155 Mich. 677 | Mich. | 1909
The relator made application to the circuit court for a writ of mandamus to be directed to the board of supervisors of the county of Ionia, requiring said board to reconvene and hear testimony upon and again determine the question of whether an application made to said board for a submission of the question of prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors in Ionia county had been petitioned for by the requisite number of electors. The circuit judge determined that the action of the board of supervisors, in determining and declaring by its resolution that an election had been prayed by the requisite number of electors, was conclusive and final under the laws of this State, and could not be reviewed by the courts. He also, in answer to the questions raised by relator’s counsel, further determined that an elector, whose name had been entered upon the register of electors in the township, ward, or election district wherein he resided by his initials only, was a duly qualified elector, and that, in view of this determination, the other questions relating to the final action of the board became immaterial. On this hearing, and also before the circuit judge, it was contended that the petitioner was denied the privilege of being heard before the board of supervisors by its committee, and that for this reason the board should be reconvened and permit the petitioner to be heard by his counsel.
Among the other questions presented on the hearing before the circuit judge, was the question of whether the electors who signed the petition for submission of the question to the electors were entitled at any stage of the proceedings before final action of the board of supervisors
“ I am informed that your committee, after hearing the arguments upon the questions of law, presented by the objections filed by my client, John Koerber, to the submission of the question as to whether the manufacture of liquor and the liquor traffic should be prohibited in Ionia county, have decided:
“ (1st) That a qualified elector, under the law, must be a registered elector, and that your committee would investigate that question and every name found upon the petitions not registered, should be taken off.
‘ ‘ (2nd) That it was a compliance with the registration laws if an elector had his name upon the registration books by initial only; and that the objections made to the petitioners who registered by initial only is not well taken; and that such names would be counted.
“ (3rd) That any petitioner so desiring, by request to the board of supervisors, might have his name removed up to the time of final action by the board, and as to the requests filed you had granted the privilege to each of the parties requesting that their names be removed and have stricken such names from the petitions.
“I have been before your committee twice and asked for an opportunity of presenting the question of fact as to the number of petitioners not registered, and although that privilege has not been in express terms denied me, at the same time the request has been evaded. I am informed that it is claimed that there are less than one hundred persons on those petitions" not registered, while on the other hand, I insist if given an opportunity of presenting the facts, that I shall be able, in behalf of my client, to show that there are more than nine hundred, which, together with the withdrawal cards, will bring the number of petitioners below the required percent.,one-third*681 of all of the qualified electors, as shown by the poll lists of the last preceding election, and in behalf of Mr. Koerber and other parties — citizens'interested—I demand the right to go before your committee and presenting the original registration books, if necessary, from each township, voting precinct and ward, for comparison with the petitions, for the purpose of furnishing your committee and the board of supervisors with absolute and undisputed testimony that there are upon said petitions a number of unregistered electors, practically and substantially as claimed by Mr. Koerber in his objections filed, and before the committee adjourns or makes its report to the honorable board of supervisors, I insist that Mr. Koerber have the right to be heard upon this question before your committee and before the board, and I am putting this in writing so that hereafter there will be no question but what you understood his desires and demands in the premises, and that you may act accordingly.”
No other question of fact appears to have been raised before the committee, except the question of whether the names appearing upon these petitions were properly registered; nor was there any effort to make any proof upon the subject except by a comparison of the registration lists with the petition. It is obvious that the committee were just as capable of doing this as was the attorney for the relator. It was not like the case cited by relator’s counsel of State, ex rel. Hawley, v. Board of Sup’rs of Polk Co., 88 Wis. 355, in which the effort was made to offer proof aliunde to show that names appearing upon the poll list by initial were in fact the names of qualified electors, but it was a mere question of comparison of names, a duty which the committee were just as capable of performing as would be any party appearing before them. But another obvious answer to this claim of right is found in the statute itself. Section 5417, 2 Comp. Laws, provides:
“At such meeting of the board of supervisors it shall be the duty of the county clerk to lay before them the petitions filed in his office praying for such election, and when, upon examination, it shall appear to the said board, upon the face of said petitions, and by the transcripts of*682 •the poll lists, or by reference to the returns and canvass of the last general election, that such election has been prayed for by the requisite number of electors, as herein-before provided, they shall, by resolution, determine and declare to that effect, and such determination shall be final as to the sufficiency of the petitions and the requisite number of electors signing the same, and they shall thereupon issue an order directing that such election be held in and for such county.”
The statute very plainly implies that it is the poll list to which reference is to be made by the board, and the return shows that these poll lists were before the board. The comparison was made by them. The board went as far as they were justified in going, certainly, in investigating the transcripts. There were admittedly 4,052 names on the petition. Of those, who had signed the petitions, 597 signed withdrawal cards, and it is claimed that the names of 700 of those who signed the petitions appeared upon the registration lists only by initial. It is the contention of the relator that if the names of those appearing by initial be deducted, and the names of those who sought to withdraw their signatures be deducted, less than one-third of the number of electors in the county would appear. If, however, the relator is wrong in either contention, it is apparently conceded that the names of the requisite one-third did appear upon the petition. We might readily dispose of the question presented by a reference to our own decisions, in which we have held that, under the statute above quoted, the determination of the board that the proper steps had been taken and that the requisite number of electors had signed the application is final. As was said in Friesner v. Charlotte Common Council, 91 Mich. 504:
“As it would be competent to call an election of the voters of the county, or indeed to have named in the statute a day for an election to be held, it is likewise competent to empower the board to determine when the prerequisite facts exist which shall authorize them to call an election of the people.”
The important question, however, is presented in the brief, and discussed by counsel, as to whether those who signed the petitions may, without assigning any reason therefor other than a change of mind, withdraw their names after the proceedings are launched. The statute (section 5415, 2 Comp. Laws) reads as follows:
“To enable each and every elector to determine for himself if his name has been fraudulently attached to said petition, it is hereby required that the signatures of all the petitioners residing in any one and the same township, ward or election district, shall be attached to one petition or list, separate from those of any other township, ward or election district, and that an exact copy of said petition and of all the signatures thereto shall be posted in three of the most conspicuous places in the said township, ward or election district for at least ten days immediately prior to its presentation to the county clerk.”
If this statute can be held to imply the right, which we think it fairly does, of one whose name has been fraudulently attached to the petition to have it erased, it goes no further, and confers no right upon one whose name is attached, of his own volition and without any fraud to demand such withdrawal. There was no claim in the applications for withdrawal in the present case that these names were fraudulently procured. ' The withdrawal cards were uniform, and read as follows:
“Since signing the same, for reasons satisfactory to myself, I have concluded that I am not in favor of the submission of that question, and I, therefore, respectfully request that my name be withdrawn and struck from said petition; and that you do not consider me as in favor of the submission of the question.”
These requests or cards of withdrawal were presented after the action of the clerk in calling together the board of supervisors and up to as late as the 15th of January, the date upon which action was had. There would be
The precise question has been before numerous courts. In Bordwell v. Dills, 70 Ark. 175, it was said:
“ When the petition has been filed with the county court, it has been then delivered, presented to the court, made a court record. The public has now become interested in it. The jurisdiction of the subject-matter has now attached. In the absence of something in the statute permitting it, no individual signer, nor, indeed, all the signers, could thereafter withdraw or erase their names from the petition without leave of the court. And the court should not grant such leave without some good cause shown therefor. He who voluntarily sets on foot a proceeding for the enforcement 'of a salutary police regulation in any community should not be permitted to capriciously undo his work. He should not be allowed to play fast and loose with the interests of society.”
The same question and principle was presented in State v. Gerhardt, 145 Ind. 439 (33 L. R. A. 313). In that case it appeared that three days before the meeting of the board of commissioners a remonstrance against the sale of liquors in the township had been filed, and that, after filing the remonstrance, certain electors who had signed the remonstrance applied to withdraw their names therefrom. The court stated the question as follows:
“ Has a remonstrant, after the expiration of the time within which a remonstrance may be filed, the absolute right, without cause, to withdraw from it, leaving the remonstrance, which theretofore had contained sufficient remonstrants to defeat the granting of the license, insufficient, on account of the withdrawal of the signatures, to accomplish the result ? ”
This question was answered in the negative in an opinion which commends itself to us in its reasoning. See, also, Carr v. Boone, 108 Ind. 241. We also think that
Having reached this conclusion, it becomes unnecessary to determine or discuss the question of whether a registration by initials is sufficient.
The order of the circuit court is affirmed.