second office of the kind prohibited operates ipso facto to absolutely vacate the first. His acceptance of the one was an absolute determination of his rights to the other." Mechem, supra, section 429, citing numerous State decisions.
"The officer has a right to elect which of the two he will have and retain, but his election must be deemed to be made when he accepts and qualifies for the second. The public has a right to know which is held and which is surrendered. It should not be left to chance or to the uncertain and fluctuating whim of the officeholder to determine." S. v. Brinkerhoff,
In re Martin,
The right of election must be admitted in all such cases. If the acceptance in this case and entry did not vacate the first, what (498) did it do? It is difficult to understand how the defendant could accept the second and hold the first in the same breath, and *Page 307 thereby do what is expressly forbidden by the Constitution. Reason as well as public policy forbids it. The exceptions in Throop, supra, section 32, do not include the defendant's case, because they relate to appointments made in violation of a statute and were therefore void; whereas the defendant's election was regular and valid, and was ratified by his acceptance.
His Honor's conclusion was erroneous and his judgment must be reversed. The question in this State does not turn upon the incompatibility of the duties of the two offices alone, as it did at common law, but upon the plain and positive language of the Constitution.
Reversed.
Let final judgment be entered here. Caldwell v. Wilson,
Cited: Greene v. Owen,
State Ex Rel. Cromartie v. Parker ( 1897 )
State Ex Rel. Foard v. Hall ( 1892 )
State Ex Rel. McNeill v. Somers ( 1887 )
C. C. Clark and Others v. . E. R. Stanley and Others ( 1872 )
State Ex Rel. Caldwell v. Wilson ( 1897 )
State Ex Rel. Gattis v. Griffin ( 1899 )
State Ex Rel. Midgett v. Gray ( 1912 )
State Ex Rel. Harris v. Watson ( 1931 )
Opinion No. 76-168 (1976) Ag ( 1976 )
In Re Advisory Opinion in Re Phillips ( 1946 )
Borden v. City of Goldsboro ( 1917 )
McCullers v. Board of Commissioners ( 1911 )
Whitehead v. . Pittman ( 1914 )
State Ex Rel. Greene v. Owen ( 1899 )
State Ex Rel. Dalby v. Hancock ( 1899 )
Moore v. Knightdale Board of Elections ( 1992 )
Edwards v. Board of Education of Yancey County ( 1952 )
Mid-Continent Building Co. v. Board of Equalization ( 1939 )
State Ex Rel. Brigman v. Baley ( 1938 )