58 Kan. 709 | Kan. | 1897
This was a proceeding in mandamus, brought to contest an election held for the purpose of determining the location of the county seat of Gray County. In the alternative writ it is alleged that, by a vote of the electors of the county, the county seat was, on February 13, 1887, located at the town of Ingalls; that on January 10,'1893, a petition was presented to the Board of County Commissioners, requesting the calling of an election to vote upon a proposition to remove the county seat from Ingalls tt> the town of' Cimarron; that the petition was signed with the names of 306 persons, purporting to be electors of the county, and that of these, three were of persons who never signed the petition or authorized their names to be signed to it, three were the names of minors, fifty were the names of persons who were
Taking the averments of the writ to be true, as we must, the petition upon which the election was ordered was wholly insufficient. If the petition was fatally defective, it did not warrant the order calling the election, and any election held thereunder was necessarily invalid. This appears to have been conceded;
Evidently, it was the purpose of the Legislature that every matter affecting the validity of the election might be investigated and determined in a single contest had after the election was held. There is nothing to indicate that the validity of each step in and about the election must be contested when it is taken, nor any suggestion that only those who refrain from voting or participating in the election are authorized to institute a contest, nor do we see any rule for applying the doctrine of estoppel in this case. The fact that the adherents of Ingalls participated in the election, the validity of which had not yet been determined, prejudices no one, and estops no one from exercising