172 Va. 470 | Va. | 1939
delivered the opinion of the court.
Pursuant to Code 1936, section 4675 (30), (Alcoholic Beverage Control Act) the circuit court of Campbell County ordered the proper election officials to open the polls on September 21, 1937, and permit electors of the town of
“We further certify that eleven ballots cast in said election were not counted because they were void.”
At second October rules, 1937, some twenty electors who participated in the election filed a bill in chancery attacking the validity of the election, and the return of the commissioners of election on three grounds: (1) That the ballots were counted in secrecy and in violation of Code, section 177, (2) that there was a discrepancy in the number of votes cast and the number of ballots returned, and (3) that eleven ballots were illegally rejected. The three election judges and the three clerks, one of whom served only a part of the day, were named respondents in the bill.
Mrs. Emory Cundiff, one of the judges of election, was the only respondent who made any defense to the suit. She demurred to the bill on the ground that a court of equity has no jurisdiction to determine a contest of an election. After her demurrer was overruled, she filed an answer in which she charged that some twenty-one other votes cast in the election were invalid.
At the conclusion of the introduction of the testimony, which was heard ore tenus, the trial court entered a final decree, which, in part, reads as follows: “ * * * it further appearing to the Court from the aforesaid evidence
While there are five assignments of error, the only question presented is whether a court of equity has jurisdiction to hear and determine the contest of an election held under Code 1936, section 4675 (30).
Section 39 of the Constitution declares that the legislative, executive and judicial departments shall be separate and distinct so that neither exercise the power properly belonging to the others, nor any person exercise the power of more than one of them at the same time. Section 36 provides that “the general assembly shall enact such laws as are necessary and proper for the purpose of securing the regularity and purity of general, local and primary elections, and preventing and punishing any corrupt practices in connection therewith; * * * .” Section 56 further provides
The General Assembly has exercised the power thus conferred upon it by making elaborate provision for the contest in both primary (Code, section 247, as amended by Acts 1936, ch. 186) and general elections (Code, secs. 259-268, as amended by Acts 1936, ch. 186) of candidates to public office. In every such contest the act states with precision who shall be the complainants, the time in which the complaint shall be filed, the notice to be given, the parties who may reply, and the tribunal which shall have power to hear and determine the contest. In no event is either party given the right to appeal, as the acts expressly provide that the judgment of the tribunal having the conferred power to decide such controversies shall be final.
Provisions are found in Code 1936, secs. 674-e and 674-k, for the contest of a referendum to the qualified voters of a political subdivision of the Commonwealth on the question of incurring a bonded debt for the benefit of the public schools. In each of these sections it is stated that “if such contest shall not have been begun within the thirty days herein prescribed, the authority to issue the bonds, and the validity of the taxes necessary to pay the principal and interest of bonds, shall be conclusively presumed, and no court shall have authority to inquire into such matters.”
Code, section 2754, provides the procedure for the contest of an election held to determine the sense of the qualified voters on a bond issue for the removal of a courthouse from one site to another, confers jurisdiction upon the circuit court of the county in which such election is held to hear and determine such contest, and expressly states that “the judgment of said court shall be final.”
Prior to 1916, when prohibition (the Mapp Act, chapter 146) was adopted, certain acts known as the local option law were in force. Sections 581-586 of the Code of 1887 provided the method by which the sense of the qualified
While these acts of the General Assembly have no direct bearing upon the question presented in the case now under consideration, we cite them for the purpose of showing that in the procedure prescribed for an election contest, either of a candidate for public office, or of a referendum to ascertain the sense of the qualified voters on questions of public interest, none of the rules which govern a suit in equity are followed. It is significant to note that from the very organization of the Commonwealth in 1776 to date, there has been no case, at least no case has been cited by counsel, and we have not been able to find one, in which a court of equity has asumed jurisdiction on the sole ground that the question involved was the contest of an election.
These statutory provisions require the determination of every election contest to be decided with dispatch. In most, if not in all, the judgment of the lower tribunal is made final, thereby preventing the delay which would necessarily result if this court were empowered to review such proceedings. In view of the constitutional mandates, the pertinent acts of the legislature and the origin and history of the jurisdiction of courts of equity, it would seem beyond controversy that the public policy of this Commonwealth has been, and is to regard all contests of elections as purely political.
This court has held that if it appeared upon the face of the proceedings that the election was void a collateral attack could be made upon it in any proceeding. Chalmers v. Funk, 76 Va. 717; Haddox v. County of Clarke, 79 Va. 677, and Sanders v. County School Board, 158 Va. 303, 163 S. E. 394, 395.
In the Sanders Case, supra, we said: “The courts may hear election contests only when power is given them by statute. There is no statute law in Virginia authorizing the courts to determine the contest of such an election as is here under consideration * * * .”
It was held in Bull v. Read, 13 Gratt. (54 Va.) 78, that equity had jurisdiction upon the application of one or more of the taxpayers of a school district to enjoin a board of school commissioners from levying a tax until the validity of the act under which it was proceeding could be ascertained. This case was followed and cited with approval in Redd v. Henry County, 31 Gratt. (72 Va.) 695, in which the question of the action of certain election-officials was only incidentally drawn into the controversy.
It is now argued that this is not an election contest but an attempt to correct a mistake in the result of an election. Every election contest is instituted for the purpose of obtaining a different result from that reported by the commissioners of an election. This is usually done by proof that a legal fraud was perpetrated, or that a mistake in law or a mistake in fact was committed. The contest now under consideration was instituted by twenty citizens who alleged that as qualified voters of the town of Altavista they had a right to maintain this suit in equity. The bill contains a
It is, therefore, apparent that appellees base their contention on the inherent power of a court of equity to hear and determine an election contest, and it was on this ground alone that the chancellor entertained jurisdiction of the cause in the lower court.
In City of Roanoke v. Elliott, 123 Va. 393, 413, 96 S. E. 819, 826, Judge Burks, speaking for the court, said: “In the cases at bar, the judge was to receive the returns from the commissioners of election and to ‘declare the results, as shown by the face of the returns.’ This was a ministerial duty. McKinney v. Peers, 91 Va. 684, 22 S. E: 506. If, after stating the total votes cast and the number of votes for and against the change, he drew a wrong conclusion as to the certificate he should make, that did not render the duty
The judge of the trial court did not purport to act in the perforlhance of a ministerial duty in opening and recounting the ballots, but in his official capacity as chancellor of a court of equity, and it is in that capacity that we hold he had no jurisdiction to entertain the cause.
The General Assembly has the inherent power to prescribe the conditions and circumstances under which it may permit the sale of alcoholic beverages other than wine and beer within the town of Altavista. This it may do with or without the approval of the majority of the qualified voters within the town. It has seen fit to authorize or withhold the sale of such beverages upon the approval or disapproval of the majority of the qualified votes cast in an election called for the purpose of ascertaining their wishes. In determining this question the General Assembly provided the only method of ascertaining the result of the referendum when, without further provision, it placed this duty upon certain designated election officials. It has made no provision for the recount of the ballots after the returns have been made and the certificate filed. The General Assembly can, at its next session, repeal the whole or any part of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Act. The property rights of neither complainant nor respondents are involved in this litigation, nor would any property rights be infringed upon if the whole act were repealed. The entire subject matter is political. By express mandate of the Constitution the
While a few courts hold to the contrary, the great majority are in accord with the views herein expressed. See Hester v. Bourland (1906), 80 Ark. 145, 95 S. W. 992; Bass v. Katterfohn (1922), 194 Ky. 284, 239 S. W. 53; Hamilton v. Carroll (1896), 82 Md. 326, 33 A. 648; Litzelman v. Town of Fox (1936), 285 Ill. App. 7, 1 N. E. (2d) 915; Ulrich v. Clement, 124 N. Y. S. 133; Elliott v. Garner (1910), 140 Ky. 157, 130 S. W. 997; Markert v. Sumter County (1910), 60 Fla. 328, 53 So. 613, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 690; Parmeter v. Bourne (1894), 8 Wash. 45, 35 P. 586, 757; State ex rel. Woodruff v. Dortch (1889), 41 La. Ann. 846, 6 So. 777; Patterson v. Knapp (1907), 125 Ky. 474, 101 S. W. 379; Patterson v. People (1913), 23 Colo. App. 479, 130 P. 618; Darbonne v. Village of Oberlin (1908), 121 La. 641, 46 So. 679; Stamper v. Hall, 270 Ky. 164, 109 S. W. (2d) 386; and Larcom v. Olin (1893), 160 Mass. 102, 35 N. E. 113.
For the reasons stated, the decree of the chancellor is reversed, and a final order is here entered dismissing the suit.
Reversed and dismissed.