89 P. 1016 | Kan. | 1907
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Prior to a city election in Muscotah each of two local political organizations, known respectively as the People’s party and . the Citizens’ party, nominated a full ticket. A certificate of nomination was duly filed by the president and secretary of the convention of the People’s party, but no certificate of any kind was filed in behalf of the Citizens’ party. Nevertheless the city clerk caused both tickets to be printed upon the official ballot. A majority of the voters marked their ballots in favor of the candidates on the Citizens’ ticket, and they were declared elected. A candidate on the People’s ticket claiming to have been elected police judge brought a proceeding in the district court to enforce his right to that office. Being denied relief, he prosecutes error. His contention is that inasmuch as the. Citizens’ ticket was printed upon the ballot in direct disobedience of the statute it was .not a means by which a voter could give effective expression of his choice, and that all ballots marked in favor of that ticket should have been rejected. The adoption of' this rule would have resulted in the plaintiff’s election.
It is true that the statute expressly forbids the placing of any names on the ballot excepting such as are brought to the notice of the clerk by proper certificates, in these terms: “All nominations made and certified in accordance with the provisions of this act, and none other, shall be printed on the official ballot.” (Gen. Stat. 1901, §2707; Laws 1903, ch. 228, §2; Laws 1905, ch. 222, § 1.) In the plaintiff’s brief it is assumed that an important if not controlling question is whether this language is mandatory or merely directory. There is no room for doubt upon that subject. The provision is mandatory. It is the imperative duty of the clerk to follow the statute — a duty
The adoption of the Australian ballot law has made a great change in the method of ascertaining and giving effect to the popular will. Formerly the rule was to count any ballot from which by any reasonable method of interpretation the purpose of the person casting it could be gathered. Now such purpose, however clearly shown, is disregarded unless expressed in a particular way. Legislative restrictions upon the exercise of the right of suffrage are enforced by the courts without hesitation to the very letter, so long as they relate to matters within the control of the individual voter. But with respect to regulations regarding the conduct of others the effort is still to seek such a construction of the law as will accomplish rather than defeat the expressed wishes of the people. The case of People ex rel. Hirsh v. Wood, 148 N. Y. 142, 42 N. E. 536, arose upon facts very similar to those here presented. It was there said:
“The effort in this proceeding is to disfranchise innocent- voters because of a latent defect in the official ballot furnished by the state, not discernible on inspection, which ballot they were compelled to use, the defect consisting in the unauthorized insertion therein by a public official, charged with the duty of making up and printing the ballots, of names of candidates in a party column not duly nominated by such party. The intention of the voters who used this party column tq express their choice is clear and admits of no doubt. Each one received his ballot from the inspectors, marked it with the cross under the party name and emblem, and returned it to the inspectors, by whom it was deposited in the box and subsequently counted. We can conceive of no principle which permits the disfranchisement of innocent voters for the*546 mistake or even the wilful misconduct of election officers in performing the duty cast upon them. • The object of elections is to ascertain the popular will, and not to thwart it. The object of election laws is to secure the rights of duly qualified electors, and not to defeat them. Statutory regulations are enacted to secure freedom of choice and to prevent fraud, and not by technical obstructions to make the right of voting insecure and difficult.” (Page 146.)
After quoting a part of the foregoing extract the court said, in Blackmer v. Hildreth, 181 Mass. 29, 68 N. E. 14:
“This must be borne in mind in the construction of such statutes, and the presumption is that they are enacted to prevent fraud and to secure freedom of choice, and not by technical obstructions to make the right of voting insecure. The provisions above recited with reference to the preparation of the ballot are plainly limited and confined to that purpose. They are binding upon the officers for whose guidance and direction they are needed. If it be seasonably objected to a nomination paper that it was not filed within the time required by § 145, or that the provisions of §§ 141 and 142 have not been complied with, it is the duty of the proper board to inquire into and settle the question, and to sustain the objection, if found to be true, and reject the paper. So far as respects their decision these provisions are mandatory. When the decision is made it is final, and a ballot made up in accordance therewith is not thereby made illegal. And in the same way the action of the town clerk, at least in the absence of fraud and corruption, as to the papers to which no objection is made, must be regarded as final so far as respects the ballot which he prepares.
“But with the preparation of the ballot the influence .of these provisions ends. If there be irregularities like those in this case they do not accompany the ballot and taint it in the hands of the voter. This view of the statute gives due weight and scope to the provisions in question, and preserves 'the sanctity of the right of suffrage and its free and honest exercise. To hold otherwise would be to lose sight of the purpose for which these provisions were made, namely, to provide the method and time for the preparation of the*547 ballot, and would subject our elections to intolerable and perplexing technicalities in no way material to the substantial. merits of the controversy or to the freedom and result of the action of the voters. Its natural tendency would be to thwart rather than to secure a true expression of the popular will.” (Page 31.)
In State v. Fransham, 19 Mont. 273, 48 Pac. 1, it was said:
“There is wisdom in that construction of election laws which holds rigidly to the doctrine that in our country, where the will of the people is supreme, when clearly expressed it cannot be defeated by a claim. that an official neglected to properly make up the ballot published and voted. A party or candidate may be defeated by an official’s wrong, but the electors must be secure in the knowledge that their votes, when legally cast, will be counted. And we cannot hold to the contrary, unless compelled to do so by mandatory provisions of law and construction requiring such votes to be held void not in our constitution or codes. The argument that the ballot was a falsehood, and that no person should profit by it, has considerable force, we admit; but it is not strong enough, under the facts admitted by the demurrer to the complaint herein, to outweigh the more important controlling principle that the electors, who do not make up the ballot, must rely with perfect assurance and safety upon the official ballots given .them, and that their ballots will be counted as marked, and that their legally expressed will cannot be overthrown where they are not at fault, although it should turn out that the public officer who had to do with the preparing of the ballot voted may have neglected his duty.” (Page 290.)
And in Kulp v. Railey (Tex.), 89 S. W. 957:
“The voter has nothing to do with the making up of the ballot, but is required to use it in order to exercise his right to vote. He can only vote for those whose names are printed on it, or strike them out and insert others. The ballot comes to him from the of--ficers of the law, regular on its face, and authenticated, both by the printing on it and by the signature of the judge of election, as the ballot which, he is required to use. If it is in the power of the legislature*548 to thus impose on voters, in exercising their consti-' tutional right, the necessity of voting tickets prepared for them in advance, and yet to defeat their choice, not for any act or omission of their own, but because of an antecedent direliction of the officers appointed by law to prepare the ballots, certainly no purpose to do so can be imputed to the legislature without the clearest expression of it.” (Page 959.)
In the recent case of State v. Bunnell [Wis.], 110 N. W. 177, it was held that even where a candidate had wrongfully changed his nomination papers after they had been signed the voters had a right to rely upon the correctness of the official ballot, and the canvassing board was not required to reject the ballots cast for such candidate. (See, also, Ogg v. Glover, 72 Kan. 247, 256, 83 Pac. 1039, and cases there cited; Attorney General v. Campbell, 191 Mass. 497, 78 N. E. 133; State v. Mason [Wash.], 88 Pac. 126; People ex rel. Williams v. Bd. of Canvassers, 105 N. Y. Supr. Ct., App. Div., 197, 94 N. Y. Supp. 996, affirmed in 183 N. Y. 538, 76 N. E., 1116.)
None of the cases cited from other jurisdictions arose under statutes precisely like ours, but the general rule of construction they all announce is none the less pertinent on that account. The leading case of People ex rel. Hirsh v. Wood, 148 N. Y. 142, 42 N. E. 536, involved an act containing substantially this provision, which was a part of the original Australian ballot law adopted in this state: “No ballot without the official indorsement shall be allowed to be deposited in the ballot-box, and none but ballots provided in accordance with the provision of this act shall be counted.” (Laws 1893, ch. 78, § 25.) The court said that while this language was somewhat obscure, its main purpose was to enforce the use of official ballots, and that the prohibition against counting referred to ballots provided by the public officers, adding:
“It is impossible to suppose that the legislature used the word provided, as synonymous with prepared, so as to visit upon voters a forfeiture of the franchise if an official should make any departure in preparing*549 the ballot from the strict authority conferred upon him.” (Page 148.)
So in State of Iowa v. Bernholtz et al., 106 Iowa, 157, 76 N. W. 662, the court said of the same clause that it evidently related to ballots furnished the voter, adding: “He may not use a ballot of his own choosing, but must cast such as are provided by the proper officials.” (Page 161.)
In the revision of 1901 this portion of our statute was remodeled into its present form, which is as follows:
“No ballots other, than those provided, printed and indorsed in accordance with the provisions of this act shall be delivered to a voter, deposited in the ballot-box, or counted.” (Gen. Stat. 1901, §2718; Laws 1903, ch. 228, § 4; Laws 1905, ch. 222, § 8.)
The object of this change is not entirely clear. We are satisfied, however, that the legislature never intended that no ballot should under any circumstances be counted unless in its preparation every requirement of the statute had been fully met. Such a construction, indeed, would be fatal to the claims of the plaintiff, for it would forbid the counting of any of the ballots cast at the election in question (since none of. them was prepared in accordance with the law), and would require the entire proceeding to .be treated as a nullity. We are equally satisfied that it was not the intention that the election board or other canvassing body should sit in judgment upon the conduct of the clerk in preparing the official ballot, and on account of his mistake or misconduct reject votes cast by persons who are themselves free from fault or wrongdoing. A purpose so foreign to the theory of the law and so abhorrent to a sense of justice should not be attributed to the legislature except in consequence of language so explicit as to admit of no other interpretation. The provision quoted falls far short of being'such an expression.
The judgment is affirmed.