45 Mo. 340 | Mo. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the general election of 1866, plaintiff and defendant were candidates for the office of county clerk. The record shows that within eight days after the election the county clerk, taking to his assistance two justices of the County Court, proceeded to examine and cast up the votes given for the candidates, and gave
It is impossible to understand some of these preliminary pro-' ceedings. The record fails? to throw any light upon their inducement or the circumstances surrounding them; but it is presumed that this is but a chapter of the same controversy considered in some of its aspects in State v. Hixon, and State v. Bowen, 41 Mo. 210-21. The questions we are called upon to decide are purely technical, and their decision must be governed by views long settled and universally acquiesced in. After the first canvass, and the election returns had been regularly and lawfully made, it seems there was an attempt to make a new one, and that the governor’s commission was issued to the person declared to be elected on this second canvass. The notice required by the statute was made within twenty days of the second count of the votes, though more than twenty from the first; and we must first consider which was the official count referred to in the statute. Section 52 of the chapter of elections (Wagn. Stat. 573) provides that “no election of any county officer shall be contested unless legal notice of such contest be given in writing to the opposite party within twenty days after the votes shall be officially
But if the county clerk bad tbe right to recount tbe votes at all, be certainly could not do so after tbe expiration of the eight days limited by tbe statute, and after tbe matter bad been removed by notice of contest to tbe County Court. Tbe second canvass was a nullity, and tbe certificate under it wholly unauthorized. The “ official count,” then, referred to in the requirement as to the time of notice, was tbe count made under tbe statute within eight days of tbe election.
It is admitted that tbe notice of tbe intended contest was given more than twenty days after this official count, and tbe question arises whether this requirement in regard to time is peremptory or may be enlarged. It has always been held that where tbe jurisdiction of a court is made to depend upon tbe time either of giving notice or of taking appeals, tbe requirement is peremptory. And in construing tbe statute under consideration, this court has ruled, in Castello v. St. Louis Circuit Court, 28 Mo. 278, that “the fifty-fifth- section of tbe election law (same as § 52, Wagn. Stat.) provides that a legal notice in every contested election of a county officer must be given within twenty days after tbe official count. This is tbe longest period allowed for such notices. It may be requisite to give them before tbe lapse of twenty days, but they can not be deferred beyond that period in any case.” Wilson v. Lucas, 43 Mo. 290, was a contest of an election to tbe office of circuit judge, tbe statute requiring forty days’ notice. Tbe petition was dismissed because that requirement bad not been observed. This question is too well .settled, both upon principle and authority, to admit of doubt, and the action of tbe County and Circuit Courts in refusing to dismiss tbe case for want of notice was clearly erroneous.
Tbe contestant complains that inasmuch as tbe contestee took
The other judges concurring, the judgment of the District Court is affirmed.