6 S.D. 313 | S.D. | 1894
Upon a petition to remove the county s.eat from Castlewood to Bryant, signed by a majority of the legal voters of Hamlin county, and duly presented to the county comtnissioners of that county at the regular July, 1890, meeting, the question was submitted to the electors of said Hamlin county at a general election held November 4, 1890; and, notwithstanding it was legally ascertained that a majority of all the votes cast were for the removal of said county seat from Castlewood to Bryant, the county canvassing board declared in favor of Castlewood, because the proposition was not ratified by two-thirds of all the votes cast thereon. This proceeding, authorized by section 1494 of the Compiled Laws, was duly instituted by a qualified elector, and prosecuted in the circuit court, for the purpose of testing the validity of said election, and to question the right of the village of Castlewood to be se
The only important question of fact raised by the pleadings is whether the county seat of Hamlin county had been located at Castlewood, by a majority vote of the qualified electors of said Hamlin county, prior to the year 1890. As matters of fact the court found, in effect, that the county seat of Hamlin county was located at the Spaulding-Boswell ranch by the county commissioners at their first meeting after the organization of the county, in the year 1878, and at the next general eléction held in said county, on the 1st day of November of that year, the question of the location of said county seat was regularly submitted; and the Spaulding-Boswell ranch, receiving a majority of all the votes cast upon the question,, was duly declared to be the county seat, and so remained until November 13, 1884. The findings of the court relating to a resubmission of the question in 1884 are as follows: “(6) That at an adjourned meeting of the board of county commissioners of said county, held on September 1st, in the year 1884, two-thirds of the legal voters of said county signed, and presented to the board of county commissioners, a petition in due form praying that the question of the change and location of the county seat of said county be, in due and legal form, submitted to the electors of said county at the general election to be held therein in the year 1884. (7) That by virtue of said petition said commissioners did, in due time and legal form, submit said question of the change and location of the county seat of said county to the electors thereof at the general election held therein on the fourth day of November, 1884, and that at said election the question of the change and location of the county seat of said Hamlin county, having been duly submitted, was duly and legally voted upon by the legal voters of said county. (8) That at said general election the
All steps and proceedings to change the location of the county seat from Castlewood to Bryant were taken and had subsequently to the organization and admission of the state of South Dakota into ihe Union under our constitution, which by adoption, became the supreme law of the state. Sections 2 and 3 of article 9 of the constitution are as follows:
(2) “In counties already organized where the county seat has not been located by a majority vote, it shall be the duty of the county board to submit the location of the county seat to the electors of said county at a general election. The place receiving a majority of all the votes cast at said election shall be the county seat of said county.”
(3) “Whenever a majority of the legal voters of any or • ganized county shall petition the county board to change the location of the county seat which has once been located by a majority vote, specifying the place to which it is to be changed, said county board shall submit the same to the people of said county at the next general election, and if the proposition to change the county seat be ratified by two-thirds of the vote cast at said election, then the county seat shall be changed, otherwise not.”
Should it be found that the county seat of Hamlin county was located at Castlewood by the vote of 1884, and not by the special legislative act of .1885, the action of the trial court must be sustained, because that portion of the special act upon which appellant relies, and seeks to change the location of the