34 Kan. 714 | Kan. | 1886
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question for our determination is, whether the temporary injunction granted by the probate judge of Pratt county, on September 7, 1885, enjoining the county commissioners of that county from canvassing the vote polled on October 1, 1885, upon the proposition for the relocation of the county seat of that county, shall be continued in full force until the action can be tried and determined. The order calling the election was made September 1, 1885. The statute requires thirty days’ notice'of the election. (Comp. Laws of 1879, ch. 26, § 6.) It is claimed that, although notices of the election were posted September 1st, no legal notice of the election could'have been given, as there was not sufficient time so to do. It is settled in this state that where any particular number of days, not expressed by dear days, is prescribed, the rule in regard to the computation of time is, not to exclude both the day on which the notice is served and the day on which the act is to be performed, but to exclude the one and include the other. (Civil Code, §722.) Following this rule, thirty days’ notice was given. This was sufficient. (English v. Williamson, ante, p. 212.)
“In all cases where the county seat of any county in this state has been or shall hereafter be located by a vote of the electors of such county, . . . the board of county commissioners, upon the petition of three-fifths of the legal electors of such county, shall order an election for the relocation of the county seat.”
We have examined the decisions cited, holding that the determination of the county board in such cases is conclusive until reversed or set aside upon appeal or by writ of error, and also the decision that the county board cannot comply with the request of the signers of petitions or remonstrances asking their names to be stricken off. The former decisions are contrary to the adjudications of this court, and the reasoning of the latter decision is not satisfactory. It is true that county-seat contests are attended with great bitterness, and charges and countercharges of unfair practices and fraud are more or less bandied about; but we cannot perceive that the peace of the community can be promoted by the granting of an election
It is further claimed that the injunction granted September 7th has and can have no operation, because the state can give no bond, and if she could give bond, she would not be suable on it; also, because it is alleged that the probate judge did not fix the amount of the undertaking. To support the first proposition, the case of Commonwealth v. Franklin Canal Co., 21 Pa. St. 117, is cited as decisive. The Pennsylvania statute provides that&emdash;
“No injunction shall be issued by any court or judge until the party applying for the same shall have given bond with sufficient sureties.”
The statute of this state reads:
“No injunction . . . shall operate until the party obtaining the same shall give an undertaking, executed by one or more sufficient securities.”
Counsel for the county board rely with a great deal of confidence upon the cases of Moore v. Hoisington, 31 Ill. 243, and Dickey v. Reed, 78 id. 261, to establish the doctrine that the canvass of election returns cannot be interfered with by an injunction. Both of those cases were proceedings for contesting elections. This is not a proceeding to contest an election, but to restrain the canvass of a vote, upon the ground that the petition presented to the county board for the election was wholly insufficient because of the fact that certain names were by the signers requested to be withdrawn, and that some of the names signed were the signatures of non-residents, or
As to the constitutionality of ch. 91, Laws of 1883, see The State v. Comm’rs of Butler Co., 31 Kas. 460. The vote polled October first cannot be canvassed or declared, or any valid proceedings taken thereon to change the county seat of Pratt county, until the real facts of the case shall be ascertained upon the final trial and the temporary injunction now in force shall have been legally dissolved; and the vote can never be canvassed or declared, if it be finally determined that there was no valid or sufficient petition presented to the county board upon which to order an election. If, upon the trial, it shall be made to appear that after striking from the petition the non-eligible petitioners and the names of all persons who asked their names to be stricken off the petition before • final action was taken thereon, the petition contains less than three-fifths of the legal electors of the county on the last assessment rolls of the county, the order for the election and all proceedings thereunder must fall.
We are therefore led to the conclusion that the district judge erred in dissolving the temporary injunction, and the case will be remanded with instructions to reverse such order, and to proceed further in accordance with the views herein expressed.