Dissenting Opinion delivered by
Mu. Chief Justice Shields (with whom Me. Justice Neil concurred.)I do not agree with the conclusion of the majority in this case, as expressed in the opinion prepared and delivered by Mr. Justice Buchanan, and dissent therefrom.
It is not controverted that this case presents an election contest, of which the circuit court of Knox county had. jurisdiction, and which the petitioner, J. L. Lowe, as a citizen, voter, and taxpayer of the municipality of Knoxville, had the right to bring and maintain, provided his contention was supported by the facts, which are not controverted; the case being before us upon petition and demurrer, and sound in law. These propositions are abundantly established by the repeated decisions of this court. Adcock v. Houk, 122 Tenn., 275, 122 S. W., 979; Taylor v. Carr, 125 Tenn., 235, 141 S. W., 745; Marshall v. Kerns, 2 Swan, 68; Lewis v. Watkins, 3 Lea, 174; Maloney v. Collier, 112 Tenn., 91, 83 S. W., 667.
*501It is also uncontroverted that the provision of the charter of the city of Knoxville, granted to it in 19Í1 (section 30), providing for the publication of campaign and election expenses, and penalizing the failure to comply "with it by disqualifying the candidate so failing from holding the office to which he sought to be elected, upon which petitioner’s contest is founded, is constitutional and valid, and that a failure to comply with its terms by any candidate, in any election to which this section applies, would be good ground upon which to successfully contest his election.
The opinion of the majority, as I understand it, is predicated upon the conclusion that the charter, and especially section 30, requiring all candidates for city offices to publish in a daily newspaper, the day before the election, a sworn, itemized statement of their campaign expenses, and, within three days after the election, a like statement of their election expenses, was not in force when the election under which the defendant Heiskell claims the office of mayor was held, and that, if it was in force, the section requires only one publication to be made, and that within three days after the election, and -that such publication, properly itemized, was made within said time by the defendant, and that for these reasons the demurrer of the defendant must be sustained, and the petition dismissed.
I do not differ with the majority that a statute does not become effective until the time fixed for it to take effect, nor that statutes generally have a prospective effect and will not be given a retrospective effect, unless it *502plainly appears that such was the intention of the legislature. These are questions which have no bearing on the case, and the discussion of them merely tends to obscure the real issues presented.
The charter of the city of Knoxville under which the election being contested was held, and which the court is called upon to construe in this case, was enacted ipto a law' by the legislature April 20, and approved July 1, 191T, for the purpose of giving to the city of Knoxville the improved form of municipal government known as the “commission” form. Under the constitution all statutes take effect forty days after the adjournment of the legislature, unless otherwise provided for in the act, and the adjournment of the legislature of 1911 occurred in July of that year. The election in question occurred on January 20, 1912, about six months after the enactment of the law.
When this act was passed, Knoxville had a charter, and had officers elected thereunder, and it was necessary for the validity of the new charter that it take effect in all governmental matters at such time as would not interfere with those then in office during their official terms, and for this reason a clause postponing its operation in governmental matters was*put in it. It was necessary, however, that it go into effect previous to said-time so far as to elect persons to the offices created, who under said charter were eligible to fill them, in the manner provided by the new charter, to be installed im mediately upon the expiration of the ternis of the old *503officers, when the charter became effective for governmental purposes.
The question the court must determine is when the charter and its several parts became the law of the municipality. This is determined by ascertaining the intention of the legislature in the matter, and when that is ascertained, it is controlling upon the court. The entire charter must be looked to and considered in ascertaining this intent.
The rules governing the interpretation and construction of statutes are well known and free from doubt.
“The fundamental rule,” says Judge Cooper, speaking for the court in the case of Brown v. Hamlett, 8 Lea, 735, “of construction of all instruments', is that the intention shall prevail, and for this purpose the whole of the instrument will be looked to. The real intention will always prevail over the literal use of terms. Legislative acts fall within the rule, and it has been well said that a thing which is within the letter. of. a statute is not within the statute, unless it be within the intention of the lawmakers.”
And in Gold v. Fite, 2 Baxt., 248, 249, it is said: “A thing which'is within the intention of the makers of a statute is as much within the statute as if it were within the letter. And a thing which is within the letter of the statute is not within the statute, unless it be within the intention of the makers, and such construction ought to be put upon it as does not suffer it to be eluded.”
*504It has also been held that:
“The occasion of the enactment of a law may always be referred to in interpreting and giving effect to it. The court should place itself in the situation of the legislature, ascertain the necessity and probable object of the statute, and then give such construction to the language used as to carry the intention of the legislature into effect, so far as it can be ascertained from the terms of the statute itself.” People v. Supervisors of Columbia County, 43 N. Y., 130.
In Maxey v. Powers, 117 Tenn., 403, 101 S. W., 187, it is said:
“Statutes must be construed, if possible, so as to make them sensible, and to effect and carry out the purposes for which they are enacted. It is not to be presumed that the lawmakers will pass a defective and insensible act, or one in conflict with the organic law.
“And, in order to do this,” it is further said in that case, “the legislative intent will prevail over the strict letter or literal sense of the language used, and, in order to carry into effect this intent, general terms will be limited, and those that are narrow expanded.”
The charter of Knoxville, the statute we are considering, by sections 3, 4, 5, 6, 30, 39, and 45, provides for the election of a board of commissioners, to consist of a mayor and four commissioners, by the qualified voters of the city at large as therein provided, on the third Saturday in January, 1912, to hold office until September, 1915, when their successors shall be elected.
*505These sections prescribe that this election shall be held by the election commissioners of Knox county, and that they shall be compensated by the city of Knoxville for their services, and that the commissioners of election shall print the official ballots to be voted, in a certain form; they provide for the preservation of these ballots for one year, the manner in which' the election returns shall be canvassed and certified, and make it the duty of the commissioners to place the names of all candidates upon the official ballots who comply with the requirements of the act, and to keep open for inspection, at all reasonable hours, the records relating to said elections, and prohibit the commissioners and other officers from being armed while the election is being held or the returns canvassed, under certain penalties; and they provide “that every act or deed, whether of commission or omission, denounced by law as an offense in the case of regular State election, to be a like offense in the case of any regular or special election held under this act and be punishable in like form and manner.” They expressly provide- that the “commissioners of elections shall give bona -fide representation among the election officers to each candidate in said election, and malee an equitable and reasonable division of said election officers among the different elements represented by said candidates.”
They provide that no person shall be eligible to the office of mayor or commissioner unless he shall have been for at least one year before his election a citizen *506of the State and a resident of the city, and that the mayor shall be thirty years of age and the commissioners twenty-five years of years of age.
They further provide (section 6) : “That any candidate for election under this act who shall to any person pay, give, or offer to pay or give, or promise directly or indirectly, money, office, or anything of value, or who shall knowingly suffer any person to do so for the purpose of obtaining the vote or influence of any elector, or of obtaining his vote or influence against an opposing candidate, shall be disqualified as mayor or commissioner, in addition to the other penalties prescribed by law for such offenses.”
They further provide, evidently to aid in enforcing the above provision, to prevent bribery and for punishment for it (section BO) : “That every candidate for an elective office and every elective officer of the city of Knoxville shall, the day before the election and within three days after the election, file with the recorder and and publish at least once in a daily newspaper of daily circulation, his sworn statement of all of his campaign and election expenses itemized, and by whom such funds were contributed; and any candidate for an elective office and any elective officer failing to comply with the requirements of this act shall be disqualified from holding the office he seeks or has been elected to.”
These provisions relate to matters, for the most part, occurring and to be dated, or which may be done before the day of the election.
*507Tliese are the election lavs of the city of Knoxville, provided by the charter to govern elections for the offices of mayor and commissioners, and prescribing* the qualifications of voters in such elections, the eligibility of candidates for the offices of mayor and commissioners, and how they shall qualify themselves to be voted for as candidates for said offices, and penalties for failure to properly do so, the precautions deemed necessary to secure a fair election, and prevent, detect, expose, and punish fraud, corruption, and bribery of electors, and penalties denounced against election officers, voters, and candidates who shall be guilty of corrupt practices and otherwise violate the election laws, and fail to observe, and comply with all the provisions of the statute to promote the purity of elections, which was one of the chief and moving causes of the enactment of the new charter and the adoption of the commission form of government.
All these matters relate to the election of mayor and commissioners. There can be no election without some plan or scheme to be pursued, officers to hold it, electors to vote in it, a candidate to be voted for, and all are necessary, integral parts of an election, and a provision in regard to an election under the charter necessarily covers and includes them all, without specially mentioning any or each of them.
The provision of the charter providing when it shall take effect is section 44, and is in these words: “Be it further enacted, that for the purpose of giving the requisite legal notice of twenty days of the general *508municipal election, at which, shall be elected the first board of commissioners provided for herein, this act shall take effect from and after December 30, 1911; that for the purpose of electing the first board of commissioners, as provided herein, it shall take effect on the third Saturday in January, 1912, and for all other purposes it shall take effect and be come operative on the fourth Saturday in January, 1912, the public welfare requiring it.”
The particular clause of that section now to be construed is as follows:
“That for the purpose of electing the first board of commissioners, as provided herein, it [the charter] shall take effect on the third Saturday in January, 1912, and for the all other purposes it shall take effect and become operative on the fourth Saturday in January, 1912.”
The majority hold, as I understand the opinion, that this clause makes effective the provisions of the charter for holding an election on the day named of the first board of commissioners provided for, but not the provisions of section 30, requiring candidates to publish statements of their campaign and election expenses, and that this did not také effect until the entire charter became effective, one week later. Whether any or all of the other provisions governing the election officers, voters, candidates, and for the prevention of fraud are made effective in that section, is not clearly stated.
I cannot comprehend the process of reasoning by which this conclusion is reached. I cannot understand *509how any one of the provisions authorizing and governing the election can be held to be included and made effective, and not all of them. They are all component parts of one system. What reason is there for holding that part is included and part excluded? What reason is there for excluding this particular provision? What reason is there for not applying these important provisions of section 30, for the prevention and detection of bribery, to the first election under the new charter? The majority have not stated any; I can see none, and do not think any exist.
It is my opinion that, when the legislature provided that the charter should take effect upon á particular day for the election of the first board of commissioners of the city, it contemplated, meant, and intended that all the provisions of this remedial statute authorizing the election, providing when it should be held, who should be its officers, the electors therein, the eligibility of candidates therein, how they should qualify in order to be voted for and enable them to accept and hold the offices, prohibiting bribery and the prevention and detection of it, and, in express terms, the penalties of various kinds, among others, disqualification to hold the office to be filled, for any violation or failure to comply with the provisions made to secure purity in election should apply, be effective, and enforced.
These provisions are all to be found in the same statute, relate to the same subject, are of equal dignity and importance, and all prescribed to accomplish the same end. The most of them are absolutely necessary to the *510holding of an election, and the majority must have held that these were made effective. They all contribute to one of the chief objects to be obtained by the new charter — honest and fair elections, and the prevention of bribery and other corrupt practices in elections.
Can it be said, and does the majority hold, that none of the sections of the statute providing for holding municipal elections, who shall be the officers thereof, who shall be the voters therein, who shall be candidates therein, and their qualifications, the punishment prescribed for all who violate the laws controlling the same, and the disqualification of candidates guilty of the corrupt practice of influencing voters, were not in force when this election was held? These matters are no-more mentioned in section 44 than are the provisions of section 30, which they hold were not in force.
Can it be said that the other sections, prescribing the duties and prohibiting the unlawful acts of candidates, found in the charter, to te effect that they shall have been citizens of Tennessee and residents of the city for at least one year before the election, and that the mayor should be thirty years of age, and the commissioners twenty-five years of age, and that candidates who pay, give, or offer to pay or give, or promise directly or indirectly, office or other thing of value, or knowingly suffer any person to do so, for the purpose of obtaining the vote or influence of an elector, shall suffer the general penalties prescribed by law for such offenses,'and be disqualified from holding the offices of mayor and commissioner, were not intended by the legislature to be *511effective in tlie first election field under tfie charter, and does tfie majority so hold? I think such holding necessarily follows, that section 30, requiring itemized statements of campaign and election expenses to be published before and after tfie election, was not in force.
As stated, all these provisions are found in tfie same statute, were enacted for tfie same purpose, and what applies to, includes, or excludes one applies to, includes, or excludes all. Those I have referred to are not specially mentioned in section 44, and are not more excluded by the words of that section than is section 30, invoked in this case.
What is tfie distinction between these several provisions in regard to tfie qualification and disqualification of candidates, and tfie others made for tfie purpose of securing purity in elections? Why should one be in force and not the other? If those first mentioned are not in force, it seems to me there was no valid election. I do not believe that it can be field that tfie general assembly intended to make such discrimination without cause, and be guilty of tfie stultification that follOAVS it.
I do not believe that it wTas tfie intention of the legislature that one of the most important provisions intended to accomplish this purpose should not be effective in perhaps tfie most important election under tfie new form of government. Were they not all needed in tfie first election as much as any subsequent elec*512tion? As stated by this court in one of the cases referred to:
“Statutes must be construed, if possible, so as to make them”sensible, and to effect and carry out tbe purposes for which they were enacted. It is' not to be presumed that the lawmakers will pass a defective or insensible act.” Maxey v. Powers, supra.
In another case (Wise v. Morgan, 101 Tenn., 273, 48 S. W., 971, 44 L. R. A., 548), this court said:
“The legislature cannot be supposed to intend its own stultification, and therefore the courts will restrain the language of the statute, so as to avoid a construction that would lead to absurd consequences. The presumption against absurdity is probably a more powerful guide in the construction of statutes than the presumption against inconvenience or injustice.”
To hold that the legislature did not intend this important provision regulating these elections, prescribed by section 30, that candidates should make publication one day before the election of itemized, sworn statements of their campaign and election expenses, should not take effect until after the first election, while all other provisions for safeguarding and protecting the election should take effect previously, it seems to me convicts that body of the most consummate folly and absurdity, and makes them stultify themselves in enacting the law, yet providing that it shall not be enforced when most needed.
Section 30, providing for the publication of these itemized statements, is, as stated, one of the essential *513and integral regulations of the election. It is supplementary to section 6, which prohibits candidates from using money to influence and corrupt voters, and disqualifies them, when guilty, from holding the office sought, for the purpose of exposing and preventing bribery, and aid in the enforcement of that section. It relates to the qualification of candidates in the election. It prescribes a prerequisite to the election. It is necessarily and unavoidably included in the clause providing when the charter takes effect for the purpose of holding an election, just as much so as those providing for the day of the election, the form of it, the officers of it, the voters in it, and the disqualification for bribery of electors. No words need be added to include this provision. If it is not included, then all the other provisions authorizing the elections and to secure the purity of the same are not, and there was no authority for holding the election at all, and it was void, and does not entitle the defendant to the office of mayor. To my mind the legislative intent here is clear and explicit, and the court has no discretion but to enforce it.
The case of Maxey v. Powers, supra, involved the construction of a statute enacted for the purpose of redistricting Knox county. It contained a section providing that it should not go into effect until September 1, 1906, the day when the terms of the then justices of the peace of Knox county expired. It contained no provision in regard to holding elections to elect justices of the peace for the new districts created, which were radically different from the old ones. The election *514commissioners of Knox county recognized the existence of this statute, and held elections for justices of the peace according to the manner in which the county was redistricted, and justices of the peace were elected and qualified upon September 1 next thereafter. This court held that this action of the election commissioners was authorized, because it must have been the intent of the legislature that justices of the peace for the county should be elected in the new districts at the general election for that purpose, that to hold otherwise would have the legislature making no provision for the justices of the county, and it could not be presumed that such an absurdity was intended to take place. There was no provision there for an election, as in this case; but the evident intention of the legislature was given effect. -
It is said in that case in regard to the election held by the election commissioners:
“This they could do by reference to the redistricting act, 'although it was not in effect at the time the election was to be held. It [the redistricting act] had been duly enacted and placed upon the statute books of the State by the proper authority. While no rights can vest under a statute until it becomes effective, yet it is notice to every one of what will be the law upon the date it takes effect, and all must so conduct themselves as to conform to its provisions when effective. This is especially true in regard to public officers whose duties are affected by the law.”
*515So the statute under consideration had been enacted six months before the election, all candidates were charged with knowledge of its provisions and requirements, and they were charged with the duty of anticipating them and of so conducting themselves as to make them eligible to the offices they sought, when the election was held.
It is further held by the majority that section 30, when properly construed, only requires a candidate to file and publish one statement of his election and campaign expenses. This seems to me in the face of the plain terms of the statute. The language is:
“That every candidate for an elective office and every elective officer of the city of Knoxville shall, the day before the election, and within three days after the election, file with the' recorder and publish at least once in a daily newspaper of daily circulation, his sworn statement. of all his campaign and election expenses itemized, and by whom such funds were contributed.”
Here is an express requirement that the statement shall be filed and published the day before the election and within three days after the election. This necessarily requires the filing and publishing of two statements, if all the words of the statute are given effect, as must be done. A statement filed and published one day before the election cannot comply with the requirement that one be published within three days after the election, and the requirement that one be published within three .days after the election is no compliance with the provision requiring one to be published the day before *516the election. Without absolutely disregarding the phrases “one day before the election,” and “three days after the election,” it is impossible for my mind to conceive how only one statement would fulfill the mandate of the statute.
The object of the law is contrary to the construction of the majority. The purpose of the publication of a statement of campaign expenses before the election was that other candidates and the public might be apprised of any corrupt use of money made or intended to be made in the election, and the source from which the money came, and might take steps to thwart it. The publication required after the election ivas to furnish information of corrupt use that had been made of money since the previous statement aud on the day of the election, in order that the qualification of the candidate obtaining his election by bribery might be prevented, and his election contested, under the provisions of the charter contained in section 6, disqualifying any candidate ivho used money, or knowingly suffered it to be used, for the purpose of influencing the vote or votes of electors.
Clearly, two statement, one before the election and one after, are required to be filed and published. The defendant himself so construed the statute, and filed and published two statements; but the first was not published the day before the election, but on the day of the election, a day too late. Defendant’s counsel also construed the statute the same way, and did not controvert the necessity of two statements and two publications.
*517I am of the opinion that section 30 of the charter, along with all other provisions of the statute relating to holding elections, the electors therein, the eligibility, qualification, disqualification, and duties of candidates, were in force the necessary period before and upon the day of the election, and that the failure of the defendant Heiskell to file and publish, the day before the election a sworn and itemized statement of his campaign expenses (for his election expenses had not then been incurred, and would not be until the succeeding day, and were to be published in his second statement), disqualified himself as a candidate for the office of mayor for the term for which he sought to be elected. Such is the plain mandate of the lawmaking power, and the court has no powrer to disregard it.
I am also of the opinion that the two sworn statements which Mr. Heiskell did file in an attempted compliance with section 30 of the charter are wholly insufficient. They are not the itemized statement of expenses and contributions contemplated by the statute. I do not think the statement that he contributed f500 to the Democratic campaign committee, to be used by it in bearing the legitimate expenses of the campaign, such as office rent, clerk hire, printers’ bills, postage, brass bands, etc., is an itemized statement of his expenses. It is a mere statement that he gave a lump sum to the campaign committee for certain purposes, but does not pretend to be a statement of how the money was used. I think this statute contemplated that the candidate should use reasonable diligence to know what funds *518were contributed toward Ms expenses, and bow they were used. I believe that in contemplation of this statute tbe campaign committee are tbe agents of tbe candi1 date, and it is bis duty to ascertain wbat disposition they make of campaign funds and to publish them in bis statement.
It will entirely destroy tbe efficiency of this wholesome law to bold that tbe condidate may bide behind tbe campaign committee, bis o>vn agents. It will not do to bold that be or bis friends can place large sums of money in tbe bands of a committee, or others, to corrupt the voters in an election, and escape all responsibility. It is charged in this bill, and confessed by tbe demurrer, that $10,000 was used in this election. Suppose this sum bad been contributed by the defendant himself, and admitted in bis statement; would tbe court bold that be was not bound to give some account of bow this enormous sum of money was used in a municipal election, when it must judicially know that it could only be used for bribery and other corrupt purposes, in direct violation of tbe laws of tbe State and the provisions of tbe city charter? I think not.
The statute requires that tbe sworn statement be of all tbe candidate’s campaign and election expenses, itemized, and by whom such funds are contributed. The petition charges that there was contributed to tbe campaign fund, and used in tbe election of Samuel G. Heiskell, $10,000 or more. Yet the statement of campaign expenses which Mr. Heiskell published on tbe day of tbe election fails to make any mention of contribu*519tions by other parties, or that none was made by other parties- and his statement published after the election contains the statement that “there have been no contributions to me in the election,” but is silent as to contributions for campaign expenses. Neither of these statements contains any statement or reference to the $10,000 admitted to have been contributed to his campaign committee and used in aid of his election, or who made the contributions.
These omissions, in my opinion, make the statements fatally defective. It is immaterial that there were other candidates in this election, as the funds were used for Mr. Heiskell’s benefit along with those other candidates, and such expenses came within the terms of the statute. If candidates can be allowed to contribute money to their campaign committees, and allow these committees to receive contributions from others, and be excused from making statements of how these funds were used, then the statute is a dead letter, a more empty form. The legislature never intended that this should be done. The .campaign committee are the agents of the vcandi-date. They represent him, and expend money for him, and he must ascertain from them from what source the money was received, how they expended it, and show it in his statement. The principal cannot escape responsibility for the acts of his agents within the scope of their agency, and especially when he seeks to reap the benefits of their conduct. This is familiar law.
The construction of a similar statute came before the *520courts of Pennsylvania, and it was held (as stated in the syllabus) :
“That the account of a candidate for nomination, showing expenditures made in his behalf to secure the nomination, is insufficient under the act of March 5, 1905, if it shows moneys paid by the candidate to individual agents of his own to be used on his behalf, but fails to show for what purposes the moneys thus intrusted to the agents were used.”
And further: “The account which merely exhibits the fact that the candidate has deposited money in the hands of an agent to be used for legitimate expense and does not show the persons to whom, and the purposes for which, the agent paid the money, is not such £a full, true, and detailed account’ as said act of March 5, 1905, plainly contemplated.”
Further: “To be a true account, within the spirit and intent of the act, it must set forth each and every sum of money disbursed by the candidate, whether' personally or by his agent, for election expenses, and the date of each disbursement, the name of the person to whom paid,, and the object or purpose for which the same was disbursed; and, moreover, the account must be accompanied by vouchers for all sums expended exceeding $10 in amount. Filing the receipts of his agents for the money spent by him in their hands does not meet the requirements of the act.” In re Umbel, 231 Pa., 94, 80 Atl., 541. To the same effect is the case of Healy v. State, 115 Md., 377, 80 Atl., 1074.
*521In Ohio, a similar statute came under review of the courts, and it was held that it makes no difference whether the candidate expends the money directly and out of his OAvn pocket, or whether it was paid for him and for his benefit by his agents and friends. State v. Good, 8 Ohio Dec., 401.
Nor can I agree to the view the majority take of the $15 which Mr. Heiskell in his last statement of election expenses says he paid to Mr. Woods, without any explanation for what purpose it was paid or used. The legislature has made no distinction between large and small sums, and the court has no authority to do so. Defendant should have stated for what use or expense this sum was applied. It is a small sum compared with the $10,000 that was used in this election; but who can say that it did not influence Avrongfully the fourteen voters which constitutes Mr. Heiskell’s’ majority over his opponent?
The provisions of the charter (section 6) disqualify candidates for holding office when they have been guilty of using money, directly or indirectly, to influence voters in their behalf. One object of requiring a sworn statement of them is to deter them from so using money, as the publication of the fact would disqualify them from holding the offices to which they may be elected.
One of the primary objects of the commission form of government given the city by the new charter was to free its government of graft, corruption, and bribery in elections, and the administration of municipal affairs, which it has been said is the curse of American munici*522pal government. Section 36, requiring publicity of campaign and election expenses, is one of the means relied upon to effect this purpose. It is well known that the use of money in elections, national, State, and municipal, is the greatest menace to our republican institutions. This evil has challenged the attention of the entire nation, and been the subject of much legislation, both State and federal.
It is comparatively of little importance who holds the office of mayor of Knoxville for the present term, but it is unfortunate that the wholesome provision of the charter of the city, intended to secure the purity of elections and prevent and punish bribery and corrupt practices, should be substantially emasculated by what seems to me a too rigid construction of the law.
The provisions in question are remedial in their nature, and should be given a broad and liberal construction to suppress the evil which the Legislature intended to prevent. It is said in a late work of authority that “laws enacted in the interest of public welfare, . . . for the prevention of fraud, for providing remedies against either public or private wrongs, shall be liberally construed with the view of promoting the object in the mind of the legislature.” Cyc., vol. 36, 1173, 1174.
Mr. Sutherland in his work on Statutory Construction (section 336), says: “Remedial statutes are such as the name implies, embracing a great variety in detail. Those enacted to afford a remedy, or to improve and facilitate remedies existing, for the enforcement of *523rights and the redress of injuries, and also those intended for the correction of defects, mistakes, and omissions in the cítíI institutions and administrative policy of the State.”
And in section 582: “The law favors a liberal construction of certain statutes, to give them the most beneficial operation. When they are liberally construed, the principles which induce strict construction are not lost sight of nor ignored. Liberal construction is given when these principles do not so antagonize- it as to make it unjust. Two classes of -statutes are liberally construed — remedial statutes, and statutes which concern the public good or the general welfare.”
These rules, in my opinion, should be applied in the construction of this undoubted remedial law, and, when applied, the terms and provisions of it are clearly and unmistakably in favor of the contention of the petitioner.
I am of opinion that Mr. Heiskell failed to comply with the charter, by making publication of his campaign and election expenses, in time and form, as prescribed by its provisions, which are component parts of the constitution of the municipality, the chief executive of which he aspires to be, and that by the express terms of this' constitution he is disqualified from holding that office for the term for which he was a candidate, and, therefore, that the petition should be sustained, and he be enjoined from qualifying and assuming the duties, powers, and emoluments of mayor of the city.
Mr. Justice Neil concurs in the views herein expressed and joins in this dissent.