Reversing.
This appeal involves the rights of rival claimants to five memberships on the board of education of the city *Page 429 of Hopkinsville, and the decision depends upon a determination of the authority to fill vacancies in the board when less than a quorum remains in office.
The five appellants claim the offices by virtue of appointment by the Governor, and insist that, under the circumstances that existed in this case, the power to fill vacancies is reposed by law in the chief executive of the state. Five of the individual appellees assert title to the same offices under appointments by the four remaining members of the board of education, participated in by the five members whose terms were expiring. The circuit court decided against the appointees of the Governor, and they appeal. The city of Hopkinsville is concerned only to have the matter settled that it may recognize, in the administration of the schools, the rightful incumbents of the offices.
The Constitution provides:
"Vacancies in all offices for the state at large, or for districts larger than a county, shall be filled by appointment of the Governor; all other appointments shall be made as may be prescribed by law." Section 152.
"The General Assembly shall prescribe the qualifications of all officers of towns and cities, the manner in and causes for which they may be removed from office, and how vacancies in such offices may be filled." Section 160.
Members of the board of education are state officers (Hoskins v. Ramsey,
In cities of the third class, to which Hopkinsville belongs, the board of education consists of nine members and a majority elect of said board constitutes a quorum for the transaction of business. Ky Stats., sec 3462. It is apparent, therefore, that five vacancies left the board without a legal quorum and disabled it from the transaction of any business.
It is urged however, that the incumbents whose terms were expiring held over until the election and qualification of their successors, and enabled the board thus constituted to fill the vacancies. But we have held that officers, whose terms would expire before the vacancies occurred, could not make appointments to fill such vacancies. Terry v. Cornett,
It follows that the five members whose terms were about to expire could not legally participate in the appointment of their own successors, which left the board without a quorum in the matter of filling prospective vacancies, and helpless to act on the subject.
Appellees present a theory that the "authority" to appoint members to fill vacancies is vested in the board of education, a corporation, which was then in being and would continue in being when the vacancies, occurred, and when the appointments were to be made, which consideration is supposed to bring this case within the reasoning and strict letter of the authorities last cited. The theory is confounded by the fact that the board of education as a corporate entity cannot function with less than a quorum of its members and five of them whose terms were expiring were disqualified to vote on their own successors. The corporation can act only by its members, and, when a majority of them are disqualified on a given subject, the board itself is powerless to act thereon. But the appellees further argue that the four members remaining in office constituted all of the board of education legally in office and as such had a right to carry on the business and fill the vacancies. This contention is predicated upon a definition of "majority *Page 431
elect of said board," as used in section 3462, Ky. Stats., as meaning a majority of those constituting the actual, as distinguished from the authorized, membership thereof. State v. Orr,
The contention is unsound and utterly untenable. In our state the Legislature has sometimes provided that the remaining members of a board were empowered to fill vacancies (Ky. Stats., sec. 4465, as amended by Act March 7, 1922, p. 35, c. 8), and in many other instances has bestowed the power upon a board or body in which only a quorum could act, requiring a quorum to consist of a majority of all the members elect. The plain import of such provision is that a majority of all members that could in any event be elected to the board must be considered in office and counted to comprise a quorum. 43 C. J. 503; Pinson v. Morrow,
The case of Elliott v. Burke,
The power conferred upon the board is limited to the filling of vacancies when such vacancies are not sufficient in number to destroy the required quorum. When the vacancies result in a reduction of the board below a majority of the entire membership, as authorized by law, it is wholly without power to act as a board or otherwise, even to declare a vacancy. City of Williamsburg v. Weesner,
It necessarily results that the board of education did not, under the circumstances existing, possess the power to fill the five approaching vacancies therein, or *Page 432
any one of them. The General Assembly has provided, pursuant to the power conferred upon it by the Constitution, that the Governor shall fill all vacancies in office where no other provision therefor has been made. Ky. Statutes, sec. 3758. It was upon the authority of this statute that the Governor acted when he appointed the appellants to fill the five vacancies in question. Nelson v. Board of Education,
As there was no other provision of law for the filling of the vacancies in the board of education of Hopkinsville, when the vacancies left it without a quorum, the statute applied to the situation, and the Governor of the commonwealth was authorized to appoint the appellants to fill those five vacancies.
The circuit court erred in holding that the appointees of a minority of the membership of the board were entitled to the offices. It should have adjudged that the appointees of the Governor were the lawful incumbents and entitled to hold the offices until the election and qualification of their successors.
The judgment is reversed, with directions to enter a decree in accordance with this opinion.
Whole court sitting.