Gossard v. Vaught

10 Kan. 162 | Kan. | 1872

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Brewer, J.:

But a single question is presented in this case. Is a county-seat election held by order of the county commissioners more than fifty days after the presentation of the petition therefor, a valid election? The law under which this election was held is ch. 26, of the Gen. Stat., p. 296. As preliminary to such an election a petition therefor must be presented to the county board. > This must be signed by a certain proportion of the electors. Upon the filing of such petition it is made the duty of the county board to order an election. Sec. 5 of this act declares that “The election provided for in this act shall be held within fifty days after the presentation of the petition therefor; and the county commissioners shall cause thirty days’ notice of any such election, to be given by publication,” etc. In this case the petition was presented on the 16th day of February 1872, and the election ordered, and held on the 1st day of June —106 days thereafter. Was it valid? The rule by which we must be guided in deciding this question has been already' announced by this court in the case of Jones v. The State, ex rel. Atherby, 1 Kas., 273, where it was said that “unless a fair consideration of the *166statute shows that the legislature intended compliance with the provision in relation to the manner to be essential to the validity of the proceeding, it is to be regarded as directory merely.” This rule was followed with approbation in the case of Gilleland v. Schuyler, 9 Kas., 569, decided at the last term. That it is within the power of the legislature to make almost any step in the proceeding an essential one, admits of no doubt. Except so far as restrained by constitutional limitations, the time, the place, and the manner of holding elections, are within its control. It has in the present instance exercised that control, and prescribed when and upon what conditions an election might be held. It is conceded that those conditions were disregarded, or at least one of them. "Was that condition an essential one? We should not expect to find in the statute any express declaration that this or that provision was essential, leaving the inference that the others were not. True, we sometimes find words of prohibition so strong and clear as virtually to amount to such a declaration. But that is not the ordinary method of legislation. Generally the legislature prescribes the different steps to be taken in the conduct of the election, and there stops. No officer may rightfully disregard any. Each provision is to him a command, and if only the officer were to suffer a neglect of any, would vitiate the result. But the public is interested, rather than the officer. In the present case it can hardly be a question of any moment to the commissioners whether the co,unty-seat be at Eldorado, or Augusta. It probably is a question of some interest and importance to the people of Butler county. It is hard, therefore, that the neglect or misconduct of an officer should work injury to the public. If the people have voted, why should the acts of their agents, be they what they may, ever defeat the result of that vote? •One obvious reason is, that in the preservation of certain forms is found protection to the purity of the election. A disregard of these forms opens the door to and invites fraud. Hence it is proper that the legislature should prescribe rules ,and forms of proceeding, a disregard of which will in some *167•cases vitiate the election. It is not easy always to distinguish between what is essential and what is purely directory. It' was said by the supreme court of Wisconsin in The State, ex rel. Cothren, v. Lean, 9 Wis., 292: “We understand the doctrine concerning directory statutes to be this: That where there is no substantial reason why the thing to be done might not as well be done after the time prescribed as before, no presumption that by allowing it to be so done it may work an injury or wrong, nothing in the act itself or in other acts relating to the same subject-matter indicating that the legislature did not intend that it should rather be done after the time prescribed than not to be done at all, there the courts ■assume that the intent was that if not done within the time prescribed, it might be done afterwards. But when any of these reasons intervene, then the limit is established.” It is ■an old rule that time and place are of the substance of an election. This has its exceptions and limitations. Yet when the legislature has named a day on which an election shall be held, an election on any other day is void, and confers nothing. So when the proper authorities have designated •certain places for the polls, an unnecessary removal to remote places will vitiate the election. Here the legislature has not named the day, or the month, but it has placed bounds within which it must be held, not less than thirty, that being the time of publication of notice, nor more than fifty days from the presentation of the petition. One reason of the rule above given is to avoid confusion and bring' full knowledge of the election to each voter. Proclamation by the sheriff in a general election is required as well as publication of notice in this. Yet a proclamation naming a day other than that fixed by the statutes, followed by an election at that time, would be void. Knowledge of the time of an election is not obtained simply from a proclamation or a notice. Every one is supposed to know the law. As a matter of fact there is a general wide-spread information concerning the provisions of the statutes in reference to elections. Probably as many obtain their knowledge from the statute book as' from proclama*168tion or notice. True, the statutes do not convey as accurate information concerning a county-seat as a general election. Yet a movement toward a county-seat election is a matter of public notoriety. A petition must be signed by a large proportion of the people. Action must be taken by the county board thereon. This gives general information. They have the statute declaring that county-seat elections must be held within fifty days after presentation of the petition. The fifty days pass; no notice is published, no time fixed. Can they not turn their attention to other matters, or must they remain on constant watch for notice of an election ? If an election can be held at any time thereafter, upon thirty days’ notice, there is a fair probability of its being held unknown to many of the voters. ' For if valid when held 106 days after presentation, it would be equally so 206 or 306-days thereafter. There is thus a presumption that by allowing such an election to stand, an injury and wrong may be done to some citizens, and therefore it comes within the scope of one of the tests laid down in the Wisconsin case above quoted. Again, if the county commissioners may wait 106 days, they may wait longer. They may watch and wait until sometime when many of the voters are absent on business or pleasure, and so deprive a large number of those interested of their choice in the matter, or until there has-been a great increase or decrease in the population, and that population then desires no agitation of the question, and no-expense of an election. This again shows a possibility of wrong and injury. And again, the county-seat question is a vexatious, annoying, deranging question. Parties arrange-business, and establish homes, with reference to the county-seat. It becomes the center of many interests. Roads are opened, and local improvements made, with reference to it. Let it once be permanently established, and many elements of growth and prosperity will gather about it. County buildings must be erected. County records are there.' Public business-is there transacted. Lawyers’ offices abound. Courts are-held. Conventions meet. Railroads seek it. Travel passes-*169thither. Merchants seeking the county trade, locate. Each helps the other, and all tend to mutual prosperity. The very zeal and persistence with which county-seat contests are conducted is abundant proof of the general estimation of the value of such seats. The legislature could not have been ignorant of these things, and must be supposed to have legislated concerning them. Conceding the right of every county to change its county-seat whenever the public interests demanded, it nevertheless saw the necessity of a speedy termination of any question of change. If a change was necessary, let it be made, and that speedily. If unnecessary, let it be so decided, and as speedily. For while undecided, and in controversy, all these elements of growth and prosperity are still, and the whole county suffers, as well as individual towns. "Values are unsettled; improvements stop; county commissioners are loth to add county buildings, for the people may abandon all and locate the county-seat elsewhere. The merchant waits till the question is terminated before he establishes business; and if the contest is protracted, moves on to some other county. Noplace is benefited; some are injured, and the whole county suffers. Hence the public good requires a speedy termination. In view of this, we must suppose the legislature acted. And having fixed the time within which such an election must be held, it seems to us it intended that compliance with this requirement should be essential to its validity. It may perhaps be worthy of notice, though only a slight circumstance, that the requirement of notice and the limitation of fifty days are both in the same section, and couched in the same terms of obligation. The-publication of notice comes plainly within the decision in 1 Kas., 273, as essential to the validity of the election. Does it not seem reasonable that the legislature intended that both should be essential? "We are led to the conclusion that the district court erred in its ruling, and the case will be remanded with instructions to reverse the order refusing a temporary injunction, and to proceed further in accordance with the views herein expressed.

All the Justices concurring.