136 Mo. App. 322 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1909
This action was instituted to contest the election held in the city of Columbia on February 5, 1908, held under what is known as the Local Option Law, article III, chapter 22, Revised Statutes 1899.
The vote was canvassed and the result declared on the 18th day of February, 1908, which was “against the sale of intoxicating liquors” in said city, as provided by said law. On the 27th day of said month, the plaintiffs filed a notice of contest which failed to state that they were voters and taxpayers, but did state that they were citizens of the city. The city of Columbia, its mayor,
On the 19th day of March, the plaintiffs filed an amended notice of contest in which was recited that they were citizens and taxpayers of the city. Prior thereto, the court made an order for a recount of the ballots cast at the -election. Thereafter, the city of Columbia, the mayor, the members of the city council and the city clerk filed an answer to the motion to contest, in which they stated, among other things, that they had no interest in the controversy as contestees and asked that the action be dismissed as to them. And, thereafter, the remaining contestees filed a motion to dismiss all of said proceedings on several grounds, among which were assigned the following, “Because there is a defect of parties contestees,” and, “Because the contestants herein have no right or authority of law to institute and prosecute this proceeding.” The motion was sustained; the plaintiffs appealed.
It seems that the court decided the case on the ground that the Local Option Statute does not provide for parties contestant and contestee in such cases. Section 3031 of the article providing for a contest contains the folloAving, “The election in this article provided for, and the result thereof, may be contested in the same manner as now provided by law for the contest of elections for county officers in this State.” Sections 7079 and 7030 of the statute providing for contesting elections for county officers contemplate that the parties to the contest shall have been the opposing
Here, the plaintiffs are mating no claim as candidates for office and neither are the defendants; consequently, they do not come within the express language of the law either as to contestants or contestees. But it is insisted that, as the Legislature intended that elections under the Local Option Law might be contested as a matter of right, its purpose should not be rendered nugatory by reason of the failure in the act to declare specifically who should be contestants and contestees; and that it is the duty of the courts to exercise their powers to effectuate that purpose. ■
To sustain this proposition, our attention has been called to some adjudicated cases. In Village of Metamora v. Village of Eureka, 163 Ill. 9, 45 N. E. 209, the proceeding was to contest a county seat election. In the course of the opinion, a statement was made that prior to the adoption of the statute providing for contests in county seat cases, and where no method was provided for contesting an election upon the question of. removing county seats, the courts of chancery took jurisdiction under their general powers to determine the legality and the result of such election. The court dismissed the action because the county had not been made a party to the contest as provided by the statute. In Lusk v. Thatcher, 102 Ill. 60, the case was one in equity to contest an election for organizing certain territory into a village. It was held that “If it is impossible to make the village a party for want of the election of officers, a proper representation should be made a party, otherwise no decree would bind the corporation.”
In Truelson v. City of Duluth (Minn.), 61 N. W. 911, it is held that a contest of any general or
This case has little or no bearing on the question before us, as it relates solely to the mode of procedure after the court has obtained jurisdiction. The question here is not one of proceeding, but want of jurisdiction —not of jurisdiction over the subject-matter, but by failure of the statute to provide who may institute the proceedings and against whom.
At common law, the proceeding for election contest was unknown. State ex rel. v. Hough, 193 Mo. 615. In this State, election contests are purely statutory and, in the absence of such a statute, there can be no such contests. [State ex rel. Francis v. Dillon, 87 Mo. 487; State ex rel. v. Elkin, 130 Mo. 90.] “Statutory jurisdiction exists only by statutory warrant, and legislative omission to confer jurisdiction cannot be supplied by judicial construction.” [Taaffe v. Ryan, 25 Mo. App. 563.] In a suit to enforce a mechanic’s lien, the law requiring that notice of the lien be served on the owner of the land, the owner had left the State and, leaving no agent, service could not be had as the statute required. It was held that the lien could not be enforced. The court said, “It is simply a case of defective legislation and the courts have no power to
The provision in the Local Option Law, that election contests “may he contested in the manner as is now provided by law for the contest of elections of county officers in this State,” cannot be enforced unless we write something into the latter that was never contemplated at the time of its passage. The Legislature evidently entertained the opinion that the statute providing for the contest of elections of county officers was applicable for contest of elections under the Local Option Statute, but in this that honorable body was mistaken. “ ‘It ÍS' a familiar rule of construction,’ says the court, ‘that the opinion of the legislative body as to the construction of a law can have no force unless it is given force by being enacted into a law. That the Legislature has by way of recitals or otherwise shown that it thought a certain law already upon the statute book would receive a certain construction, cannot influence the courts in construing such statute.’ ” [Lewis’ Sutherland on Statutory Construction, sec. 515.]
The same author, in section 605, quotes from eminent English authority as follows: “ ‘We are bound,’ said Bullee, J., ‘to take the act of parliament as they have made it; a casus omissus can in no case be supplied by a court of law, for that would be to make law.’ ” The author further proceeds to state, “It win make no difference if it appears that the omission on the part of the Legislature was a mere oversight, and without doubt the act would have been drawn otherwise had attention been directed to the oversight at the time the act was under discussion.” And, as was said in Crawford v. Spooner, 6 Moore’s P. C., 9, “ ‘We cannot aid the Legislature’s defective phrasing of an act, we cannot add and mend, and by construction make up any deficiencies which are left there.’ ” And “the language of statutes, but more especially of modern acts, must neither be extended beyond its natural and proper
It is clear that the Legislature overlooked the fact that the act providing for election contests for county offices could not he made to apply in cases of contests of elections under the Local Option Law, as there was no congruity in the two enactments. We are asked to correct this oversight and write iuto the law contestants and ■ contestees not provided for in either act. This, we cannot do without assuming to “add to and mend” the statute — that is, to assume as a court the functions of the Legislature. All the authorities agree that this cannot he done.
Other points are urged by defendants that the proceedings cannot be maintained, but, as we prefer to base our conclusions on the main question involved, we will not discuss them. Affirmed.