42 Fla. 348 | Fla. | 1900
On September 20, 1895, relator filed in the Circuit Court of Polk county his petition for mandamus against the plaintiffs in error, and an alternative writ issued on the same day, which was subsequently amended. The amended alternative writ alleged that relator was over twenty-one years of age, a citizen of Polk county and a registered voter in district No. 3 of said county; that on September 3, 1895, at a regular meeting of the board of county commissioners of said county he presented his application for a permit to sell wines, liquors and beers in said election district for a term of one year from and after October 1, 1895 ; that said application was in writing, signed by a majority of the registered voters of said district as shown by the registration lists of the district at the time of the presentation thereof to* the board; that said application was sworn to in manner and form and published as required by the statute prescribed, prior to the presentation thereof to said board; that notwithstanding relator had complied with all the requirements of the law in like case, said board being ill advised and neglectful of the. rights of petitioner in the premises
The amended return was demurred to, the ground of demurrer being that it failed to state facts which in law constitute a defence to the case made by the alternative writ, for-it (the return) is contradictory, uncertain, evasive and otherwise insufficient.
The demurrer to the amended return was sustained, and plaintiffs in error not desiring to> amend, final judgment was given upon the demurrer, directing a peremptory writ to issue commanding plaintiffs in error to perform the acts mentioned in the alternative writ. From this judgment plaintiffs in error sued out writ of error, which the court below directed should operate as a supersedeas, and plaintiffs in error executed and filed their supersedeas bond, conditioned, among other things, to pay costs and damages in case the judgment be affirmed, or the writ of error quashed, or the appellate proceedings dismissed by the appellate court.
One of the errors assigned is that the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the amended return and in rendering judgment against plaintiffs in error. The defendant in error has not favored us with an argument in support of the-judgment of the-court below, nor are we advised of the precise grounds upon which the Circuit Court based its ruling that the amended return was bad. A careful consideration of the case convinces us that the facts alleged in the return were entirely sufficient to defeat the application for the peremptory writ, and we fail to see wherein the return is contradictory, uncertain,
It is true that the first section of Chapter 3700, approved June 2nd, 1887, under which the election mentioned in the return was held, provides that within, three days after ordering the election the clerk of the Circuit Court shall appoint deputy registration officers in each voting precinct in the county and furnish them with proper registration books in which to register all persons who' may be entitled to registration under the laws of the State, and requires the deputy registration officers to register all persons entitled to registration as in case of general election and to return the registration books to the clerk of the Circuit Court at least five days before the election, and that the return in this case shows that the clerk of the Circuit Court did not comply with this provision in the present instance, but that per
The judgment of the Circuit Court is reversed.