In July, 1861, Elias T. Crosby was auditor of Dearborn county, Indiana. On the 17th day of that month, he abandoned the office and removed from the State.
At the annual election, in October following, William Leal became a candidate for the office of auditor of Dearborn county, and received eleven hundred and twenty-eight votes, being the highest number cast for a candidate for that office; but the clerk of the Circuit Court of the county, Samuel L. Jones, refused, within twenty days, and still refuses, to certify the vote for the candidates for the office of auditor, at said election, though there was no contest, to the Secretary of State, whereby the relator was prevented from obtaining a commission for the office to which he claims to have been elected. This suit was instituted to obtain a mandate, compelling the clerk to make and transmit the certificate.
A demurrer to the complaint was sustained, and the mandate refused, oh the two grounds, that no notice of the election for an auditor of the county was given, and that there was no vacancy capable of being filled at the election.
It was the duty of the clerk to certify the votes to the Secretary of State; 1- G-. & H., p. 312, sec. 38; and this without regard to the legality of the election. The duties of the clerk are ministerial, not judicial. Brower v. O’Brien, 2 Ind. 423. 1 G. & H. 306, note. Still, where it is manifest that the election held was void, a Court will not compel a ministerial officer to perform a useless act. Beal v. Ray, 17 Ind., p. 554. Same case, 18 Ind., p. 346. Is it so manifest in this case ?
The election for auditor was not void by the omission to give notice that it was to take place. The People v. Cowles, 3 Kernan, 350.
Does the complaint, in this case, then, show, prima facie, that a vacancy existed in the office of county auditor, of Dearborn county, twenty days before the annual October election for 1861? A vacancy may so occur in an office as to require it to be filled at a succeeding annual election, by the acceptance, by the incumbent, of another incompatible office. Ind. Dig. 599. By the expiration of the current term of the incumbent. Biddle v. Willard, 10 Ind. 62. By the death of the incumbent. 3 Kernan, supra; see The State v. Pidgeon, 8 Blackf. 132. By the removal of the incumbent, from the office, by legal proceedings. By the voluntary removal of the-incumbent, living, from the township, county, or State, as the case may be; and this without a judicial declaration of the vacancy. This is expressly ruled in Hadley v. The Board, etc., 4 Blackf. 116, as we understand that case. The constitution and statutes of the State require county officers to be residents, and to attend to their duties at the county seat.
■ We think the demurrer should have been overruled, and the defendant required to answer. An additional observation or two may be justified.
We think the following propositions are deducible from the judicial decisions of the Supreme Court of Indiana:
1. Where it appears, prima facie, that acts or events have occurred subjecting an office to a judicial declaration of being vacant, the authority authorized to fill such vacancy, supposing the office to be vacant, may proceed, before procuring a judicial declaration of the vacancy, and appoint or elect, according to the forms of law, a person to fill such office; but if, when such person attempts to take possession of the office, he is resisted by the previous incumbent, he
The judgment is reversed, with costs. Cause remanded for further proceedings.