The Territorial Legislature, by an Act approved February 10, 1877, provided for the organization of the counties of Lawrence, Pennington and Custer, and authorized the governor to appoint all the officers for said counties except justices of the peace. The Territory embraced within these counties, was, at the time of the passage of said act supposed to be within an Indian reservation, and the act provided that nothing should be done by the governor towards the organization of said counties until the Territory embraced within them should come within the jurisdiction of the Territory.
After the ratification of the Sioux Indian treaty by Congress on the 28th day of February, 1877, the governor appointed the officers for said counties, among others the appellant as register of deeds and ex-officio county clerk of Lawrence county, and issued commissions to his appointees, running until January 1st, 1879, and until their successors should be elected and qualified.
The same act provided for the election of four justices of • the peace in each of said counties, at special elections to be called by the respective boards of county commissioners, when organized, who should hold their offices until their successors should be elected at the general election in 1877, and should qualify.
Prior to said general election the board of county commissioners of Lawrence county spread the following minute on their records: “ We will, therefore, call an election for four justices of the peace, and for no other officers;” and appellant, at the proper time, as clerk of said county and in compliance with the provisions of section 5, chapter 27, ^Political Code, *443made out and delivered to the sheriff, election notices, naming as the officers to be chosen — four justices of the peace— but no others, whereupon this proceeding was instituted by the relator for a writ of mandamus to compel the appellant, as county clerk, to issue notices of election for the election of three county commissioners, one register of deeds, sheriff, treasurer, judge of probate, &c. An alternative writ was issued, and on the hearing the court below awarded a peremptory writ. Prom this judgment and final order defendant appeals.
Section 5 of chapter 27, Political Code, above referred to, reads as follows: “ The county clerks of the several counties shall, at least thirty days before any general election, * * * make out and deliver to the sheriff, coroner or other person to be designated by them, of their respective counties, three written notices thereof for each election precinct.” The form of the notice prescribed by the samé section, requires that the offices to be filled at such election shall be named therein. In this case the clerk, in the notices made out by him, named only the office of justice of the peace, and this appeal presents the naked question, whether such notices should not have included a.11 other offices of Lawrence county, which under the law are filled by election; or in other words how long are the appointees of the governor entitled to hold, and when should their successors be chosen. Turning to chapter 42, Political Code, providing for the organization of these Black Hills counties, including the county of Lawrence, we find that sections 1, 2, 3 and 4, defines their boundaries; section 5 is repealing in its character, and section 6 reads as follows: “ The governor is hereby authorized, and it is made his duty, when the country embraced within said counties herein described comes within the jurisdiction of this Territory, or as soon as practicable, and he can obtain the necessary information after the passage and approval of this act, and without the petition of voters otherwise required, to appoint for each of said counties three county commissioners, who shall constitute the board of county commissioners, one register of deeds, one sheriff, one treasurer, one judge of *444tbe probate court, one district attorney, one coroner, one superintendent of public schools, and one assessor; and said officers so appointed shall hold their offices respectively until their successors shall be elected and qualified according to law.” Section 7 relates to the qualification of the officers so appointed; sections provides for the election of justices of the peace at a special election; section 9 defines a quorum of the board, the duties of clerk, etc., and section 10, is as follows: “This act shall take effect and be in force from and after its passage and approval, and it amends and modifies all acts and parts of acts inconsistent with its provisions, so far only as it is necessary to carry this act into effect, but all other such acts, except those bounding and defining counties herein defined, are in force, except so far as this act governs and takes the place of other law.” This is all there is of special legislation relating to these counties, and we must look elsewhere for an explanation of some of the phraseology used in this act. It will not be contended but what these Black Hills counties might and could have been organized without any of the provisions of this special act, except those embraced in the first five sections, naming them and defining their boundaries. Sections 1 to 5 inclusive, of chapter 21, Political Code, clearly define the mode and manner, and confer ample power and ■ authority for the organization of new counties, and it seems clear that these statutes must be construed together, chapter 42 as being merely supplemental, for a special purpose, to the sections last cited. They certainly both have the same purpose in view and relate to the same subject-matter.
It is an established rule of law, that all acts in pari materia are to be taken together as if they were one law; and they are directed to b.e compared in the construction of statutes, because they are considered as framed upon one system and having one object in view. (Dwarris on Statutes, 189.) And the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Patterson v. Winn, 11 Wheat., 385, has laid down the rule that “several statutes that are in pari materia are to be construed as one statute in explaining their meaning and import.”
*445A very cursory examination of the statutes under consideration will conclusively show that they are in pari materia. and that the Legislature had the provisions of the general law (chap. 21) in view all the time when framing this special act. By section 6 of the act last referred to, the governor is authorized to appoint the officers for these counties, “ without the petition of voters otherwise required;” where and by what law required ? The answer is to be found in section 1, chapter 21, “ whenever the voters of any unorganized county * * shall be equal to fifty or upwards, and they shall desire to have said county organized, they may petition the governor, etc. Why were the Black Hills counties made, an exception to this rule? The Legislature took notice of the fact, which was notorious, that there were several thousand voters in these counties, without county government, without courts, and without any of the machinery of the law for the protection of life and property, and the various, vast and valuable interests that had sprung up like magic in that new country; the distance from the capital of the Territory, and there being no United States mail carried into the Hills, communication was slow and uncertain; the desire of the people for county organization was well known, and to have waited for petitions could have served no practical purpose, and would only have prolonged the rule of anarchy and confusion; therefore to save time and hasten the consummation of the purposes of the act, this provision was inserted and the petition dispensed with. And for the same good and cogent reasons, we apprehend, the governor was empowered to appoint all the other officers, except justices of the peace, for these counties. This, we think, is a satisfactory answer to the somewhat specious argument of counsel, contending that the provision authorizing these appointees to “ hold their offices respectively until their successors are elected and qualified according to law,” must refer to section 15 of chapter 21, and not to section 3, same chapter; and that unless their construction is adopted, “ all the legislation in chapter 42, outside of naming and defining the boundaries of said counties, was an idle exercise of power.”
*446Chapter 21 only authorized the governor to appoint three commissioners, who, after having qualified, should appoint all the other officers. These provisions to which we have referred, together with the one requiring justices of the peace to be chosen at a special election, are the only departures of importance from the general law governing the organization of new counties, found in this special act. Now coming back to section 6, chapter 42, where it provides that the appointees of the governor “ shall hold their offices respectively until their successors shall be elected and qualified according to Zero,” we are met with the question, what law is referred to? If this special act had stopped with section 5, could there have been any question as to when their successors would have been elected? Certainly not. Sections 2 and 3, chapter 21, provides that the commissioners app'ointed by the governor and the officers appointed by them “ shall hold their office until the first general election thereafter, and until their successors shall be elected and qualified.” The officers of Lawrence county were appointed and qualified in the spring of 1877; the “first general election thereafter” occurred on the Tuesday next after the first Monday of November, 1877. (Section 2, chapter 27, Political Code.) Reading these statutes together, can there be any doubt as to the proper construction? Why attempt to make these counties an exception to the well settled rule fixed by legislation governing the period for which persons hold under appointment to an elective office? As we have seen, under the general law relating to the organization of new counties, the officers appointed hold only until the next general election; and section 11, chapter 22, Political Code, provides that appointments to fill vacancies must be made to continue until the next general election and until a successor is elected and qualified; and my attention has not been called to any provision authorizing an appointment to an elective office to extend beyond the next general election, when the people may choose for themselves. We do not say this could not be done by appropriate legislation, but we say it has not, and courts should not, by a forced and strained construction in antagonism to the spirit and letter of general statutes, and the well *447recognized legislative policy of the Territory, do that which the law-making power has carefully and studiously avoided. Much stress has been laid by counsel for appellant on section 15, chapter 21, which provides that the officers of each organized county shall be chosen at the general election in the year 1878, and every two years thereafter. This section has reference to the election for a full term, providing that the election of these officers shall occur at the same time, and making the tenure of office and the time of its commencement, uniform throughout the Territory, and has no application whatever to cases of vacancy, or the election of the successors of officers appointed upon the organization of a new county. Were this not so, and were the construction insisted upon by counsel for appellant correct, then sections 2 and 3 of this same chapter, and section 11 of chapter 22, and the provisions of the section under consideration, could not stand together; for if their reasoning be good-in the case at bar, it must prevail in every other case involving the construction of these acts, and consequently no officer can be voted for to fill a vacancy or otherwise, except at the general election in the even years. This cannot be claimed to be the legislative intent.
Our attention has also been directed to section 8 of this special act, as throwing light on the question before us. This section provides for the election of justices of the peace at a special election to be called by the board of county commissioners, and enacts that the justices so elected “ shall hold their offices until their successors shall be elected at the general election in 1877, and shall qualify.” It is asked if all the officers were to be elected at the general election in 1877, why specify in particular the office of justice of the peace; and it is contended that the naming of one necessarily excludes all others. This by no means follows. The Legislature doubtless considered the law as to the election of the successors of the appointees, fixed and certain; but here they had created an anomaly, had authorized the election of justices of the peace at a special election: how long should they hold the office, and where is the provision of law settling the question?’ *448In order to avoid doubt and confusion, these officers were placed on the same footing with those holding under appointment, and their successors elected at the same time. Can there be any good reason for a construction that requires the officers chosen by the people to retire at the next general election, while those appointed must be permitted to hold over for a year longer? In the absence of any plain and unequivocal statute, we would hesitate long before placing a Legislative body in so unenviable a position befoi’e the people.
The view we have taken of the questions presented by this appeal, seems to be in consonance with the generally received doctrine as held in analogous cases. An article in the Florida constitution providing that “ when any office from any cause shall become vacant, and no mode is provided by this Constitution, or by the laws of the State for filling such vacancy, the governor shall have power to fill such vacancy, by granting a commission which shall expire at the next election,” was held by the Supreme Court of that State to mean that the power vested in the governorship is not a power to fill the office for the unexpired term; that power remains with the people; the power conferred is to provide an incumbent for the office between the date of the removal or death of the regular incumbent, and the filling of the office by an election by the people; and although the Constitution does not fix the precise time for the next election,” yet it is the duty of the authorities to see that the time of this election is not indefinitely postponed at the expense of the rights of the people. (State v. Gamble, 13 Fla., 9.) The same principles are enunciated in the case of McAlfee v. Russell, 29 Miss., 84.
Under a Missouri statute, providing that when any one of the judges of the county court shall vacate his office, for any reason other than the expiration of his term of service, the governor shall appoint “ until the next regular election,” a suitable person to perform the duties of his office, — it was held that the term of office of a judge appointed by the executive continues only until the next general election, and not till the next regular election of county judges. (State v. Conrades, 45 Mo., 45.)
*449The Constitution of Oregon provides that in case of a vacancy in the office of Judge, “ the governor shall fill such vacancy by appointment, which shall expire when a successor, shall have been elected and qualified.” This provision is quite vague and indefinite, and it does not appear that the Supreme Court of that State, were able to find anything in their Constitution or statutes that materially assisted them in construing it. Yet in the case of the State of Oregon v. Johns, 3 Oregon, 533, that Court say: “The people of Oregon by their Constitution made their judiciary elective, and only gave the executive power to fill temporary vacancies, which should occur between elections. If the people had intended to part with this power of appointing county judges, they would have expressed it; it cannot be inferred. No inference or intendment is ever presumed against the sovereign. Such is the universal rule for the construction of statutes, for they emanate from the sovereign power which, in this State, is the people. They appoint the executive, and he only acts by delegated authority, and this authority cannot be presumed beyond the express words of the grant. And I think the power in this case only extends to the filling a vacancy until the next general election, when the people can regularly exercise their authority in electing officers. I think it is not reasonable to presume that, where the people have reserved to themselves the appointment of an officer, they would confer on the executive the filling of a vacancy in the office, which would extend the time of the appointee bejmnd a general election, and deprive the whole people of a county from electing their local officers, when they could fill it as conveniently as they appointed the original-incumbent.” If this reasoning can be applied in a case involving the filling of but one office, how much more forcible will be its application to the case at bar, where the right of the people of Lawrence county to fill by election, not only one office but all their most important local offices, is presented for adjudication. And while properly speaking, there is no sovereignty lodged in the people of a Territory, yet Congress gave in our Organic act the power to the Legislature and governor to determine whether these *450officers should be elected or appointed, and the legislative power, true to the principles of republican government in its simplest form, provided for their election among the earliest enactments on our statute books, and there is no impropriety in saying that the right to choose their local officers, is lodged with the people of this Territory, and for the purposes of this case it matters but little how that right may have been conferred, whether by a Constitutional provision or an act of Congress, aided by their own legislation, the material point is, they possess it, and hence the rule of construction is the same, when various statutes effecting this right are under consideration.
We .are clear in the opinion that the voters of Lawrence county had the right under the law to choose all their county officers, that are elective, at the general election in 1877, and that the peremptory writ of mandamus was properly granted.
Two other incidental points are worthy of notice. Por what term or period are these officers elected, and when should they qualify? As the statute provides that they shall be elected at the general election in 1878, and every two years thereafter, except commissioners, it follows that the officers chosen at the general election in 1877 were so chosen to fill out an unexpired term, and that their successors must be elected at .the general election in 1878. On the other point as to the time when the newly elected officers should qualify, I think there is not much room for doubt or difference of opinion. The appointees are to hold until the next general election, and until their sue. cessors are elected and qualify; and in the absence of any statute fixing a particular time, the officer elect is entitled to the office and its emoluments as soon as the result of the election has been officially declared, and he has qualified as required by law. The appointments running only to the next general election, cannot by intendment or construction be made to extend until the first Monday of January, as contended by counsel for appellant; and section 9, chapter 5, Political Code, applies to the qualification of officers elected for a full term, and not those elected to fill vacancies or unexpired terms; it reads as follows: “Except when otherwise. *451specially provided the regular term of office of all county-township and precinct officers, when elected for a full term, shall commence on the first Monday of January next succeeding their election.” The words, “when elected for a full term,” necessarily excludes those not elected for a full term, and the fair and reasonable inference is that they are left to enter upon the duties of their office at once.
All the Justices concurring, the judgment of the court below isAFFIRMED.