53 S.E.2d 458 | Ga. | 1949
1. A petition filed with an ordinary, to contest an election for constable, which fails to state a ground for contest that the ordinary has jurisdiction to hear and determine should be dismissed; and since the petition in the instant case failed to state such a ground, the ordinary erred in refusing, on motion, to dismiss the petition, and his subsequent findings and orders were nugatory.
2. Unless the votes for an ineligible person are expressly declared to be void in an election contest proceeding for that purpose, the effect of such person receiving a majority of the votes cast is not to give the office to the qualified person having the next highest number of votes, but to invalidate the election.
Thereafter, and on January 12, 1949, Stone filed in the superior court a proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto to inquire into the right of Thompson to act as constable of the district. The suit was brought by Stone both as a citizen of the district, and as a claimant to the office. He later abandoned his claim to the office and admitted to the court that on the day of the election he was not a duly qualified voter of the county. The petition and information show the undisputed facts set out above and, in addition, it was alleged and contended by Stone that Thompson did not file a legal election contest with the ordinary as contemplated by the Code, § 34-3001; that the ordinary exceeded his jurisdiction and passed upon a matter over which he had no legal authority to pass; that the ordinary had no authority to declare one elected who received a minority of the legal votes cast, after first finding that the candidate who received the greatest number of legal votes was ineligible to hold the office because he was not a registered voter on the day of the election. Thompson filed a plea, designated as a plea to the jurisdiction, and demurrers, general and special, to the petition and information, by which he sought to have the proceeding dismissed on the ground that Stone, by participating in the contest, was bound by the ordinary's determination of the matter and had therefore exhausted his remedy. The plea and demurrers, which raised substantially the same questions, were *245 overruled by the court, to which ruling exceptions pendente lite were duly filed. The trial judge, after hearing evidence and without the intervention of a jury, found that Thompson had no legal title to the office of constable, or right to assume to act as such, for the reason that Stone received the highest number of legal votes cast in the election, and the ordinary had no authority, after declaring Stone to be ineligible, to enter thereafter an order declaring that Thompson had been elected to the office. He further found that Stone was not eligible to hold the office for the reason that he was not a duly registered voter of the county on the day of the election. The commissions of office issued to both parties were ordered vacated, annulled, and canceled.
Thompson assigned error on the judgment ousting him from office and canceling his commission of office, and on the exceptions pendente lite. The only ruling before the court as to Stone concerns his right as a citizen to institute and maintain a proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto to inquire into the right of Thompson to hold the office.
1. "Whenever any contest shall arise over an election of any constable . . the same shall be filed with, heard and determined by the ordinary of the county wherein such contest may arise, under the same rules and regulations as to the mode of procedure as prescribed in contests where commission is issued by the Governor." Code, §§ 34-3001, 34-2801, 34-2802, 34-2803. The jurisdiction conferred upon an ordinary to hear and determine a contest arising out of an election of constable is limited, and he has no power other than that expressly conferred by statute.McDonald v. DeLaPerriere,
In the present case, there is no contention that any vote cast in the election of constable was illegal, or that the result of the election as certified by the election managers to the ordinary was not correct. The sole ground of contest, as alleged in the petition filed for that purpose, was that Stone, whose name was certified as having received the greatest number of legal votes cast, was not qualified as a candidate for the office because he was not a duly registered voter of the county on the day of the election. Clearly this was an attempt to raise a judicial question, a determination of which would be without the scope of authority conferred on the ordinary in an election contest case. The ordinary therefore erred in refusing to dismiss the petition on motion of Stone, and the subsequent findings and orders were void. This being true, Stone, in the capacity of a citizen of the district, could thereafter institute and maintain a proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto for the purpose of inquiring into the right of Thompson to exercise the functions of the office of constable in the district under and by virtue of the void judgment of the ordinary. Code, § 64-201; Hathcock v.McGouirk,
2. Thompson, the plaintiff in error, contends that where a person who is ineligible to hold an office receives a majority of the votes cast in an election, the effect is not to invalidate the election, but to declare the qualified person who receives the next highest number of votes to be elected. He relies uponPearson v. *247 Lee,
Accordingly, the trial judge did not err in holding the election void because of Stone's admitted ineligibility, and in the judgment ordering the commissions of office issued to Stone and Thompson vacated, annulled, and canceled.
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur. *248