delivered the opinion of the court.
A commissionership of highways is a town office. Its duties in counties under township organization are defined in chapter 121 of the Revised Statutes of Illinois on Roads and Bridges, while the provisions concerning election thereto are found in the Township Organization Act, being chapter 139 of the Revised Statutes of Illinois, and in the General Election Law. Section 1 of article 9 of chapter 139 is that “No person shall be eligible to any town office unless he shall be a legal voter and have been one year a resident of such town.”
The provision that the officer should be a legal voter is an addition to the law as it existed before the passage of the revised Act in March, 1874. Before that time the only expressed qualification was residence within the town for one year.
The qualifications provided for in section 1 of article 9 of chapter 139 have received another addition by an Act approved June 21, 1895 (subsequently amended by the addition of a proviso by Act of May 10,1901), which amended section 16 of article 1 of the same chapter. Said section 16 before amendment was as follows: “Of the commissioners of highways elected at the first election, one shall hold his office for one year, and one for two years, and the other for three years, to be determined between them by lot before entering upon the duties of their office, and until their respective successors are elected and qualified.”
The amendment of 1895 added to this the following pro- • vision:
“ And it shall be the duty of the commissioners of highways, together with the town clerk and supervisor to meet within ten days after the next town meeting after the passage of this Act in each town, and divide each township into three districts, to be known as road commissioners’ districts numbers one, two and three, dividing the township as near into three equal divisions as possible, taking into consideration extent of territory and population in making and forming boundaries of such districts, and a plat of each district to be filed in the office of the town clerk of said town. The purpose of such division is to have the different j>ortions of each township represented by a commissioner of highways, who is a resident of such district, and when a vacancy occurs such vacancy shall be filled either by election or appointment, as the case may be, by a resident of said district where such vacancy occurs.”
Counsel for appellees in this case claim that the effect of this amendment is to add to the qualifications required by section 1 of article 9 for a highway commissioner, residence within the road commissioners’ district for which he is elected for a year before the election. We see no reason for reading such a provision into the law. In our opinion, if the person elected is “ a legal voter,” a resident of the town for a year, and a bona fide resident of the road commissioners’ district at the time he is elected, his qualifications are complete when elected.
We are not called upon to decide what would be the effect of his moving out of the district after election— ' which is the point discussed in an analogous case by the learned judge of the Appellate Court in the Fourth District, to the opinion in which we are cited by appellees. People ex rel. v. Ballhorn, 100 App. 573.
Appellees disclaim any admission that there was a vacancy requiring an election on April 4,1905, or of the bona fides of the residence of respondent in Koad Commissioners’ District ISTo. 3 on that date; but we deem the stipulations and findings conclusive on these points, and that the only question for us to decide is whether Markiewicz was on April 4, 1905, “a legal voter” under the meaning of section 1 of article 9 of chapter 139 of theBevised Statutes of Illinois.
The correct answer to this question depends on another: What is meant by a legal voter in this statute ? A legal voter where, and in what body of electors? The answer to this seems to us plain, in view of the conceded fact with the statement of which this opinión begins—that a commissioner of highways is a town officer, as much so as a supervisor or a £own clerk, to be voted for by all the qualified electors of the town, and not by the qualified electors only of the road commissioners’ district of which he is a representative and must be a resident. The phrase, a legal voter, must mean “ a legal voter of the town.”
The main question then is, “Was the respondent, Markiewicz, a legal voter of the town of Lemont, April 4, 1905?” The appellees contend and the court below found that he was not, because although he was at that time a male citizen of the United States over twenty-one years of age, and had resided in State, count}7 and town for the year next preceding, he had not resided in “the election district” for the thirty days next preceding that' date, and therefore could not legally (and as a matter of fact did not) himself vote at the election.
With this position we cannot agree. We think that the respondent was a legal voter of the town of Lemont on the day of the election. It is true that section 1 of article 7 of the Constitution of Illinois on Suffrage provides that “every person having resided in this State one year, in the county ninety days, and in the election district thirty days next preceding any election therein, * * * who shall be a male citizen of the United States above the age of twenty-one years, shall be entitled to vote at such election”—but it is to be noted that this constitutional provision does not purport to be a definition of “a legal voter”—a term not used therein. -It is a statement of what constitutes a qualified elector at any given election. A qualified elector for a given election is one thing; “a legal voter” is another, and the latter phrase may vary in meaning according to the context and purpose in and for which it is used. This is well illustrated in a case to which appellees have cited us—Sanford v. Prentice, 28 Wisconsin, 362. This case is not in point as cited, but it is useful in showing the distinction we have indicated. In that case the question was whether a particular tax, which needed the assent of “a majority of the legal voters,” had been validated by an election at which a majority of.those voting, but not a majority of the qualified voters of the district, had approved it. The court pointed out the difference between the term “qualified electors” and “legal voters,” and held that in the la/w under consideration “legal voters” meant only those actually voting.
The distinction pointed out between “qualified electors” and “legal voters” is just as valid when it operates differently. It would be a reductio ad absurdum of appellees’ argument to say that, if a law of Wisconsin had limited the holding of office in that district to legal voters, a qualified elector was not eligible, because he had not voted at any particular election in it.
We think that in the case at bar it is equally an absurdity to suppose that the respondent was not eligible as highway commissioner, because he did not in fact vote for himself or somebody else April 4, 1905, and we think that even if he were not a qualified elector, he might be a legal voter under the meaning of the Township Organization Act.
When the Legislature in the revision added the qualification of being “a legal voter” to the one year’s residence in the town before required for incumbency of township office, we think it intended merely to place beyond doubt the proposition that no unnaturalized citizen or minor should be eligible. In this view we should hold Markiewicz to be “a legal voter” of the town and eligible, although on April 4, 1905, he was, because of his removal from one election district in the town to another within the thirty days preceding, for the nonce not a qualified elector for the office to which he was chosen.
There is confirmation of this view in the fact that he was a qualified voter of the town on that day, even if he were not a qualified elector at that election. There can be no doubt whatever that the annual election at which he was elected was, under the statute, a part or element of the annual town meeting at which the miscellaneous business of the town could be transacted at one of the several polling places. It does not matter whether any such place was designated or any business done thereat or not. It could have been done, and at that place Markiewicz, as a male citizen of the United States over twenty-one years old and a resident of the town for a year, could have voted. For that purpose, at least, the language of the Election Act, chapter 46 of the Revised Statutes, section 29, is in full force. “ In counties under township organization each town shall constitute an election precinct.” In this sense, therefore, there can be no doubt that Markiewicz was a legal voter of the town of Leraont on April 4, 1905.
But we might go further. The Supreme Court in Williams v. Potter, 114 Ill. 628, held "that for the purposes not only of the town meeting for miscellaneous business, but for the purposes of a town election for town officers, there can be but one precinct, and that, co-extensive with the boundary of the town, that all the polling places or “election districts” for the purposes of a town election as distinguished from other elections are open to ail the voters of the town alike, subject only to the limitation that no one shall vote at more than one place. In that view Markiewicz was not only “a legal voter,” but a qualified elector at the election on April 5, 1905. That he abstained from voting is, we have already indicated, of no importance.
The distinction which appellees attempt to draw between the laws in force relating to this matter when the case of Williams v. Potter arose, and those in force in 1905, is not valid. We have carefully examined the laws then in force regarding elections and township organization, and the laws as subsequently amended, and we can see no change which alters the principle involved. The election law now, as then, provides that in counties under township organization each town shall constitute an election precinct. It now provides that the county board shall provide different polling places when the number of voters reaches a certain figure; it then provided that it might do so. But that does not change the principle involved, which makes a distinction between the township elections and all others. Then, as now, the Township Organization Act provided (sec. 68, chap. 139) that “the general laws of the state in regard to elections and qualifications of voters shall apply to all elections held under this Act so far as the same may he applicable, except as hereinafter provided.” Counsel for appellees are forced in their attempt to withdraw the case at bar from the operation of the principles laid down by the Supreme Court in Williams v. Potter, to assert that the reasoning of said decision is unsound and in disregard of the law as it then existed. We do not agree with this contention, and would not be at liberty to adopt it if we did. Counsel cannot expect us to follow even Mr. Haines’ opinion in his excellent compilation of the Township Laws of Illinois against that of the court of last resort of the State. If the announcement of the principle noted was a dictum, in Williams v. Potter, it was at least a judicial dictum, which we are bound to respect. Law v. Grommes, 158 Ill. 492.
The technical objections made by appellees to the sufficiency of the bill of exceptions are not well taken.
We are of the opinion that the respondent is entitled to exercise the office from which he was ousted by the judgment of the Circuit Court, and that judgment is reversed.
Reversed.