192 P. 1111 | Utah | 1920
This is an application by the plaintiff against the defendant for a writ of prohibition. In view of the facts stated in the application and of the relief sought therein, we shall treat the application as one for a writ of review, under Comp. Laws Utah 1917, sections 7376, 7377, rather
An original application was made to said district court to correct the name of one Lillian Cutler on the official ballot, who is a candidate for the office of county recorder, by substituting her true name of “Lillian” in place of the name of “Minnie,” which latter name was erroneously certified to the county clerk and therefore erroneously printed on the official ballot. The application in the district court was based on Comp. Laws Utah 1917, section 2108, which reads as follows
“■Whenever it shall appear by affidavit of a candidate or his agent that an error' or omission has occurred in the publication of the names or description of the candidates nominated for office or in the printing of sample or official ballots, the district court, or judge, thereof, either in term time or in vacation, may, upon petition of such candidate or his agent, by order require the county clerk, city recorder, or town clerk, charged with the duty in respect to which an error or omission has occurred, to forthwith correct such error or show cause why such error should not be corrected.
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Pursuant to said application, the district court made the following order:
“Ordered that John E. Clark, county clerk of Salt Lake county,*148 state of Utah, he and he is hereby authorized and directed to correct said error, by causing all the judges of election in the several voting districts of said Salt Lake County to strike out the word ‘Minnie’ and insert the word ‘Lillian’ before the name ‘Cutler’ upon all official ballots, so that the correct name of said petitioner may appear as candidate of the Republican party for county recorder on the ticket of said party in the said official ballot, before delivering said official ballot to the respective voters at the general election to be held on the second day of November, 1920; petitioner to furnish printed or mimeographed copies of order for clerk and to furnish same within two hours from now, i. e., before 4:30 p. m. October 29, 1920, and to furnish rubber stamps; and it is further
“Ordered that said county clerk cause a copy of this order to be placed in a conspicuous place on the election supplies and delivered to at least one of the election judges in each of the election districts in Salt Lake county, Utah.” t
The applicant contends that the district court exceeded its jurisdiction or authority in making the foregoing order, in that it directs the correction on the official ballot to be made by the judges of election, whereas the statute requires that the county clerk shall make such correction. To our minds there is much force to the contention. In justice to the district judge, however, it should be
¥e are therefore constrained to hold that the court exceeded its authority in directing the- correction to be made by the election judges. In view that the order was made by the district court on the theory that it was “practically impossible” for the corrections to be made by the county clerk, all of which is conceded by counsel for the candidate, and in view that the correction cannot now be made by the county clerk as contemplated by the statute, the order of the district court should be, and it accordingly is, set aside and annulled, without cost.