149 P. 960 | Mont. | 1915
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the general election held in November, 1914, the towns of Baker and Ekalaka were rival candidates for the permanent county seat of Fallon county. The canvassing board returned that Baker received the highest number of votes, and this proceeding was instituted to contest the election. A demurrer to the petition was sustained, and contestant, electing to stand on his pleading, suffered judgment, of dismissal to be entered against him and appealed.
The only question necessary to be decided is: Do the laws
For many years we have had an effective election contest statute (secs. 7234-7249, Rev. Codes), but prior to the time the Corrupt Practices Act was adopted, in November, 1912 (Laws 1913, p. 593), an election to office was the only subject of contest. Our inquiry is directed, then, to ascertain to what extent, if at all, existing statutes upon the subject of election contests were enlarged or extended by this latter Act. A comparison of the two statutes may be made most advantageously by considering the subject under the three general heads: (a) Who may contest; (b) what may be contested; and (e) what are the grounds of contest.
Section 7234, Revised Codes, provides: “Any elector of a county, town or city, or of any political subdivision of either, may contest the right of any person declared to be elected to an office to be exercised therein, for any of the following causes. * * * ” Section 45 of the Corrupt Practices Act provides:
The grounds of contest under the earlier Act are enumerated in section 7234, above; under the later Act, in section 45, above. In point of fact, the change effected is slight. The later statute defines with more particularity the Acts which constitute corrupt practices, as a comparison of its provisions with sections 8124^8175, Bevised Codes, will demonstrate. Under the Bevised Codes, a violation of the election laws was punishable by fine or imprisonment, or fine and imprisonment (sections 8168, 8169, 8170, 8171, 8172, 8173); under the latter Act, by fine or imprisonment, fine and imprisonment, or forfeiture of office (sections 37, 39, 50, 51). So far as the question before us is concerned, the changes indicated above are the only ones of consequence effected by the Corrupt Practices Act. Notwithstanding the very explicit terms employed in section 45, above, which seem to limit the authority of an elector to contest only the right of a person to a nomination or election, counsel for appellant insist that when that language is considered in connection with other expressions in the Act and with the title and manifest purpose of the measure, authority may be found by virtue of which this proceeding can be main
Section 38: “Where, upon the trial of any action or proceeding under the provisions of this Act for the contest of the right of any person declared nominated or elected to any office. * * * ”
Section 39: “If, upon the trial of any action or proceeding under the provisions of this Act, for the contesting of the right of any person declared to be nominated to an office, or elected to an office. * * * ”
Section 40: “Any action to contest the right of any person declared elected to an office, or to annul and set aside such election, or to remove from or deprive any person of an office of which he is the incumbent, for any offense mentioned in this Act. * # # ”
Instead of aiding appellant, these references apparently lend color to respondent’s contention that the authority to contest is restricted to an attack upon the right of a person, that is, a human being, declared nominated or elected to office. The term “persons,” however, is defined in section 10 of the Act, as follows: “ ‘Persons’ shall apply to any individual, male or female, and, where consistent with collective capacity, to any committee, firm, partnership, club, organization, association, corporation, or other combination of individuals.” An incorporated city or town is a municipal corporation; -and the argument is advanced that we have in these several sections recognition of authority for attacking the right of a city or town declared to have been chosen the seat of county government. The terms as employed in the definition are very broad, but we are satisfied that they were not intended to comprehend a candidate for county seat honors. The references above are all to -a person declared elected to office, and the same section also defines this term as follows: “ ‘Public office’ shall apply to any - national, state, county or city office to which a salary attaches and which is filled by the voters, as well as to the office of presidential elector, United States senator, or pre
In their extremity, counsel for appellant are driven to urge this court to adopt and apply the definition of'“persons” as given above, but to reject the definition of “public office” found in the same section. It is true that neither of these definitions is to be used exclusively. The opening sentence of section 10 is: “Terms used in this Act shall be construed as follows, unless (some) other meaning is clearly apparent from the language or context, or unless such construction is inconsistent with the manifest intent of the law.” Then follow the definitions given above and others not material here. It is not contended, and could not be, that a meaning of the term “public office” different from that given is clearly apparent from the language of the sections referred to or the context; but it is insisted that a construction of those sections in harmony with the definition thus given as an aid in the construction of the Act is inconsistent with the manifest intent of the law. If this be true, it would be interesting to know what purpose the definition was intended to serve. We agree with counsel that the object to be attained by this Act is to prevent corrupt practices in all elections. The same end was likewise in view in the enactment of the former Corrupt Practices Act, now found in sections 8121-8175, Revised Codes. We do not agree with counsel, however, in their assumption that the present statute seeks to accomplish its purpose in all cases through the medium of an election contest. It is clearly within the range of legislative activity to provide for a contest of every election, but that the Corrupt Practices Act does not purport to do so is fairly dedueible from its title as well as its text. The title of the Act follows: “A bill to propose, by initiative petition a law to limit candidates’ election expenses; to define, prevent and punish corrupt and illegal practices in nominations and elections; to secure and protect the purity of the ballot; to provide for furnishing information to the electors and to provide
In passing, it is worthy of note that certain provisions of the Corrupt Practices Act appear to be in direct conflict with the
The Codes and the Corrupt Practices Act provide for certain contests; they likewise provide severe punishments for violations of the election laws, and these remedies were doubtless deemed sufficient to make the statutes effective for the purposes intended. The laws of this state do not provide for a contest of an election for the location of a county seat, and for this reason the demurrer to the petition was properly sustained.
While a court of equity would intervene to prevent a city or
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.