delivered the opinion op the court.
On the 4th of April, 1893, the appellee, Charles C. Fox, was elected by the board of council of the town of Danville, Kentucky, city attorney for the ensuing-year, and was to qualify as such attorney on the third Saturday in that month. The appellant, W. 0. Goodloe, had, on the 9th of April, 1892, been elected city attorney for the town of Danville for the period. of one year.
By the provisions of the charter of the town, one year is the length of the term of the office of city attorney, but the incumbent holds it until his successor is elected and qualified. This action is brought by the appellant to enjoin and restrain appellee Pox from taking the oath of office and entering upon its duties.
In the petition it is alleged (1) that appellee was not eligible to the office of city attorney, because he was then master commissioner of the Boyle Circuit Court; (2) that the election at which appellee was chosen city attorney was invalid, because it was not held on the day fixed by the charter, and amendments thereto, for holding such election; (3) that the voting by the board of council was by secret ballot, when it should have been viva voce.
A demurrer was sustained to the petition as amended, and plaintiff failing to plead further, his petition was dismissed. To review that action of the court, this appeal is prosecuted.
Section 165 of the Constitution provides that no person shall, at the same time, be a State officer or a deputy officer, or a member of the General Assembly, *630and an officer of any city or town, &c. The office of master commissioner is not one that comes within the inhibition of the Constitution. The master commissioner is not a State officer or a deputy State officer. One who holds that position is not ineligible to an election to, or to hold, the office of city attorney for the town of Danville.
Had appellee Pox been ineligible to hold the office of city attorney while acting as master commissioner, then, under section 5, chapter 81, General Statutes— which reads as follows: “The acceptance by one in office of another office or employment incompatible with the one beholds, operates to vacate the first” — ■ he would have vacated the office of master commissioner by accepting that of city attorney. This, we deem, a sufficient answer to the question raised that Pox could not accept the office of city attorney while holding the office of master commissioner.
To determine the question of the validity of the election on the fourth of April involves the construction of the charter of the town of Danville and the amendments thereto.
Under the third section of the act approved February 12, 1890 (Acts 1889-90, voh 1, pp. 321-332), amendatory of the various acts governing the town of Danville, the election of councilmen for the town was to be from the wards on the first Saturday in April. On the Saturday following their election, after taking the oath of office, they are to meet and organize by electing one of their number mayor of the town. Under this act, the councilmen hold their offices twelve months, which necessitated an annual election.
*631By an act amendatory of the act- supra, approved February 17, 1890 (Acts 1889-90, p. 759), the term of the office of councilman is increased to two years. The act did not change the -time of their election or the time when they should meet and organize.
By the terms of section four of the act of February 12, 1890, the board of council at their first meeting •after having elected a mayor, or at some adjourned meeting, if they saw fit to postpone the same, shall ■annually elect, for a term of one year, a city attorney, who may be sworn into office the third Saturday in April in each year. The time when the councilmen ■are to be elected is certain. When the board of council are to meet and organize by electing a mayor is equally definite and certain. The city attorney “may he sworn into office the third Saturday in April of each year,” but the terms of the act do not make it imperative that he should be inducted into office on that day. Instead of a biennial election as in the case of councilmen, the city«attorney is to be elected ■annually. The council elected in 1892 were to elect a city attorney at the first meeting after the mayor was ■elected or at some adjourned meeting, which left uncertain and indefinite the day for his election.
The organization of the board of council, which was elected in 1892, was complete when they elected the mayor. Thus they had no organization to perfect in 1893, as the councilman who had been elected mayor held his office two years. As no organization of the board of council was to be perfected in 1893, no day was named upon which, or adjourned meeting provided ior at which, the election should take place in the odd *632yeai’s. As the city attorney conld take the oath of office on the third Saturday in April, it is reasonable' to infer that the election should take place in April in the odd year, oxx a day anterior to the third Saturday in that month.
■ The purpose of the act was to limit the term of the-city attorxxey to one year, and that the council should not hold the election to fill that office until it was fixlly organized by having a mayor to preside over their deliberations. If the act had provided that the city attorney shoxxld be elected on a certain day in April, for-instance the first Saturday, and anxxually thereafter, then we woxxld hold that the council should have held the election on that day. Iix the absence of such a provision of the charter, we are constrained to hold that the election of the appellee Pox on the 4th of April was valid. It is not claimed that it was not a free and fair electioxx, or that a majority of the board did not participate in it. It is xxot claimed that Pox was attempting to interfere with the appellant in the discharge of his duties as city attorney during the term for which he had been elected. The complaint was that he would take the oath of office on the-third Saturday in April, 1893, axxd enter upon the duties of the office of city attorney, which, we think, he had the right to do.
It is insisted that the election of appellee Pox was-invalid, because the voting was by secret ballot and not viva voce.
There is nothing in the charter which requires that the voting shall be viva voce or prescribing how the-voting shall be done.
*633Tlie contention is, that section 147 of the Constitution was applicable to this election, and the election being by persons in their representative capacity, the voting should have been viva voce.
Section 166 of thé Constitution provides that “all acts of incorporation of cities and towns heretofore granted, and all amendments thereto, except as provided in section 167, shall continue in force under this Constitution, * * * but not longer than four years from and after the first day of January, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-one, within which time the General Assembly shall provide by general laws for the government of towns and cities, and the officers and courts thereof as provided in this Constitution-”
Section 167 provides that “all city and town officers in this State shall be elected or appointed as provided in the charter of each respective town and city until the general election in November, 1893, and until their successors shall be elected and qualified, at which time the terms of all such officers shall expire.” * * *
When the election of appellee occurred, the charter and amendments were in force. They were continued in force by the express terms of section 166 until the General Assembly should provide by general laws for the government of towns and cities. By section 167 the officers of all cities and towns were to be elected or appointed, as provided in the charter of each respective town and city, until the general election in November, 1893, and until their successors are elected and qualified.
The General Assembly had not, when this election *634took place, passed general laws for the government of towns and cities. At the time of this election the General Assemby had not passed any law relating to the election or appointment of officers of towns and cities, and could not pass any law, to go into operation before the November election of 1893, that would change the method (provided in the charters of towns and cities ■and amendments thereto) of electing or appointing officers of cities and towns. This election was, and correctly so, regulated by the charter and its amendments of the town of Danville, and it was not necessary to make appellee’s election to the office of city attorney valid, that the voting should be viva voce.
Judgment affirmed.