Roane v. Matthews | Cases | Westlaw

Roane v. Matthews | Cases | Westlaw

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Roane v. Matthews

Supreme Court of Mississippi.March 29, 189775 Miss. 9421 So. 665 (Approx. 3 pages)

Roane v. Matthews

Supreme Court of Mississippi.March 29, 189775 Miss. 9421 So. 665 (Approx. 3 pages)

75 Miss. 94
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
ROANE, Dist. Atty., ex rel. TUNSTALL,
v.
MATTHEWS.
March 29, 1897.
R. H. Tunstall was appointed to the office of marshal of Holly Springs in August, 1895, to fill out an unexpired term ending on the first Monday of January, 1897. He was duly commissioned and qualified as such officer. In the elections in 1896 E. J. Matthews received a majority of the votes for that office. He gave bond, and his commission was issued to him by the governor, and he took possession of the office. This proceeding is a quo warranto brought by the district attorney, on relation of R. H. Tunstall, against E. J. Matthews, for the purpose of ousting Matthews from the office of marshal of Holly Springs. It was shown that Matthews had not paid his poll tax for the year 1895. It was further shown that Matthews was deputy sheriff under R. M. McWilliams, and that he had an agreement with the sheriff that the sheriff should pay his taxes, and that the sheriff had handed him some tax receipts for other things, but none for his poll tax. Matthews thought his poll tax had been paid, but it had not in fact been paid. It was further shown that a short time before the election the commissioners revised the roll book, and wrote opposite the name of Matthews the letter “D,” which indicated that he was delinquent. His name was not put on the ticket until he secured a mandatory injunction and had it put on. On the 11th day of December, 1896, after the election, a friend of Matthews paid his poll tax, and it is contended that, though Matthews was not eligible at the time of the election, he became eligible before the term of office began, and that eligibility, in the constitution, was predicated as of the commencement of the term of office, and not of the election.

Attorneys and Law Firms

*665 Fant & Belk, for appellant.
Strickland & Gary, for appellee.

Opinion

WHITFIELD, J.
Tunstall had the right to hold over as marshal of Holly Springs until a legal successor had been duly qualified. Code 1892, §§ 3030, 3031. And his successor must be one who is legally eligible. Taylor v. Sullivan (Minn.) 47 N. W. 802. And Tunstall, on the facts of record, had the right to test Matthews' right to the office in this proceeding, which is a quo warranto by the state, in the name of the district attorney, on the relation of R. H. Tunstall. Code 1892, §§ 3520–3522; Taylor v. Sullivan, supra. In the case of Andrews v. Covington, 69 Miss. 740, 13 South. 853, the relator, Covington, was not claiming under the right to hold over, but was claiming against Andrews' right to hold over, on the ground that he (Covington) had just been elected. The relator, Covington, failed to show his own title,—his own eligibility,—and the court said that that action, being a private suit to try the right to the office, failed “for the reason that Covington had not shown himself to be legally entitled to be inducted therein.” He admitted that he was not a qualified elector, and we held that, not being a qualified elector, section 250 of the constitution made him ineligible to hold office. Here Tunstall was legally qualified as an elector, and legally appointed, and does not claim on the ground of any new election, but claims that Matthews is usurping the office, and that he (Tunstall) is, under the sections of the Code cited, entitled merely to hold over—being legally in already—until an eligible successor shall be legally qualified. The qualification of an elector, so far as the payment of his taxes is concerned, as prescribed by section 241, Const. 1890, depends upon the fact of the actual payment of such taxes, and not the party's thought or supposition or belief, however honestly entertained, that the taxes have been paid; nor upon any agreement he may have with any one that that one shall pay them for him. The right to vote as an elector rests upon no such shadowy grounds as these. Section 250 of the constitution provides that “all qualified electors, and no others, shall be eligible to office, except as otherwise provided in this constitution”; and section 245 provides that “electors in municipal elections shall possess all the qualifications herein prescribed, and such additional *666 qualifications as may be provided by law.” The “eligibility to office” meant in section 250 is eligibility at the time of election. Unless then eligible by the payment of taxes, a candidate cannot become so by paying the taxes afterwards. This is the manifest meaning of the constitution, and any other construction leads to the most absurd results. The precise question was thus determined in Taylor v. Sullivan, supra, on irrefragable reasoning, construing a constitutional provision substantially identical. Compare Andrews v. Covington, supra. Learned counsel for appellee cite two cases contra: Smith v. Moore, 90 Ind. 294, and Vogel v. State, 107 Ind. 374, 8 N. E. 164. But they are wholly unlike this case, merely holding that “one who held a judicial office by election may, under the Indiana constitution (Rev. St. 1881, § 176), be elected to an office not judicial, the term of which will begin after his judicial term expires”; and Elliot, J., dissented from this, even, in the case in 90 Ind., supra. Learned counsel also insist that payment of taxes is not a condition to registration. But it is a condition of the right to vote. “One is not qualified to vote if not duly registered.” Bew v. State, 71 Miss. 6, 13 South. 868. Clearly, Matthews was not a qualified elector at the date of the election, the second Tuesday in December, 1896, for marshal, and was not eligible to hold the office, and did not become so by the subsequent payment of his poll tax for the year 1895 by Dancy, for him, on 11th December, 1896, and is therefore holding the office without authority of law. And clearly, also, Tunstall has the right to hold over until an eligible successor, within the meaning of the constitution as above declared, has legally qualified. It follows that the judgment must be reversed, and, the case being here on an agreed statement of facts, judgment final will be entered here, removing E. J. Matthews, appellee, from the said office, and debarring him therefrom, and for costs. So ordered.

All Citations

75 Miss. 94, 21 So. 665
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