11 Neb. 104 | Neb. | 1881
It appears from the record that on the sixteenth day of June, 1879, it having been made to appear to the governor by the affidavits of three resident freeholders of Nance county that said county contained a population of not less than two hundred inhabitants, and that ten or more of the same were tax payers therein who petitioned the governor to appoint O. E. Stearns, George S. McChesney, and J. W. Whitney to act as special county commissioners in and for said county. That thereupon the governor did appoint the persons above named special commissioner^, who qualified and entered upon the duties of their office. Said commissioners thereupon divided said county into five precincts, and on the twentieth day. of September, 1879, fixed upon the fourth day of November, 1879, as the
A number of defenses are interposed, the principal of which are: First, That the matter has already been •adjudicated. Second, That the relator does not show -a sufficient interest to bring and maintain the action. Third, That the defendants have no further power or authority in the premises. Fourth, There is a plain and adequate remedy at law by contest.
It appears from the record that proceedings were instituted in the district court of Merrick county to compel the defendants to canvass the votes in question, which proceedings were afterwards dismissed. The grounds of the motion were irregularities in the proceedings, and the motion seems to have been properly sustained, as, in addition to the grounds therein set' forth, it is clear that the court had no jurisdiction. There has therefore been no adjudication upon the merits of the case, and the proceedings referred to are not a bar to this action.
TÍie third objection, that the defendants have no further power or authority in the premises is insufficient. They .accepted- the office of special commissioners, and took an oath to faithfully discharge .the duties thereof. One of the duties imposed upon them was that of canvassing the votes cast at the first election. This they have not done. It is ho answer to say that they canvassed a part of the votes. It was their duty to canvass the entire number cast. They had no authority to reject any portion of the returns and refuse to receive them. Their duties were purely ministerial. Hagge v. The State, 10 Neb., 51. State v. Hill, Id., 58. To permit a board of canvassers to throw out votes or reject returns upon some pretext, and thus defeat the will of a majority of the electors and change the result of an election, leads to lawlessness and violence, and if carried out in all elections in the state for any con-
The objection that the relator has a plain and adequate remedy at law is untenable. The 6th subdivision of section 64 of the act to provide a general election law, approved March 1st, 1879, provides that an election may be contested “ for any error in any board of canvassers in counting the votes, or in declaring the result of the election if the error would ■ change the result.” Laws 1879, 260. It is very clear from an examination of the statutes that it was not intended that this remedy should be exclusive. It is merely one of the grounds of contest, but it is equally so without the aid of the statute. But in many cases the mode here provided is not a plain and adequate remedy. Without attempting to define what is a full and adequate remedy at law, which must in a great degree be determined from the facts and circumstances of each case, I think all the cases agree that the mere fact that an action will lie does not supersede the remedy by mandamus. If the remedy by action is not a plain and adequate remedy, a mandamus should be awarded. If a person has received a majority of all the votes cast for an office, which, if canvassed, will entitle him to a certificate of election, why should he be compelled to
Judgment accordingly.