This case has twice' received the attention of this court, vide State v. Roper,
At Indianola.......................... 867
At McCook............................ 1,339
Ballots not reported or accounted for..... 25
Ballots rejected........................ 1
Blank ballots.......................... 3
Ballots written for McCook and not counted........'..................... 2
Total vote of precinct............. 2,237
. In the former opinion (
In Gillespie v. Palmer,
In State v. Green, 37 O. St., 227, the following ■definition of the word “vote,” given by Davies, J., in People v. Pease,
In Everett v. Smith,
In Holcomb v. Davis,
In People v. Wiant,
In County Seat of Linn County,
With the exception of the case last above cited,, those of other states, except Missouri, simply adhere to the rule adopted in this state. In the County Seat of Linn County there is, however,, stated the distinction between corporate or political bodies having a fixed membership and those wherein the membership is indeterminate with respect to the data from which a majority must be estimated. Where there occurs at the same time a general and a special election, there is given an exact basis from which to ascertain the number of electors, and that is the greatest number of votes cast for any candidate or proposition. Where the election is special and confined to a single proposition, there is no occasion
As to the effect to be given to the disclosed fact that others than those counted were present, Oldknow v. Wainwright, 1 Wm. Bl. [Eng.], 229, is somewhat instructive, as will be seen by the following-copy of that case as reported: “On a special verdict, the question was, whether Segrave, the town clerk of Nottingham, was legally elected. There were twenty-one electors present; nine of whom voted for Segrave; eleven protested against him, without voting for any one else, and one other said that die suspended doing anything.7 It was argued by Mr. Caldecot, that this was such a negative upon Segrave, that his election was invalid. Serjeant Hewit, contra, in Easter Term last; and now per tot. Cur. The election is clearly good. The eleven protestant dissenters, having-voted for nobody, could not put a negative upon the only man put in nomination, and Wilmot, J., cited K. and Withers, H., 8 Geo., 2; K. and Boscawen, P., 13 Anne; and Taylor and the Mayor of Bath, temp. Lee, C. J., to shew that, Avhere a majority do nothing but merely dissent, they lose their votes.77 The proposition in support of which the citations were made by Wilmot, J., was stated and enforced in State v. Green, supra, in Attorney General v. Shepard, 62 N. H., 383, and in Rushville Gas Co. v. City of Rushville,
In Walker v. Oswald,
In People v. Town of Sausalito, 39 Pac. Rep. [Cal.], 937, the question was whether or not there was, in fact, a majority of the votes cast “for incorporation.” There were seven official ballots without a mark placed on either of them by any one to indicate his wish in any particular. These were held to be no votes, and discussing the effect to be given them, the court said they were not to be counted or considered for any purpose.
The respondents specially rely upon State v. Walsh,
Writ allowed.
