19 Neb. 161 | Neb. | 1886
This ease arises upon the application of H. G. Meckling, relator, for a peremptory mandamus against H. C. Jaynes, respondent, commanding him to turn over and deliver to the said relator all. the books and papers' pertaining and belonging to the office of the justice of the peace of the precinct of Wymore, Gage county.
The relator sets out in his relation, or petition, that on the 3d day of November, 1885, he was, and is, a resident of Wymore precinct, Gage county, and was on the day last above stated elected to the office of justice of the peace in and for said precinct; that at the general election held on said day, there were two justices of the peace to elect in
C. A. Burnham received 204 votes,
The relator received 196 votes,
Jesse Cochran received 180 votes,
And the respondent received 161 votes,
according to the canvass 'of said votes by the county board, and that certificates of election were duly issued and delivered to the said C. A. Burnham and to the relator; that relator has made and executed his bond, which has been duly approved, and has taken the oath of office as provided by law, and that on the 7th day of January, 1886, the relator demanded of the said H. C. Jaynes, whom he was elected to succeed, all of the books and papers belonging and pertaining to said office, and that the same was refused, etc.
The respondent, by his answer, alleges that he is an elector of the city of Wymore, which is and has been since the 1st day of April, 1884, a city of the second class, formed under the general laws of the state; that at a general election held in and for said town of Wymore on the 3d day of November, 1883, the respondent and C. A. Burnham were duly elected justices of the peace, in and for said town of Wymore, to hold their respective offices for the term of two years and until their successors were duly elected and qualified; that each of the last above named persons, at the time of said election, was a legal and qualified elector and a resident of the said town of Wymore, and each of said persons accepted said office and qualified, and entered upon
To this answer the relator filed a general demurrer, upon which the cause was submitted.
At the hearing, and upon a superficial discussion of the case in the consultation room, the writer was inclined io
A demurrer admits the truth of such facts as are properly pleaded in the pleading demurred to, and such only. The ■ allegations of the said answer, that the relator was not at the date of said election a resident and qualified elector of the city of Wymore, that he was not at said election elected to the office of justice of the peace, and that of the 196 votes cast at said election and counted for said relator, a large number, to-wit, forty votes, were illegally printed, distributed, cast, and counted, contrary to the provisions of the statute therein referred to, and' that without the aid of said illegal votes the said relator would not have a plurality of the total number of votes cast at said election, were none of them well pleaded in the said answer; nor did they or any of them constitute a defense to the relator’s cause of action. The relator’s cause of action consists solely in his having ■been canvassed in, declared elected, awarded a certificate of -election, taken the oath, and given the bond required by law, and the respondent having refused or failed to deliver up to him the books, papers, and furniture of the office, on demand. It was quite unnecessary for him to have alleged any other facts than these in his relation, nor would the denial and disproving of any other facts by the respondent defeat the action. It is stated as the law, in a standard work on this branch of the law, as follows: “Upon the ap-' plication for a mandamus, the court will not go behind the certificate of election and try the relator’s actual title. It is, therefore, wholly immaterial whether the relator was .eligible to the office in question, or whether he was duly elected thereto, since to try such issues would be to deter.mine the title upon proceedings in mandamus, which the courts will never do.” High on Ex. Leg. Eem., 74-5; and this is the law of the courts generally.
A peremptory mandamus will therefore issue as prayed.
Writ awarded.