145 P. 721 | Mont. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
At the general election held on November 3, 1914, Charles W. Smith was the Republican candidate, and Charles S. Muffly was the Democratic candidate, for state senator for Broadwater county. The canvassing board returned that Muffly received the highest number of votes, and a certificate of election was issued to him on November 6. On November 25 Smith commenced an action in the district court of Broadwater county contesting Muffly’s election. On December 3 the contestant secured leave of the court to amend his petition or complaint by striking therefrom:
“In the District Court of the Fourteenth Judicial District of the State of Montana, in and for the County of Broadwater.
‘ ‘ Charles W. Smith,
Contestant,
v.
Charles S. Muffly,
Contestee.
“Petition.
“To the Honorable John A. Matthews, Judge of the District Court of the Fourteenth Judicial District of the State of Montana in and for the County of Broadwater:
“The petition of contestant, above named, alleges.”
—and substitute therefor the following:
*136 “In the Matter of the Contest of Election of Charles S. Muffly to the Office of Senator for the County of Broadwater, State of Montana.
“.Charles W. Smith,
Contestant,
V.
Charles S. Muffly,
Contestee.
“Statement oe Contest.
“Charles W. Smith, contestant, presents and files this his statement of contest and alleges” — and by striking out the prayer that the court determine that Muffly was not elected and that contestant was, that a citation issue to Muffly requiring him to appear and answer, and that the ballots used at the election in precincts 1 to 13 be produced in court and counted, and that a certificate of election be ordered to issue to contestant, and to substitute therefor:
“Wherefore contestant prays that the clerk of the district court of the fourteenth judicial district of the state of Montana, in and for the county of Broadwater, issue a commission directed to two justices of the peace of said county to meet at a time and place specified in such commission, in accordance with law, for the purpose of taking the depositions of such witnesses as the above-named parties to the above-entitled contest may wish to examine, and that such other proceedings may be had for the determination of said contest as are authorized by law and by the statutes of the state of Montana. ’5 On the same day a paper designated “Statement of Contest” was filed with the clerk of the court, and application made for a commission to two justices of the peace to take testimony. The clerk having refused to issue the commission, proceedings in mandamus were instituted in the district court to compel the performance of that duty. The court refused to issue the writ, and this proceeding in cer-tiorari was instituted to review the court’s action. Upon the return, counsel for the respondent interposed a demurrer and*137 a motion to quash, and the matter is before us for determination upon the complete record of all prior proceedings. Technically, all of these proceedings were not before the district court, and it is urged are not now before us. But nothing is before us which we would not have required upon a hearing upon the merits, and nothing has been excluded which could have come before us properly. We shall therefore disregard the technical objection made, and consider the record as a whole.
Sections 48, 49, 52 and 53 of an Act approved at the general election in 1912 (Laws 1913, pp. 612, 613), under the initiative power reserved to the people by our state Constitution, and familiarly known as the Corrupt Practices Act, provide for contesting nominations or elections by actions in the district courts. Section 49, among other things, declares: “In the case of a contested nomination or election for senator or representative in the legislative assembly, * *• * the court shall forthwith certify its findings to the secretary of state to be by him transmitted to the presiding officer of the body in question. ’ ’ Article VI, Part III, Title I, Revised Codes (secs. 82-92), provides methods for securing and perpetuating testimony in a contest of an election of a member of either house of the legislative assembly. The first method requires, as a condition precedent, that within twenty days after the certificate of election has been issued a statement of contest shall be filed with the elerk of the district court of the county where the contest arises, whereupon the clerk must issue a commission to two justices of the peace of his county, who shall take the depositions of the witnesses produced by either the. contestant or contestee, report the same to the clerk, who shall forward the evidence to the secretary of state, by him to be transmitted to the presiding officer of that branch of the legislature before which the contest is to be tried. The second method (section 91) provides for depositions to be taken in the manner and under the rules applicable in civil cases; and section 92 provides: “The house before which the contest is pending may take such other evidence in the case, as it deems material.”
In considering a like provision of the Constitution of Kansas, Mr. Justice Brewer said, “The Constitution declares (Art. II, sec. 8) that: ‘Each house shall be judge of the elections, returns, and qualifications of its own members.’ This is a grant of power, and constitutes each house the ultimate tribunal as to the qualifications of its own members. The two houses acting conjointly do not decide. Each house acts for itself, and by itself, and from its decision there is no appeal, not even to the two houses. And this power is not exhausted when once it has been
But section 49 of the Corrupt Practices Act probably does not
In State ex rel. Schneider v. Cunningham, 39 Mont. 165, 101 Pac. 962, we said with reference to this provision: “Its purpose is to constitute each department an exclusive trustee of the power vested in it, accountable to the people alone for its faithful exercise, so that each may act as a cheek upon the other, and thus may be prevented the tyranny and oppression which would be the inevitable result of a lodgment of all power in the hands of one body. It is incumbent upon each department to assert and exercise all its power whenever public necessity requires it to do so; otherwise it is recreant to the trust reposed in it by the people. It is equally incumbent upon it to refrain from asserting a power that does not belong to it, for this is equally a violation of the people’s confidence. Indeed, the distinction goes so far as to require each department to refrain from in any way impeding the exercise of the proper functions belonging to either of the other departments.”
The jurisdiction of the district court is defined and limited by section 11, Article VIII, of the Constitution. Every power therein enumerated is judicial in character; and that the lawmaking branch of government cannot compel a court to act as its agent, or the agent df either house of the .legislature, merely to gather evidence and make findings therefrom which have no binding force or effect, or for any other purpose, follows from the very character of the judiciary as an independent, coordinate branch of government. The provision of section 49 of the Corrupt Practices Act above quoted is invalid. for this reason, and the contest proceeding instituted in the district court of Broadwater county on November 25 was a nullity, and the
It is idle to suggest that contestant intended his original petition, filed in court on November 25, to constitute a statement
It may be observed in passing that the method of instituting a contest provided by sections 82 et seq., above, is not exclusive. Those provisions merely contemplate a convenient method of
Because the proceeding instituted' on November 25 was ineffectual, and the proceeding commenced on December 3 was too late, this relator is not entitled to any relief in this court. The demurrer and motion to quash are sustained, and the proceeding is dismissed.
Dismissed.