Booth v. County Court

18 Colo. 561 | Colo. | 1893

Mr. Justice Goddard

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented is, whether the county court has *563jurisdiction to hear and determine an election contest between rival claimants to the office of mayor of a city of the second class. Section 12, article 7 of the State Constitution provides that:

“ The general assembly shall, by general law, designate the courts and judges by whom the several classes of election contests, not herein provided for, shall be tried, and regulate the manner of trial, and all matters incident thereto; * *

The jurisdiction to try election contests, therefore, must be conferred by statute ; and unless by some legislative enactment the county court has been designated as the tribunal for the trial of a contest of this character, the interposition of this court is properly invoked to restrain it from entertaining jurisdiction of the contest in question.

Counsel for respondent predicate the right of the county court to hear the contest in question upon section 22, page 199, of the Session Laws of 1885, which reads as follows: “ Contested election of town and precinct officers shall be tried before the county court, as hereinbefore provided for the trial of contest of county officers, so far as the same is practicable; ” etc.; and insist that the legislature intended, by the word “ town ” as used therein, to include cities, and to designate county courts as the tribunal to hear contests between rival claimants for city offices.

In our opinion this section is not susceptible of such a construction. It seems to us more reasonable to conclude that, if the legislature intended by it to cover contests for city offices, it would have said so expressly, and not have left it a matter of doubtful judicial construction by using the word “ town ” as including cities, and thus give to the word a sense different from that invariably given it in the general act relating to municipal corporations. Therein such corporations are divided into distinct and separate classes as cities of the first or second class and incorporated towns, and are referred to throughout the act as separate and distinct organizations.

It is not to be presumed that in this single instance the *564legislature omitted the' word “ city ” in legislating in reference thereto, with the expectation that courts would construe the word “town” as synonymous with, or as including, cities.

As a further and conclusive reason why the contention of respondent cannot prevail, is the fact that the legislature has expressly conferred the jurisdiction to determine contests for the office in question upon the common council of cities of the first and second class.

The general act relating to municipal corporations, under which the city of Highlands is incorporated, provides—

“ That the corporate authority of cities organized under this act shall be vested in a mayor and a board of aldermen, to be denominated the city council,” etc., Section 3863, p. 987, Gen. Stats.

By § 3369, p. 988 of the General Statutes, it is declared that:

“ The members of the council elected for each city shall, on the second Monday after the election, meet and organize the city council. A majority of the whole number of members shall be necessary to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business; they shall be judges of the election returns and qualifications of their own members,” etc.

That the legislature, in obedience to the constitutional mandate, intended, by the language used in the latter section, to designate the council in cities of the first and second class as the tribunal to try election contests between its members, we think is clear.

The adequacy of this provision to confer such jurisdiction is recognized in numerous cases. In Ex parte Strahl, 16 Ia. 369, Dillon, J., comments on a similar provision as follows:

“ What does this language mean ? # * * It must either have no effect or else it must mean that they may go behind the returns and judge of or decide questions which may arise in respect to these returns. That they can do so with respect to members of the city council proper is clear, and, indeed, is not disputed.”

*565To the same effect are: Linegar v. Rittenhouse, 94 Ill. 210; People v. Metzker, 47 Cal. 524; State v. Fitzgerald, 44 Mo. 425; People v. Harshaw, 80 Mich. 200.

The power to try election contests between its members being thus plainly lodged with the common council, and the mayor, by the express terms of § 3365, supra, being designated a member thereof, the contest of his election is expressly made cognizable by that body. Ex parte Strahl, supra; People v. Rarshaw, supra; Vosburg v. McCrary, 77 Texas, 563; County Court v. Schwarz, 13 Colo. 291.

If, as claimed by counsel for respondent, the failure on the part of the legislature to provide a mode of procedure renders an exercise of the power attempted to be conferred unavailing, it nevertheless is evident that the legislature plainty intended to confer the power upon the council; and this necessarily rebuts any inference that by the act of 1885 it intended to confer it upon the county court.

The proceeding instituted in the county court, which is sought to be restrained, is an election contest purely, and the sole question before us is, whether that court has jurisdiction to try such contests. Whether, if from any reason the designated tribunal is unable to try a contest, a claimant may resort to the action provided by chapter 27, Code of Civil Procedure, to determine his right to an office, it is unnecessary to decide. We entertain no doubt of the want of jurisdiction in the county court to try the contest in question. Let the writ of prohibition issue accordingly.

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