10 Neb. 32 | Neb. | 1880
This is an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus to compel the board of county commissioners of Nemaha county to call a special election for the purpose of submitting to the electors of that county the question of re-locating the county seat. The petition alleges that on the 11th day of October, 1879, the petitioners herein presented to the board of county commissioners of said county a petition signed by eleven hundred and nine electors of said county, asking said board to call a special election for the purpose of submitting to the people of said county the question of the re-location of the county seat; that the petition contained, in addition to the names of the petitioners, the section, township, and range on which, or town or city in which, the petitioners reside, their ages and time of residence in the county; that one of
Section one of the act “ to provide for the re-location of county seats,” approved February 24, 1875, provides that “ whenever the inhabitants of any county are desirous of changing their county seat, and upon petitions therefor being presented to the county commissioners, signed by resident electors of said county, equal in number to three-fifths of all the votes cast in said county at the last general election held therein, said petition shall contain, in addition to the names of the petitioners, the section, township, and range on which, or town or city in which, the petitioners reside, their ages, and time of residence in the county, it shall be the duty of said hoard of commissioners to forthwith call a special election in said county for the purpose of submitting to the qualified electors thereof the question of the re-location of the county seat,” etc. Laws 1875, p. 159.
During the argument of the cause it was admitted that a number of the signers of said petition had withdrawn their names from the same before it was presented to the county commissioners, and also that
The petitioners, in an application for the re-location of a county seat, may be regarded as plaintiffs in the proceeding. Any or all of the signers of such a petition‘may withdraw their names at any time before it is presented to the board of county commissioners; their action in signing the same is entirely voluntary; and if they withdraw their names, either directly by erasure from the petition or by signing a remonstrance against calling said election, their names cannot be counted by the commissioners as petitioners. And if parties have been induced by misrepresentation to sign such petition they may undoubtedly go before the board and state the facts as to such misrepresentations, and demand that their names be stricken from the petition, or not counted as petitioners. The commissioners should not call an election for such purpose unless they find, at the time of calling said election, that more than three-fifths of the voters, as shown by the return of the last general election, are then petitioners in favor of such election. It is not the intention of the law to subject the people of a county to expense, annoyance, and animosities not unfrequently attending an election for the re-location of a county seat, unless it shall appear that the requisite number of voters are at the time of calling the same in favor of such election. The petition is only a means of determining that at least three-fifths of the legal voters of a county are in favor of the re-location of a county seat, and that an election called for the purpose of submitting such question to the people of the county will in all probability result in a re-location of the county scat.
As it does not appear that the requisite number of names was signed to said petition at the time the board refused to call said election, the writ must be denied.
Writ-denied.