State ex rel. Hancock v. Spencer

166 Mo. 279 | Mo. | 1901

MARSHALL, J.

This case was here once before and is reported in 164 Mo. 55. It then appeared to be on all fours with tbe case of State ex rel. Folk v. Spencer, 164 Mo. 48, and was disposed of by tbe decision in tbat case. Tbe circuit court made tbe same order in this case tbat it made in tbe case of State ex rel. Funkhouser v. Spencer, No. 10975. Tbe notice of contest in this case is similar to tbe notice in tbe Funkbouser case, except tbat it charged tbat all tbe 136,000 votes cast at the election for assistant circuit attorney were fráudu*283lent, and did not except the three hundred in the fourth ward referred to in that case. The contestant did not give the ten days’ notice of intention to file his petition in contest as required by section 7057, Eevised Statutes 1899, and which was held in the Eolk case to be a necessary prerequisite to confer jurisdiction upon the circuit court. In the Eolk case it was held that by appearing and answering to the merits and by not objecting to the failure to give the ten days’ notice, the contestee had waived that question and had conferred jurisdiction upon the circuit court. At that time it appeared from the record before us that this petitioner had done the same thing. The preliminary rule in prohibition in the Eolk case and in this case was then made absolute for the reasons given in the Funkhouser case, 164 Mo. 23. Afterwards the circuit court made the same order in this case that it made in the Funkhouser case, No. 10975, just decided. "What is now said in that case, except as to the three hundred votes in the Fourth ward, applies equally to this case, and results in making the preliminary rule absolute in this ease also.

But in addition to what.is said in that case, it now appears that this petitioner, on the twenty-fourth of December, filed an answer to the contestant’s petition, denying the allegations thereof, and further alleging that the circuit court ought not to take jurisdiction of said contest for the following reasons: “Because contestant did not present his petition to said court at the first term holden next after the election, nor to a judge of said court in vacation within forty days after said election, setting forth the points on which he would contest the same, and because contestant did not serve the contestee, nor cause the eontestee to be served with a notice of the time and place of the presentation of said petition to said court or a judge thereof, ten days before the same was presented.”

Afterwards on July 1, 1901, the eontestee filed in the circuit court a motion to dismiss the contested election case, and assigned as grounds for the motion the following: “First, *284contestant did not give to contestee a notice of the time and place of the presentation of his petition herein, ten days before the presentation of the same, as required by law; second, the petition of contestant does not set forth the points on which he will contest contestee’s election and right to said office of assistant circuit attorney and the facts which he will prove in support of such points; .third, the petition of contestant does not give the names of the voters to whose qualifications as voters objections are made by contestant in said petition and whose votes he intends to contest, but in pretended compliance with the rule requiring the giving of such names, he has filed a copy of the registration lists of the city of St. Louis, containing practically the names of all the voters of said city, which is not a compliance with said rule.”

The circuit court overruled this motion on July 9, 1901. Thereafter the petitioner applied to one of the judges of this court, in vacation, and obtained a preliminary rule in prohibition. The respondents admit the facts and rulings stated and attempt to justify the rulings.

Respondents contend “that section 7064, Revised Statutes 1899, specially states that jurisdiction is acquired by the circuit court upon filing of answer,” and therefore the petitioner waived the failure to give the ten days’ notice.

Section 7063 provides for the filing of the petition in a contested election case like this, the issuance of a summons and the manner of serving the same.

Section 7064 is as follows: “Such contestee shall answer said petition within thirty days after the serving thereof, specifying reasons why his election should not be contested, and upon the filing of said answer, the said clerk shall immediately notify the judge of the circuit court, whose residence is nearest to the said court where the contest is filed, of the filing of said petition and answer, and the said judge shall be possessed of said cause and have jurisdiction to try the same and may at once appoint a commissioner to take testimony in *285the same way and manner as provided for contest of State officers. Upon the hearing of said contest, either party may appeal from the judgment of the circuit court to tbe Supreme Court in tbe same way and manner as in ordinary civil cases.”

It is upon this foundation that respondents rest their contention that “jurisdiction is acquired by the court upon filing of answer.” Tbat is, tbat tbe filing of tbe answer confers jurisdiction. Manifestly tbat is a misconception of tbe statute, for- if it is tbe filing of tbe answer which confers jurisdiction, then tbe contestee could defeat tbe jurisdiction by failing to file an answer. Tbe lawmakers never intended to put it in tbe power of a defendant to prevent jurisdiction of tbe circuit court from attaching or to defeat tbe contestant’s suit, by simply making default. On tbe contrary tbe statutes plainly provide tbe manner of conferring jurisdiction and of bringing a contestee into court. Tbat is, tbe ten days’ notice of intention to file tbe petition required by section 7057 must first be given. Then tbe petition must be filed and tbe summons issued and served as provided by section 7063. Tbe case is then in court and the contestee is in court, whether be answers or not, and tbe court has jurisdiction whether be answers or not.

It is contended further tbat although the ten days’ notice was not given, and although tbe contestee pleaded tbat fact in abatement of tbe action, tbe contestee waived tbat by also pleading, in tbe same answer, to tbe merits, or stated as respondents tersely do, a defendant “can not appear and disappear at tbe same time.”

At tbe outset it is proper to note tbat tbe law regulating tbe manner of conducting a contested election case is a code unto itself. _ Tbat code is embraced in article 1 of chapter 102, Revised Statutes 1899. Tbat article does not make tbe provisions of the Code of Civil ^Procedure (chap. 8, R. S. 1899) applicable to contested election cases, and section 675 of article 6 of chapter 8, Revised Statutes 1899 (tbe Code of Civil Procedure) does not make tbe provisions of the Civil Code *286applicable to contested election cases. Therefore the rights of the parties, the manner of procedure and of pleading, must be determined by the provisions of article 1 of chapter 102. The only provision relating to the method and manner of pleading by the defendant is provided by that article and chapter, and section 7064 of that article and chapter contains all the law there is on that subject. That section provides: “Such contestee shall answer said petition within thirty days after the serving thereof, specifying reasons why his election should not be contested,” etc. Only one pleading is therefore provided for a contestee and that is an answer. In that answer the contestee is required to 'specify “reasons why his election should not be contested.” All the reasons the contestee intends to rely upon must be specified at once and in the same answer, whether those reasons be such as in ordinary common-law actions or in actions under the code are denominated pleas in abatement, or in bar or to the merits or dilatory pleas, and whether they raise issues of law or issues of fact. Therefore, an answer in a contested election case must plead in abatement or to jurisdiction at the same time it pleads to the merits, and nothing is waived by the answer except such matters and objections or reasons as are not set up in the answer. The answer in this case specially pleaded to the jurisdiction, in that the ten days’ notice had not been given. That fact is not controverted. Such a notice is necessary to confer jurisdiction. [State ex rel. Folk v. Spencer, 164 Mo. 48.] This being true, the circuit court never acquired or had jurisdiction of-the contested election case and should have so held and dismissed the case. Not having jurisdiction of the case it had no power to make any order for the recount or examination or comparison of the ballots, for such an order can only be made in a-contested election case after the court has obtained jurisdiction. Hence, a defendant in a contested election case may appear, answer, shoeing that the court has no jurisdiction, and also that there is no merit in the contestant’s claim, and may *287disappear upon Lis plea to the jurisdiction being found well taken, without the merits of the controversy ever being decided. The circuit court never acquired any jurisdiction in the contested election case of Hodgdon v. Hancock, and, hence, had no power to enter the order in question, or any order in reference to the ballots, and therefore the preliminary rule in prohibition heretofore issued is made absolute.

Burgess, G. J., and Valliant, Sherwood, Brace and Gantt, JJ., concur; Robinson, J., dissents.
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