10 Or. 345 | Or. | 1882
By tbe Court,
This action was a contest for the office of sheriff of Grant county under the provisions of title 4, chapter 14 of the miscellaneous laws, page 574. The appellant claims that he was elected sheriff of said county at the general election
Two grounds of error are assigned. 1. It was error to count the votes of the precinct,'if section 35, mis. laws, p. 573, is to be regarded as mandatory. 2. It was error to try the case at chambers, the statute authorizing it being unconstitutional. These objections will be considered in the order they are made. The general doctrine seems to be well settled that the acts of judges of elections and canvassing boards in forwarding the returns are purely ministerial, (McCrary on Elections, sec. 84, 85, and authorities there cited,) and that statutes relating to them are merely directory. In ex parte Heath, 3 Hill, 47, Mr. Justice Cowen says: “Nothing is better settled, as a general rule, than that where a statute requires an act to be done by an officer within a certain time, for a public purpose, the statute shall be taken to be purely directory; and though he neglect his duty, by allowing the precise time to go by, if he afterwards
The statute directs that on the tenth day after the close of the election, or sooner, if all the returns be received, the county clerk, taking to his assistance two justices of the peace of the county, shall proceed to open said returns, and make abstracts of the votes, &c., and it shall be the duty of said clerk immediately to make out a certificate of election to each of the persons having the highest number of the votes for members of the legislative assembly, county and precinct officers, respectively, and to deliver such certificate to the person entitled to it, &c. (Sec. 35, Mis. Laws, 573.) The vote of Catelow precinct was not received by the clerk until fourteen days after the election, and although admitted by the stipulation to have been regularly and legally cast, it is insisted that the court committed an error in counting the vote of that precinct. The purpose of an election is to ascertain, by the votes of the people, who shall be the public officers. It is true, as a general rule, the certificate of election, regular on its face, gives prima faeie right to the office, but here the stipulation admits that it is a certificate not based upon a majority of all the votes, but of a part, and by counting all, including the vote of Catelow precinct, the respondent is admitted to have received a majority of all the legal votes cast. The manifest intent of the statute is to give effect to “the expressed will of a majority of the legal voters, as indicated by their votes for such office;” (sec. 44) and so far as concerns the power of the court to ascertain
The next objection is that it was error to try the case at chambers, on the ground that the statute authorizing it is unconstitutional. It is said that when the law authorizes, or contemplates the doing of a judicial act, it is and must be understood to mean that the court, in term time, may or must do it, and the judge, in vacation, cannot, unless the power is expressly conferred upon him. (Lareo v. Casaneuva, 30 Cal., 564; Norwood v. Kenfield, 34 Cal., 331.) But here the statute expressly authorizes it, and that without in any way impairing the right of any person to contest any election in the manner otherwise provided by law. (Title 4, chap. 14, Mis. Laws, 574, 575.) The only reference cited to sustain this objection is sec. 1, art. 7 of the constitution, which provides that “the judicial power of the state shall be vested in a supreme court, circuit courts and county
Judgment affirmed.