The defendant and the intervenir took separate appeals from the judgment herein commanding the defendant to present to the hoard of supervisors of Sacramento County a petition praying for the election of a hoard of fifteen freeholders to prepare and propose a charter for said county, with his certificate thereon showing that the petition is signed by the requisite number of qualified electors. By stipulation the appeals were heard together.
*613 In so far as pertinent to the questions presented by the appeals,' the complaint alleges that the petition consisted of an original and two supplements; that they were signed by. a total of 3,602 qualified electors, ‘ each of whom at the time of such signing, affixed thereto the date of such signing,” and by 129 qualified electors who did not so affix the date of signing, and that the names on the original petition were subscribed during the month of July, 1921, and that those on the supplements were signed during the month of August and prior to the filing thereof. The complaint further alleges, and it was admitted at the trial, that the total number of votes cast for all candidates for Governor at the last gubernatorial election was 20,634, thus mating the number of qualified signers required by the constitution 3,095.
Giving due consideration to the rule applicable to conjunctive denials, the answer admits that more than the required number of qualified electors signed the petition and affixed thereto the dates of their respective signatures. The answer denies that the petition was signed cmd the dates .thereto affixed during July and August, 1921. The defendant further “avers that there were only 2,973 qualified electors of the county of Sacramento, at the time of signing said petition, affixed thereto the date of such signing, and had attached an affidavit purporting to be an affidavit of the person who solicited the signatures thereon, with the seal attached.”
The complaint in intervention does not deny that any of the signers of the original petition were qualified electors at the time they signed the same, and alleges that the supplemental petitions were signed by 388 “qualified electors of the county of Sacramento,” but further alleges, on information and belief, that the dates and ditto-marks opposite 966 signatures to the original petition and 189 signatures to the supplements “were not affixed thereto by said signers at any time but that said purported dates and ditto-marks were affixed thereto by some person or persons other than said signers, and that said purported dates and ditto-marks are false, fraudulent, fictitious and void, and that by reason thereof said petition is false, fraudulent, fictitious and void.”
*614 The defendant attached to the petition his certificate reciting : “That said original petition contains the names of 2,973 qualified electors who, at the time of signing, gave date of signing, and had attached an affidavit purporting to be the affidavit of the person who solicited the signatures thereon, with seal attached”; that on sections of the original petition there were 241 “names of persons who signed said petition, whose names did appear on the record of the registration of qualified electors of Sacramento county at the time they signed said petition and at the time said petition was filed,” but that to the sections containing 137 of these names no affidavit was attached and that to the sections containing 104 of such names proper affidavits were attached but to which affidavits the notary seals were not affixed, and that on sections containing 129 names no dates or affidavits were affixed; and that on sections of the supplemental petitions there were 388 “names of persons who signed said petitions whose names did appear on the record of the registration of qualified electors of Sacramento county at the time they signed said petition and at the time said petition was filed” to which no affidavit was attached.
*615
“If it should happen that names were forged to the petition in sufficient numbers to reduce the lawful signatures to the petition below the statutory requirement, persons legally interested perhaps might have a remedy, the nature and character of which we need not here decide.” (See, also,
Locher
v.
Walsh,
The manifest purpose of the law requiring the signers to affix the date of signing is to guard against signatures by persons who are not qualified electors at the time of signing. The pleadings admit that several hundred more qualified electors signed the petition than the law requires. Under such circumstances, to hold that the petition is insufficient would be to follow the letter of the law in disregard of its spirit. “The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life.” “No judgment shall be set aside ... on the ground of . . . rejection of evidence . . . unless, after an examination of the entire cause, including the evidence, the court shall be of the opinion that the error complained of has resulted in a miscarriage of justice.” (Const., art. VI, see. 4V2.) It is plain that there has not been a miscarriage of justice in this ease.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Burnett, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on January 12, 1922.
