Petitioner Hinkley, as a registered elector of Contra Costa County, circulated in that county a peti *207 tion proposing a new law in the form of an initiative measure to be submitted to the electors of the state under section 1 of article IV of the constitution. Petitioner Kurtz was one of the qualified electors of Contra Costa County who signed one of such petitions. When the petition was filed with respondent as county clerk of Contra Costa County a defective affidavit was attached—defective in that the circulator stated therein that he was a “resident” of said county, whereas the constitution requires that the circulator should be a “qualified elector” of the county in which he obtains the signatures. Upon the filing of the petition the respondent, in accordance with the terms of the constitution, examined the same and certified to the Secretary of State, as required, the number of qualified electors who had signed the same, first having been satisfied" by an examination of the records of registration that the circulator of the petition was a duly qualified elector of the county and that the petition was in due form. The respondent thereupon attached his certificate of such examination to a certified copy of the original petition and transmitted the same to the Secretary of State. Thereafter it was discovered that the affidavit attached to the original petition was defective in that it failed to state that the circulator was a “qualified elector” of the county. For that reason the Secretary of State refused to recognize the certificate of respondent covering said petition.
Thereupon a new affidavit was made by the circulator of the petition stating his qualifications in full as required and this was tendered to the respondent with a demand that he file the same and attach it to the proper section of the petition or that he permit the withdrawal of the petition from his files in order that the petitioner herein might attach the new affidavit thereto and refile the same. The respondent refused the demand upon the ground that to permit the alteration or removal of the petition would be to violate section 113 - of the Penal Code, which relates to the altering, mutilating, defacing, or removing of public records. In his answer to the petition for a writ of mandate herein respondent admitted that the original initiative petition and affidavit were in his possession and alleged that he had examined the signatures attached thereto as well as the qualifications of ■ the circulator and had certified them to the *208 Secretary of State as in accordance with constitutional requirements. Respondent then alleged that the new affidavit which Avas offered for filing was identical Avith the original except that the words “registered qualified elector” were inserted in place of the word “resident,” and that he refused to attach said affidavit to the petition or to refile the petition on the ground that to do so would be an alteration of the petition.
The affidavit is subject to amendment like an affidavit on a bill of costs, on motion for change of place of trial, on attachment, justification of sureties, and similar proceedings. When so amended the affidavit dates back to the time of the filing of the original.
(Burnham
v.
Hays,
Writ denied.
Langdon, P. J., and Sturtevant, J., concurred.
