129 Mo. App. 147 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
“That part of the foregoing bill of exceptions, beginning with page one and extending to page 35, both inclusive, was presented to the undersigned judge of said Newton County Circuit Court to be signed on August 6, 1906. As said bill of exceptions as then presented had endorsed thereon the words, “O. K., Horace Ruark,” and was presented by James H. Pratt, one of defendants’ attorneys herein, it was presumed by the undersigned judge that the same was correct and had been examined and approved by all the attorneys in the case, and the same was then signed by said judg’e without examination or question and was handed back to Mr. Pratt. On the next day, Aug. 7th, 1906, said judge’s attention was called to the fact that material matters particularly relating to the motion for new trial and in arrest as set out on pages 36 to 39 had been omitted, and said bill had not been seen by or any opportunity given to defendants’ attorney, John T. Sturgis, associated with Mr. Pratt in the trial of said cause, to examine said bill, and thereupon an order was made extending the time to file the bill of exceptions herein whiqh time has since been extended by a further like order.
“And now no bill of exceptions having yet been filed herein, and within the time given and extended by the court for that purpose and said bill of exceptions having been made correct by said judge by the insertion of the matters contained on said pages 36 to 39, this complete and correct bill of exceptions is now signed by the*151 undersigned judge of said Newton County Circuit Court and ordered filed and made a part of the record herein on this 2nd day of October, 1906.
“Witness my hand as judge of said court the day and date last above given. F. C. Johnston,
“Judge Newton County Circuit Court.”
On the back of the bill of exceptions was indorsed the following: “Filed Oct. 2, 1906; J. H. Centers, Clerk Circuit Court.”
It further appears from the record in the case that this completed bill of exceptions, all in one 'document, and over the signature and certificate of the judge last above quoted, was actually filed in the cause. Counsel for respondent insists that the bill of exceptions, as approved by the judge upon the second presentation to him, is not the bill of exceptions in the case for the reason, it is said, the judge had exhausted his authority over the matter when he signed and ordered filed the document first presented, which did not contain the motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment. It is argued that the first document presented is the true bill of exceptions and as that bill contained neither a motion for new trial nor a motion in arrest of judgment, then such motions are not before this court and therefore Ave are precluded from revieAving the case on its merits. The argument proceeds upon the theory that the judge in Am cation had exhausted his authority over the bill by affixing his signature and ordering filed the first or incompleted bill. The case of Atchison v. Railroad, 94 Mo. App. 572, 72 S. W. 489, is relied upon to support the proposition advanced. In that case, it is true the court said: “We think, when the judge approved and signed the paper presented to him on April 23rd as the bill, or part of the bill of exceptions, and ordered the same to be made a part of the record, he exhausted his jurisdiction Avith respect to signing the bill of exceptions and could not thereafter sign a re
It will be noticed the only question for decision is whether or not the local option law obtained Avithin the town of Granby at the time mentioned. Of course, if it did, the county court was Avithout authority and properly refused to grant the license. If the local option law did not obtain in that town, it was the duty of the county court, under the statute (sec. 2993), to grant the relator the license prayed for. A solution of this question involves the construction of at least two sections of our local option law (R. S. 1899, secs. 3028 and 3033), which are in pari materia, and a determination of the question whether a town of less than 2,500 inhabitants, the legal voters of which participated in the election by which local option was adopted in the county, can, within the four years period mentioned in those statutes, upon increasing its population to exceed 2,500, vote a second time independent of the body of the county, and repudiate a law adopted by its citizens less than four years theretofore. We have examined a large number of adjudicated cases seeking-light on the question involved, but none of them are precisely in point, for the reason they predicate upon
“Sec. 3028. Same in cities of 2,500 or more, when held. — Upon application by petition therefor, signed by one-tenth of the qualified voters of any incorporated city or town in this State having a population of twenty-five hundred inhabitants or more, to the body having legislative functions therein, such body shall order an election to be held in such city, to be voted at by the qualified voters thereof, and no others, to determine whether or not spirituous or intoxicating liquors shall be sold within the limits of such city or town. Such election shall be held within forty days after the receipt of such petition, but not within sixty days of any municipal or state election held in such city; and shall be conducted, the returns thereof made and the result thereof ascertained and determined in accordance, in all respects, with the laws and ordinances governing municipal elections in such city, and frauds perpetrated and fraudulent voting, at such elections shall be offenses as prescribed for frauds and fraudulent voting at general elections held under the law of this State, and shall be punished as in such laws provided. The result of such election shall be entered upon the journals or records of the body ordering the same, and the expenses thereof shall be paid out of the treasury of said town in the same manner as the expenses of other*158 municipal elections: Provided, that for the purpose of determining the fact of whether or not any town shall be governed by the provisions of this section, such body having legislative functions therein may, under an ordinance thereof, take a census of the inhabitants of such town and the result of such census shall be entered upon the journals or records thereof, and such entry, or a certified copy thereof, shall be proof of such fact, and shall be filed with the clerk of the county court of the county in which such town is situated.
“Sec. 8088. Question determined, not to be submitted for four years. — Whenever the election in this article provided for has been held, and decided either for or against the sale of intoxicating liquors, then the question shall not be again submitted within four years next thereafter in the same county or city, as the case may be, and then only upon a new petition and in every respect conforming to the provisions of this article.”
The question is: does the inhibition of this statute prohibit the holding of an election within the four year period in the town of Granby under the circumstances above stated? We are of the opinion that it does. It is provided therein that the question shall not be again submitted within four years next thereafter “in the same county or city, as the case may be.” Now the town of Granby is “in the same county.” It is parcel of Newton county and its qualified voters participated Avith those of the county in the election at which the law was adopted for the entire county. This being true by every principle of natural justice as well as the entire analogy of American institutions, the inhabitants of that municipality are in duty bound to abide for four years the policy adopted in the election in which each and every one of its qualified voters either participated or had the right so to do, and voluntarily waived the same. And this is true notwithstanding the fact that a large number of persons have taken up their abode
“b. Effect of Adoption. — In Minor Subdivisions of Territory Adopting. — Where a statute provides for the submission of the question of adoption to the voters of an entire county, or independently thereof to the voters of the minor subdivisions of the county, the result of the election in the entire county governs the operation of the law in the subdivisions thereof when the latter do not hold separate elections to determine whether the law shall be in force in the particular subdivision.” See also the following cases: Tatum v. State, 79 Ga. 176; Commonwealth v. Bottoms, 57 S. W. (Ky.) 493; Tousey v. Stites, 66 S. W. (Ky.) 277; Smith v. Patton (Ky.), 45 S. W. 459; Police Jury v. Descamp, 105 La. 512; Adams v. Kelley (Tex. Civ. App.), 45 S. W. 859; State v. Harvey (Tex. Civ. App.), 33 S. W. 885; Roper v. McCoy (Tex. Civ. App.), 69 S. W. 459; Caldwell v. Grider, 88 Ala. 421. It likewise comports with the general doctrine that where local option has been adopted for a certain district and the boundaries of such district are subsequently changed, the local option law is not thereby abrogated as to any portion of the district in which it has been adopted, even though the boundaries of the old district were subsequently changed.. [Medford v. State (Tex. Crim. App.), 74 S. W. 768; Jones v. State, 67 Md. 256, 10 Atl. 216; Higgins v. State, 64 Md. 419, 1 Atl. 876; Nelson v. State (Tex. Crim. App.), 73 S. W. 502.]
In Higgins v. State, 64 Md. 419, 1 Atl. 876, a new local option district was carved out of an older one in which local option had been adopted, and it was determined that local option continued to obtain in the new district by virtue of the prior election in the old.
It is argued, however, that as section 3028, supra, authorizes the legislative authority of the town to provide by ordinance, etc., for and proceed to take a census of the inhabitants thereof in order to ascertain Avhether or not it had 2,500 population and was therefore competent to submit the proposition .involved to its voters separately, that such provision, when considered together with section 3033, supra, manifests an intention on the part of the Legislature to permit such towns to proceed thereunder at any time they see fit, whether they be living under then existing local option adopted by the county, or not. We are not impressed with this argument. No word in the statute indicates such an intention nor can Ave find aught in the two sections, when read together, which point our minds to this conclusion. Had the Legislature so intended, it could have expressed its purpose to that effect in a very simple phrase. It did not do so. It is not the province of the court to read words into the law where a full and fair sense is manifested without supplying such words. To read such a provision into the statute, the court would be compelled to pass beyond its province of construction and enter the domain of legislation. The provision referred to authorizes and points out the manner for such towns to proceed in the first instance and prior to their having participated with the county in adopt
Entertaining these views, the judgment will be reversed and the writ denied.