The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action to compel the canvass of votes cast for mayor and commissioners at a special election in the city of Abilene.
Acting upon the supposition that the commission form of government had been adopted, the mayor by proclamation gave notice of the annual election to be held in April, 1910, stating that a mayor and two commissioners were to be elected. The election was held accordingly. All the votes cast were for A. W. Rice for mayor, and for L. H. Kump and J. K. Forney for commissioners. The councilmen were prevented from canvassing the votes cast at the election last mentioned by a restraining order issued by the district court, in an action brought by the state on the relation of the county attorney, but on June 3, 1910, the order was set aside. The council then refused to proceed with the canvass of the vote for mayor and commissioners, and this action was commenced to compel it to do so. The defendants
The act provides that upon the presentation of a petition of forty per cent of the voters of a city of the second class the mayor and council shall pass an ordinance calling an election for such purpose, and also provides that “the notice of such elections shall state that the election is called in order to submit this act for adoption, and shall be signed by the mayor and attested by the city clerk, and shall be published in the official city paper once each week for at least three weeks. The last publication of said notice shall be at least twenty days prior to the day fixed for such election.” (Laws 1909, ch. 82, § 36, Gen. Stat. 1909, § 1508.)
It will be observed that only five days intervened between the date of the last publication of the notice and the day of the election, instead of twenty days, as the law explicitly requires. No authority existed for changing the scheme of government other than that given by the statute, which declares that before the act shall apply to any city the proposition shall be submitted to a vote, in the manner prescribed, including the foregoing provisions relating to notice. The importance of giving the particular notice of a special election, the date of which is not fixed by the law but is left to local officers, is stated in The State, ex rel., v. Echols, 41 Kan. 1, where it was said:
“In such cases the electors depend upon the notice required to be given, and not upon any knowledge derived from the law itself; and hence the right to hold such election at a specified time is the notice prescribed by the statute. It is therefore a mandatory provision, and the courts generally hold it to be essential that the prescribed manner shall be followed in order to give validity to the election. This court has always held that the particular manner provided by*255 statute for giving notice of a special election must be strictly pursued.” (p. 5.)
The Echols case was followed in The State v. Bentley, 80 Kan. 227.
It has been said that when there is a general participation of voters in an election held at a time 'and place fixed by law the want of the particular notice directed by a statute does not make the election void. (McCray on Elections, 4th ed., § 179.) If this principle could apply to a special election under this statute in any case, it is manifest that it can not be applied here, where much less than half the electors of the city voted upon the proposition.
It is contended that the council could not decide upon the validity of the election, their only duty being to canvass the vote and declare the result. It is true that the duties of a canvassing board are ministerial, and that it can not reject returns that are regular in form on the ground that illegal votes had been cast or other frauds or irregularities practiced at the election. (Brown v. Jeffries, 42 Kan. 605.) Still, before a canvass should be compelled an election should be held by authority of law, and there should be offices to fill. (Matthews v. Comm’rs of Shawnee Co., 34 Kan. 606; Peters v. Board of State Canvassers, 17 Kan. 365; Leavenworth Co. v. The State, 5 Kan. 688.) In The State, ex rel., v. Echols, supra, mandamus was prayed Tor to compel the canvass of the votes cast upon a proposition to establish a county high school, and it was refused because the election was held void for want of a notice. The court said:
“That the giving of notice substantially in the manner directed by law is a prerequisite of the validity of such an election, and where there is a failure to post notices at any of the polling places, and a large number of the electors of the county fail to vote upon the proposition, the election will be void.” (Syllabus.)
The fact that in this case the returns of the void elec
The alternative writ is set aside and a peremptory writ is refused.