10 Neb. 58 | Neb. | 1880
The question in this case arises upon the return of the respondent to the alternative writ of mandamus. The said alternative writ contains the following charge, after the setting out of the submission of the question of the issuing and donating of the county bonds to the railroad company, and the holding of the election, that at the said election there were cast two thousand two hundred and thirty-eight votes, of which number fourteen hundred and forty-eight were cast in favor of the proposition * * * and seven hundred and ninety were cast against the proposition. “ That the votes polled, in the several precincts were returned to you
To this writ the respondent made return and answer, in which, among other things, he says : “ And respondent further says, that the annexed paper marked exhibit “A” is a true and correct copy of the record of said canvass of votes in said county, which respondent prays may be taken as a part of his answer or return in this cause; and that said canvass was completed,” etc. By reference to the said exhibit “A” wo find the following as a part of the said certificate of canvass: “ And we further certify that there are no legal returns of votes from the precinct of Paddock, in said county, for the reason that there is no evidence that all the judges and clerks of said election in Paddock precinct were qualified as provided by law, and for the reason that, it appears that one Thomas W. Wing was not qualified to sit as a judge at said election in said precinct, and for reasons not herein enumerated.”
By reference to sec. 1, chap. 35, and sec. 20, chap. 13, of General Statutes, it will be seen that the election,
“ Sec. 18. After such abstract is made and the votes counted and compared, the person or persons having the highest number of votes for each of the offices * * * voted for at such election, shall be declared duly elected, and the county clerk shall issue a certificate accordingly.”
Reading these sections of the statute without reference to authorities or construction, it seems quite clear that it is the duty of the clerk and his two assistants, who arc usually- — -though not vei-y accurately — called the board of canvassers; to tabulate the votes contained in each one of the returns, or in other words, the returns received from each of the precincts, and in ascertaining the result to add up the votes given for each candidate respectively, as returned from each precinct, from which a return of votes has been in fact received. And when we come to look into the authorities and examine the adjudicated cases, we find that the courts, with almost entire unanimity, agree in defining the duties of the canvassers under similar statutes as ministerial, consisting in tabulating and
In the case of The State, ex rel. Moore, v. Howard, not reported, this court held that where the returns from one of the precincts contained no figures showing the number of votes cast for a point to which it was proposed to remove the county seat, but only the tally^sheet of votes under appropriate heads, it was the duty of the board to canvass and allow such votes; and after the said board had adjourned,- issued a peremptory mandamus to the clerk to complete such canvass accordingly.
In the case of Hagge v. Wiseman, decided at the present term, this court held that a canvassing board possesses no judicial powers, and cannot go behind the returns.
Judge McCrary, in his valuable work on the American law of elections, has collated the, cases, showing that the courts of last resort of fifteen of the states of the Union substantially unite in denying to boards of canvassers any discretionary or judicial power. Dishon v. Smith, 10 Iowa, 212. Attorney General v. Barstow, 4 Wis., 749. People v. Van Cleve, 1 Mich., 362. Thompson, Circuit Judge, 9 Ala., 338. State v. Steers, 44 Mo., 228. Bacon v. York County, 26 Me., 491. Taylor v. Taylor, 10 Minn., 107. Morgan v. Quackenbush, 22 Barb., 72.
Erom a consideration of these cases, as well as the provisions of our statute above quoted, I reach the conclusion that the canvassers (in this case) had no right or power to reject the returns from Paddock precinct, either for the causes named in said exhibit “ A ” or for any cause whatever, and that by reason
In a late case quite in point in the supreme court of Kansas, Judge Brewster, in delivering the opinion of the court, uses the following language: “It is the duty of canvassers to canvass all of the returns, and they as truly fail to discharge this duty by canvassing only a part and refusing to canvass the others as by refusing to canvass any. And it is settled by abundant authority that where the board refuses to canvass any of the votes it may be compelled to do so by mandamus, and this though the board has adjourned sine die. Hagerty v. Harrold, 13 Kan., 367, is a case in point. The canvass is a ministerial act, and part performance is no more a discharge of the duty enjoined than no performance. * * The adjournment of the board does not deprive the court of the power to compel it to act any more than the adjournment of a term of the district court would prevent this court from compelling by mandamus the signing a bill of exceptions by the judge of the court, which had been tendered to him before the adjournment.” Lewis v. Commis. of Marshall Co., 16 Kan., 102. See also State of Iowa v. County Judge, 7 Iowa, 186.
The point was made at the hearing that by and under sections 64 and following of an act entitled “An act to provide a general election law, the procedure relative to contested elections and the filling of vacancies in office,” approved March 1, 1879 (Laws, p. 240), the relator has a remedy at law, and hence cannot be allowed the remedy by mandamus. I have considered this point, and it is certainly entitled to great weight. But I do not think that it can apply to this case. The act in question by its own terms went into effect September 1, 1879. The canvass of the votes
It will thus be seen that but a few days elapsed after the talcing effect of the said law until the relator was barred of its benefits as applied to this case, by reason of the expiration of twenty days from the date of the canvass. As the act itself gives twenty days in which a party may avail himself of its benefits, I take it as the legislative opinion that that is a necessary or reasonable time for the purpose of taking the steps contemplated by the act, and that the relator cannot be deprived of his remedy by mandamus, he never having had an opportunity to avail himself of the benefit of the act in question, with all of its privileges as to time. So that, without passing upon the main point as to whether the provisions of the law in question will in a proper case take the place of proceedings by mandamus, I am of the opinion it cannot in this case.
It therefore follows that a peremptory writ of mandamus must be granted, as prayed.