20 S.D. 142 | S.D. | 1905
This is an appeal by the plaintiff and contestant in a contest proceeding in which the court adjudged Bangor to be the legal county seat of Walworth county. In 1904 an election was held upon a petition duly filed, in which the question of the removal of the county seat from Bangor,' situated some distance from a railroad, to Selby upon the line of the railroad, was voted on. Upon canvassing the vote, the board of county commissioners of Wal-worth county declared, as a result thereof, that the town of Selby had not received the required 60 per cent, of the votes cast at the election, and therefore that the county seat must remain at the town of Bangor in said county. The plaintiff thereupon instituted the proceedings to contest said election, claiming in his notice of contest that certain illegal votes cast in the various precincts of the count)1- had been improperly canvassed by the board of county commissioners, and that, excluding such illegal votes so cast, there were at least 60 per cent, of the votes of such county cast in favor of the removal of said county seat to the said town of Selby. This notice of contest was served upon the board of county commissioners on the 14th day of December, 1904, and no' answer having been served or filed within 10 days by the board, the plaintiff applied for judgment to the Honorable Frank B. Smith, judge of the Fourth circuit, at his chambers in Mitchell, for judgment by default, Judge Gaffy at that time judge of the Sixth circuit of which the county of Wal-worth constitutes a part, being absent from the state. Judge Smith entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and contestant on the 26th day of December, 1904. On the 22nd day of December, four days prior to the entry of judgment, Judge Gaff)'-, as judge of the Sixtli judicial circuit, made an order allowing R. C. Chesky, an elector of said Walworth county, leave to appear and defend said contest as such elector. A notice of this order was mailed at Aberdeen on the 23d day of December, addressed to “Albert Gunderson, Esq.,” who was the attorney for the contestant, at his residence in Ft. Pierre,
It is contended by the appellant that as no answer was made by the board of county commissioners or any of their number in behalf of the county, or by any elector of the county, within the 10 days allowed for answering by law, the judge of the Fourth circuit was authorized to enter the judgment vacated and set aside by Judge Gaffy, and that therefore the order made by Judge Gaffy was unauthorized and invalid.
It is contended by the respondent, among other grounds, (1) that the judgment rendered by Judge Smith at Mitchell was unauthorized, for the reason that, at the time said judgment was rendered, said Chesky had appeared in the action and was entitled to notice of the application for judgment; (2) that the judgment was unauthorized and invalid, for the reason that the affidavit of no answer or appearance upon which the judgment was rendered was insufficient, in that the affidavit only stated that the defendants had not appeared in the action, and failed to state that no elector had appeared therein. We are inclined to take the view that the respondents are right in their contention. Before the judgment was rendered by Judge Smith, Judge Gaffy had made an order granting leave to said Ches-ky to appear and defend the action, and notice of that order was duly mailed at Aberdeen to the attorney for the contestant three days before the rendition of the judgment.
It is contended by the appellant that this appearance of Chesky was insufficient, for the reason that the 'notice of his appearance was not served by some officer or disinterested person in the manner provided by section 1989 of the Revised Political Code, which provides: ‘‘Any person upon whom the notice mentioned in the preceding section may be served * * * shall within ten days after the service thereof answer such notice. * * * Said answer shall be served in the man
It is further contended by the respondents that Judge Smith was not authorized in the contest proceedings to enter a judgment within his own circuit in the absence of Judge Gaily, and that therefore the judgment was null and void (citing Holden v. Haserodt, 3 S. D. 4, 51 N. W. 340), but, in the view we have taken, we have not deemed it necessary to decide this question, and therefore we express no opinion in reference thereto.
On the trial of the contest proceeding, the facts were found by the trial court in favor of the defendants and the elector Cheskey, fully sustaining the action of the board of county commissioners in declaring that as the result of the election the county seat was not
The judgment of the circuit court and order denying a new trial are affirmed.