75 P. 56 | Cal. | 1903
Election contest. Prior to the general election held in November, 1902, the Democratic and Republican parties each nominated two candidates for the office of constable of Ventura Township in Ventura County, and the board of supervisors issued an election proclamation calling for the election of two constables for said township.
Respondent was nominated by petition. In the contest the ballots were recounted, and the court found that respondent received the greatest number of legal votes, and judgment was accordingly entered in his favor. The court refused to count any ballot cast on which more than one person's name appeared for the said office of constable.
Appellants state that the record presents two questions of law which they ask to have decided, — 1. Was the township entitled to elect two constables? and 2. If the township was not entitled to two constables, was there any valid election? It is provided in the County Government Act of 1901 (sec. 56, Stats. 1901, p. 686) that "in townships having a population less than six thousand there shall be but one justice of the peace and one constable."
The undisputed evidence shows that Ventura Township contained at the time of said election less than four thousand population. Appellants do not controvert the fact that the County Government Act, if valid, gives only one constable to said township, but they claim that the said act is void because it was amendatory of the act of 1897 and was not republished as amended. The amended sections of the act were republished as amended, and this was a compliance with section 24 of article IV of the constitution. The act was held constitutional in the late case of Beach v. VonDetten,
As to the second proposition, the election was valid, notwithstanding the proclamation of the board of supervisors called for the election of two constables. The statutes gave notice of the time and place of election and the officer to be elected. (Pol. Code, sec. 1041; County Government Act, secs. 56, 58.) It is said in Cooley on Constitutional Limitations (6th ed., p. 759): "When both the time and place of an election are prescribed by law, every voter has a right to take notice of the law, and to deposit his ballot at the time and place appointed, notwithstanding the officer, whose duty it is *431
to give notice of the election, has failed in that duty. The notice to be thus given is only additional to that which the statute gives, and is prescribed for the purpose of greater publicity; but the right to hold the election comes from the statute, and not from the official notice. It has, therefore, been frequently held that when a vacancy exists in an office which the law requires shall be filled at the next general election, the time and place of which are fixed, and that notice of the general election shall also specify the vacancy to be filled, an election at that time and place to fill the vacancy will be valid, notwithstanding the notice is not given; and such election cannot be defeated by showing that a small portion only of the electors were actually aware of the vacancy, or cast their votes to fill it." (See, also, Paine on Elections, sec. 384;People v. Brenham,
We therefore conclude that the law required only one constable to be elected in the township, and that the election was valid. It is advised that the judgment be affirmed.
Gray, C., and Haynes, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is affirmed.
McFarland, J., Lorigan, J., Henshaw, J.