State ex rel. Crow v. Kramer
State ex rel. Crow v. Kramer
Opinion of the Court
At the November election, 1898, •Siegmund L. Kramer and James Griffin were candidates for the office of justice of the peace for the fourth district of the city of St. Louis. A canvass of the vote by the board of election commissioners showed that Kramer received three thousand seven hundred and sixty-six votes, and that Griffin had received the same number of votes. This canvass was certified by the board of election commissioners to the clerk
Respondent has waived all technical objections to the petition and to the procedure, and submits his title to the office on the merits of the mayor’s certificate of selection or appointment. In support of the validity of his appointment by the mayor, respondent relies on the following sections of the General Statutes (R. S. 1889), to wit:
“Sec. 6099. County Court to Decide Election of, When. — Whenever two or more persons shall have an equal number of votes for justices of the peace for any township, or there is a contested election, the county court shall decide the same.”
“Sec. 6092. Number of Justices — City of St. Louis— Mayor and Register to Perform Certain Duties. — The city of St. Louis is hereby divided into fourteen districts for the election of justices of the peace, viz.: * * # and all powers and duties now conferred by law on the county court and county clerk, respectively relating to justices of the peace, shall, in the city of St. Louis, be vested in the mayor and city register: Provided, that the judges of the circuit court, the probate court and the criminal court of the city of St. Louis, or a majority of them are hereby empowered to conform the justices’ districts to the present wards, and to redistrict said city agreeably to any law that may be passed, changing the number of such districts.”
Section 23, article 9 of the constitution declares that “all acts and parts of acts which provide for the performance
SEPARATE OPINION OE JUDGE BIGGS.
Section 6099, Revised Statutes 1889, provides that when two persons receive an equal number of votes for justice of the peace, the county court shall decide the same. Section 6092, concerning justices of the peace in the city of St. Louis, provides that “all powers and duties now conferred by law on the county court and county clerk, respectively, relating to justices of the peace, shall, in the city of St. Louis be vested in the mayor and city register.” The objection made by the attorney-general to the latter section is, that it undertakes to clothe the mayor of the city with
The contention in the Mayo case was that as the constitution provided that clerks of courts of record should be elected, the act of the legislature authorizing the county court to determine such an election in case of a tie, violated the elective principle, and that the act was therefore unconstitutional. The constitutionality of the law was upheld in a very lucid opinion written by Judge Napton. The same constitutional question is in the present case, since the constitution provides for the election of justices of the peace. Concerning the jurisdiction of this court, the supreme court has decided that a constitutional question is never settled however often the supreme court itself may have passed on the identical question.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.