The petitioner, O. H. Sumpter, is contestee in an election contest instituted against him in the circuit court of Garland County by a rival candidate for the office of county and probate judge of that county at the general election held-in September, 1906, and he presents to this court his petition for the writ of prohibition to prevent Hon. A. M. Duffie, the presiding judge of said circuit court, from assuming jurisdiction of the contest.
The statute provides that if the election of any county and probate, judge shall be contested it shall be before the circuit court of the county. Act January 23, 1875, Kirby’s Digest, § 5856. The petitioner contends that this statute is in conflict with the provisions of the Constitution of the State and void.
The Constitution contains the following provisions with reference to election contests:
“The general assembly shall provide by law the mode of contesting elections.in cases not specificially provided for in this Constitution.” Art. 19, § 24.
“That in all cases of contest for any county, township, or municipal office, an appeal shall lie, at the.instance of the party aggrieved, from any inferior board, council, or tribunal to the circuit court, on the same terms and conditions on which appeals may be granted to the circuit court in other cases-; and on such appeals the case shall be tried de novo.” Art. 7, § 52.'
The only mode of contesting elections specifically provided for in the Constitution is for the offices of Governor, Secretary of State, Treasurer of -State, Auditor of State and Attorney General. Art. ii, § 4. Learned counsel for petitioner argue that the section of the Constitution just quoted confers jurisdiction upon the circuit court, appellate only in character, to determine election contests for county offices; that the provision is exclusive, and forbids the exercise by that court of original jurisdiction. If this be true, it is, of course, beyond the power of the Legislature to confer original jurisdiction upon the circuit court in contests for such offices. But we do not think that-the section in question was intended as a limitation upon the power of the Legislature to provide tribunals wherein election contests shall be determined.
The two sections on the subject which have been quoted must be read together in order to interpret their meaning. The first one, in the broadest terms, empowers the General Assembly to provide a mode of contesting elections in cases not specifically provided for in the Constitution itself. This has been construed to mean that a place as well as a manner of trial shall be provided. Glidewell v. Martin, 51 Ark. 559.
The other section provides that in all contests for county, township or municipal offices an appeal shall lie from any inferior board, council or tribunal to the circuit court. It can be construed to mean only that, if the Legislature shall provide an “inferior board, council or tribunal” as the place of contest for such offices, an appeal shall lie therefrom to the circuit court. It does not mean, as contended, that the Legislature can not authorize a trial in the first instance in the circuit court, but must provide an inferior tribunal for the original hearing. This is plain when we consider the use of the word “inferior.” If that word had been omitted, there might be less certainty that the framers of the Constitution did not mean to provide for an appeal to the circuit court in all contests for such officés, thereby conferring appellate jurisdiction only upon the trial court. But the use of the word “inferior” makes it plain that a right of appeal to the circuit court was guarantied only from “any inferior board, council or tribunal” which the Legislature might create or empower to determine such contests.
Doubtless, the framers of the Constitution had in mind that, contests for county, township or muncipal offices being matters of local concern, the Legislature, in the exercise of the general power conferred to provide a place for such contests, would either empower the circuit court sitting in .the county to determine them, or create local tribunals to determine them which would be inferior to the circuit court, and in the latter event intended by this section to provide in mandatory terms for appeals to the circuit court from the decisions of such inferior tribunals.
We need not consider what the effect would be if the Legislature should attempt to confer original jurisdiction to hear.such contests upon some tribunal with territorial jurisdiction coextensive with the State or subdivision thereof greater than a county — whether or not such tribunal would be inferior to the court in the meaning of the section giving a right of appeal to that court. We have no such question before us. The section in question, however, manifestly contemplates the creation of some tribunal, not superior to the circuit courts, to try election contests for county offices.
It is settled by authority that election contests are not civil actions in the ordinary acceptation, but are special proceedings, and the framers of the Constitution manifestly deemed it necessary, in order to give the right of appeal from decisions of inferior tribunals, to expressly provide that appeals must be granted. Davis v. Moore, 70 Ark. 240; Douglas v. Hutchinson, 183 Ill. 323; Williamson v. Lane, 52 Tex. 335; Knox v. Fesler, 17 Ind. 254; Patterson v. Murray, 53 N. C. 278; Reynolds, etc., Co. v. Police Jury. 44 La. Ann. 863. This is, we think, all they intended by the incorporation of the section into the organic law. The position which this section occupies in the framework of the Constitution is not without some significance in determining the purpose which the lawmakers entertained when they incorporated it in the organic law of the State. It occupies a place in .the article on the judicial department, and immediately follows a section declaring the right of appeal to the circuit court in all cases of allowances made for or against counties, cities or towns, and the language of the two sections is strikingly similar, both providing in substantially the same language that appeals shall lie to the circuit court at the instance of the party aggrieved “on the same terms and conditions on which appeals may be granted to the circuit court in other cases,” and that the case shall be tried in the circuit court de novo. Now, it can not be argued that the preceding section was intended to fix the original jurisdiction for the allowance of claims against counties, for that had already been specifically fixed in another section of the Constitution. Neither can it be successfully maintained that the section now under consideration negatived the power of the Legislature to confer upon the circuit courts original jurisdiction of election contests for county offices.
This court said in State v. Martin, 60 Ark. 343, that “the maxim ‘expressio unius est exclusio altering is not to be applied with tire same rigor in construing a State Constitution as a statute; and that only those things expressed in such positive affirmative terms as plainly imply the negative of what is not mentioned will be considered as inhibiting the powers of the Legislature.” In that case it was decided that the provision of the Constitution authorizing the election of a judge for each judicial circuit did not prohibit the Legislature from providing for the election of two judges for a circuit.
Chief Justice Cockrtee, in delivering the opinion of the court in Ex parte Reynolds, 52 Ark. 330, said: “It is essential in any case that a prohibition ■ upon the powers of the Legislature should be certainly found in the Constitution to warrant the court in declaring a legislative act void; but where the act has long been acquiesced in by the legislative and judicial branches of the Government, the courts should be satisfied that it is repugnant, not only to the express and unequivocal terms of the instrument, but to its intent and reason, before resorting to their extraordinary power of nullification.”
Another potent factor in reaching a conclusion as to the intention of the framers of the Constitution in inserting this section is the legislative construction thereof adopted almost contemporaneously with the adoption of the Constitution, and the early judicial acquiescence in that construction.- This statute, authorizing the circuit court to exercise original jurisdiction in the trial of an election contest for the office of county and probate judge, was enacted on January 23, 1875, within a few months after the adoption of the Constitution by the General Assembly of which there were many members who had been members of the recent constitutional convention, and who were elected at the same election at which the Constitution was adopted by the people.
The case of Patton v. Coates, 41 Ark. 111, which was decided less than ten years after the adoption of the Constitution, was a contest instituted in the circuit court of Pulaski County to contest the election of county and probate judge. The question of jurisdiction was not raised or discussed, though the casé was reversed and remanded for a new trial, and the opinion of the court was written by Judge Eakin, who sat in the constitutional convention, and who, according to the statement of Chief Justice English (State v. Devers, 34 Ark. 195), drafted at least some of the provisions of the Constitution concerning the jurisdiction of the circuit court. “Such matters,” said Chief Justice Cockrill, in Ex parte Reynolds, supra, “are not entitled to controlling weight, for acquiescence for no length of time can legalize a clear usurpation of power; but when an examination of the Constitution leaves a doubt, the judges are warranted in looking to these extraneous matters for aid.”
The cases of Payne v. Rittman, 66 Ark. 201, and Whittaker v. Watson, 68 Ark. 555, involved contests for the offices of marshal and mayor, respectively, of cities, and this court sustained the original jurisdiction of the circuit court to determine the contests. The statutes of the State do not name any tribunal for the trial of contests of elections for municipal offices, and the court in those cases based its decision sustaining the jurisdiction of the circuit court on the constitutional provision making that court the residuum of all unassigned original jurisdiction. The particular question now presented that' section 52 of article 7 confers appellate jurisdiction only, and prohibits the exercise of original jurisdiction by the circuit court does not appear to have been raised or discussed in those cases, but the decisions themselves are necessarily in direct hostility to the contention against the power of .the Legislature to confer original jurisdiction on the circuit court. These decisions stand as a barrier in the pathway of the petitioner, and we are asked to overrule them, but we decline to do so. We adhere to them in so far as they control the decision of the question we now have under consideration.
We are therefore of the opinion that the statute conferring original jurisdiction upon the circuit court to hear and determine contests for the office of county and probate judge was valid; and that the circuit court of Garland County was correct in assuming jurisdiction of the contest set forth in the petition.
The prayer of the petition herein is denied, the temporary writ of prohibition issued here is dissolved, and the petition is dismissed at the cost of the petitioner.