23 Kan. 456 | Kan. | 1880
This is an action of mandamus, to compel the defendants, as canvassing board of the county of Harper,, to canvass and déclare the result of the election held in November last for county officers, and on the question of the-location of the county seat. The defendants, for one ground of defense, return that there were only about 800 legal voters-in said county at the date of said election, whereas the returns as made show a vote of 2,947 purporting to have been polled, and that therefore at least 2,147 of such votes were fraudulent and illegal, and that by reason thereof it is impossible to determine and declare the will of the people or the true result of such election. A motion has been made to strike out this portion of the return, and upon that motion the case is submitted to us. This motion is made in no technical spirit, but, as counsel agree, that there may be a speedy determination of the substantial questions involved. And we meet counsel in the same spirit. Our general knowledge of matters and events assures us that in au outlying and frontier county like Harper, there is no such number of legal voters, and hence that the return of the commissioners that the large majority of such apparent vote is illegal and fraudulent, is-substantially correct.
The question therefore presented is not, whether, when there have been, or is charged to have been, here and there, illegal votes received, or legal votes rejected, or fraudulent or irregular practices on the part of the officers in any one or more voting precincts, the county board has a right to inquire into-the merits of such votes, or the conduct of such officers, but whether, when there are sent in to the canvassing board returns showing such an enormous number of votes as to be perfectly obvious that they are not true returns of legal votes actually cast, but simply manufactured evidences of an attempt to defeat the popular will, this court will, by mandamus, compel the board to accept as true these fraudulent returns and canvass, and declare the result as though they even prima facie
"We might perhaps stop here, but we feel that we should fail in our duty if we did not call the attention of our fellow-citizens to the great wrong disclosed herein, as well as to its demoralizing influences. No such outrage could have been perpetrated without the connivance, if not the open approval, of many. There was a “ county-seat fight,” it is true, and it is one of the sad things connected with such fights, that the obligation of honesty in elections seems to be so often forgotten. Men, honorable men, will tolerate that which in any matter of private dealing they would scorn. Yet a dishonest vote cast at one election is the only the parent of many dishonest votes at another. And the better the men who countenance or even tolerate the one, the larger the number of the offspring.
With this appeal we close this opinion. The motion to strike out will be overruled, and judgment entered in accordance with the stipulation on file.