Lead Opinion
On October 7, 1936, W. Pooser as a candidate for the office of State Senator from the Fourth Senatorial District (Jackson County) and W. Pooser and C. W. Allen as citizens, residents, and taxpayers of Jackson Cоunty filed an information in quo warranto in this court in which they allege that the primary elections held in said county June 2nd amj June 23rd were nullities, void, and ineffectual, and that each and all the nominations for the respective county offices made in said primary elections are likewise void and ineffectual. A rule nisi was issued by this court directed to W. W. Wester and other respondents nominated in said primary election commanding them to show cause why writ of quo warranto should not be issued to them pursuant to said information.
*51 Respondents move to discharge the rule nisi on the ground of laches and the further ground that the Attorney General having refused to permit the use of his nаme, the proceeding cannot be maintained by relators as citizens and taxpayers.
A majority of the court do not think it necessary to answer the latter question in this proceeding. It is not out of plаce to state, however, that under our practice, quo warranto is a remedial as well as a prerogative writ and that this court will not refuse to extend its use on proper showing made. In State,
ex rel.
Watkins, v. Fernandez,
In the latter case, we рermitted its use to test the claim of Bauder to a “liberty” or “quasi official right” and in State, ex rel. Watkins, v. Fernandez, we permitted its use to test the right to nomination for office in a primary election. We permitted its use in bоth these cases on the theory that the law will not permit a wrong to go without a remedy, which principle was reincorporated in Section 4, Declaration of Rights, Constitution of Florida. One of the high prеrogatives of a court of justice is to keep this principle of the law dynamic by construing it to provide a remedy for every new wrong that arises. The test of whether or not old remedies will be extendеd to the wrongs that constantly arise from new conditions is not what the remedy extended to in the time of Edward the First or George the Third, but whether or not the one complaining has suffered an injury in his “lands, goods, person, оr reputation” that should in right and justice be atoned for. If this is not the rule, then *52 the Equitable Maxim and Section 4 of the Declaration of Rights are nothing more than a gesture and had as well be consigned to the pictograph corner in the museum along with the Code of Hammurabi and the tablets that Moses brought down from the mountain.
We have examined Newman v. United States,
ex rel.
Frizzell,
Relators do not rely on the violation of a private or personal right for relief but they say that a public right has been prostituted. They contend that the illegal elections held in the manner outlined in the information for quo warranto not only affeсted them unlawfully but that they vitally affected the welfare, franchises, prerogatives, and liberties of all the people of the State. They contend further that their primary object is the enforcement of a public right and being so the public is the real party in interest and that they or any other citizen or taxpayer are proper parties to the proceeding. They rely on Florida C. and P. R. Co. v. Stаte,
ex rel.
Town of Tavares,
The doctrine of these cases is generally approved in this country and it is well settled that when the enforcement *53 of a public right is sought, the people are the real party to the cаuse. The relator need not show that he has any real or personal interest in it. It is enough that he is a citizen and interested in having the law upheld, but this, like all other rules has its limitations.
In the case at bar, relatоrs as citizens and taxpayers, seek to invalidate the elections held in Jackson County, June 2 and June 23, and to oust the nominees for county offices in said county on the ground that in the primary election hеld June 2, a total of 8226 persons voted, 3645 of whom were duly registered and qualified to vote but that 4581 of whom were not qualified because they had failed to register and pay their poll taxes as the law requires, and that in the primary election held June 23, a total of 7503 persons voted, 3645 of whom were duly registered and qualified to vote but that 3858 of whom were not qualified and therefore voted illegally.
There is no chаrge that the elections were not legally called, advertised, held, and canvassed. It is merely charged that persons were permitted to vote who were not qualified to vote and notwithstanding thousаnds voted who were qualified and neither election is charged to be otherwise irregular, it is contended that both should now be adjudged to be void- and as if not held.
The law (Section 299, Revised General Statutes'оf 1920, Section 355, Compiled General Laws of 1927) requires that nominations for elective State, Congressional, and County Offices for United States Senator, Congressional, State, and County Executive Committees be made by primary election. The right to vote is prohibited to those who have not registered and paid their poll taxes unless exempt therefrom by law (Section 371, Compiled General Laws of 1927) and no *54 elеctor is permitted to vote in any precinct other than the one in which he is registered.
Under the law as thus stated, every person who voted without having registered and paid his poll tax was an illegal votеr and had no right to present himself at the polls for that purpose. It is absurd and ridiculous to contend that a candidate or a citizen has no right to relief in the face of such flagrant violation of the law. We are of the view, however, that he who seeks to correct such violations must move against them seasonably and appropriately.
This court is committed to the doctrine that extraordinary relief will not be granted in cases, where it plainly appears that although the complainant party may be ordinarily entitled to it, if the granting of such relief in the particular case will result in confusion аnd disorder and will produce an injury to the public which outweighs the individual right of the complainant to have the relief he seeks. Bronson v. Board of Public Instruction, Osceola County,
This rule is particularly appliсable to the facts in this case. Relators waited more than four months to seek relief ; at the time the information was filed, the general election in which the nominees were required to be vqted for was less than a month in the future; they do not allege that they are affected except as every other citizen is affected; it is not alleged that the illegal votes cast can be segregated frоm the legal ones and if they could, that when counted, the result of the election would be changed. It is not alleged that one of the respondents had any part in the illegal voting or even knew of it; no reason is assigned for the delay in moving against it and in fact we see nothing that could result but confusion and disorder.
In fine, nothing is relied on to vitiate the elections except
*55
that some illegal votes were cast. The rule is settled in this state that where an election is otherwise valid, it will not be held void because illegal votes were cast. It must be shown that the illegal votes will change the result of the election. Stаte,
ex rel.
McClenny, v. County Commissioners of Baker County,
For the reasons announced herein we are driven to the conclusion that the motion to discharge the rule nisi should be granted.
It is so ordered.
Brown, Buford and Davis, J. J., concur specially.
Concurrence Opinion
(conсurring). — I concur in the conclusion reached for the reasons stated in the last four paragraphs of the opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring specially). — In addition to the objection of laches, I think the relief sоught should be denied because it is now too late to afford to defendant the right to have a trial of the issues of fact in this cause before a jury as the law contemplates to be herein demandable in a quo warranto case (even when first begun in the Supreme Court). But I do not think it is necessary, as a matter of law, to show that illegal votes cast actually did change the result of the election. If as а matter of fact enough illegal .votes are actually cast to have changed the election, they are presumed to have been cast for that purpose *56 and the law will then throw the rеsult out in its entirety for want of a better remedy, because it is impossible to separ rate the legal votes from the illegal votes. With the qualification stated above I concur in the opinion of Mr. Justicе Terrell.
Addendum
On Petition for Rehearing
The information in quo warranto herein seeks to have the court adjudge that the primary elections held in Jackson County in June, 1936, are “nullities, void and ineffectual” and that the nominations made therein are “nullities, void and ineffectual,” because, it is alleged, large numbers of illegal ballots were cast and counted in .said primary elections.
The court has properly held that the casting and cоunting of illegal ballots at a primary election which was duly called and was legally held in the county except in the receipt and counting of illegal ballots even in excess of the valid ballots cast, did not on the showing made, render the primary election throughout the county null and void.
If for any reason it may, upon a sufficient showing, be adjudged that there is a failure of nominations in the county of party candidatеs for the offices voted for in the primary, the statute authorizes the appropriate executive committee of the party to fill vacancies in nominations of party candidates. Seе Sec. 411 (354) C. G. L., as amended by Chapter 13761, Acts of 1929.
• A-Vhatever may be the legal effect of the alleged wholesale casting and counting of illegal ballots in the- primary election, the proceeding as here invoked cannot now remedy the alleged illegality in the conduct of the primary election.
Rehearing denied.
