29 Nev. 281 | Nev. | 1907
By the Court,
This is an application, upon notice to respondents, for the issuance of a writ of prohibition directed to the respondent, F. P. Langan, as District Judge of the First Judicial District in and for Lyon County, and commanding him to refrain from canvassing the returns from a certain election precinct in said county called Churchill Precinct, in a certain election contest for the office of short-term county commissioner, now pending before said court, in which the respondent, I. H. Strosnider, is plaintiff and contestant, and petitioner, C. C. Turner, is the defendant and contestee. The writ is also asked for the purpose of prohibiting the respondent judge from deciding the contest.
The complaint further alleges that the board of county commissioners met on the.day of November, 1906, and canvassed the returns for all the precincts of said Lyon County, excepting the said Churchill Precinct, which they refused to canvass, with the result that, by such canvass, it was found that plaintiff and contestant had received 275 votes, and said defendant Turner had received 277 votes for said office, a majority of two votes in favor of the defendant. The answer in the lower court denies the allegations of the complaint relative to the plaintiff having received a majority of the votes cast, and further alleges facts which he claims makes the returns from Churchill Precinct void and improper to be canvassed.
The defendant’s answer, following the language authorized by the statute in election contests, further " charges the facts to be that, in other precincts in said County of Lyon, votes were thrown out and not counted that were cast for defendant and contestee, by the various boards of election for Lyon County, that should have been counted for defendant, and that said various boards of election in said county counted votes for plaintiff that were illegal by reason of having distinguishing marks, which Should not have been counted, and counted votes for plaintiff that should have been counted for defendant.” The complaint also contained a similar allegation in plaintiff’s favor. (Comp. Laws, 1624.)
The case proceeded to trial upon the issues made by the pleadings. When the plaintiff offered in evidence the returns
Petitioner sets forth in his petition that the respondent threatens»to admit the returns and ballots of this precinct, and will do so unless prohibited therefrom by this court. From the showing made upon the hearing, we think it cannot be said that the trial court has, as yet, made any intimation as to how he will determine the question presented to him. But even if we concede, solely for the purposes of the case-and the argument, the contentions of petitioner that the trial court is threatening to admit and count the ballots of Churchill Precinct, and that he will do so unless restrained, and that such act will be beyond the jurisdiction of the court, nevertheless it is' not such a showing as would warrant the restraining of such proceedings by writ of prohibition.
In the recent case of Bell v. District Court, 28 Nev. 280, this court in its opinion quoted with approval from the opinion of Hawley, C. J., in the case of Walcott v. Wells, 21 Nev. 51, 24 Pac. 368 (9 L. R. A. 59, 37 Am. St. Rep. 478), the following: "The writ of prohibition is an extraordinary remedy, and should be issued only in cases of extreme necessity. Before it .should issue, it must appear that the petitioner has applied to the inferior tribunal for relief. The object of the writ is to restrain inferior courts from acting without authority of law in cases where wrong, damage, and injustice are likely to follow from such action. It does not lie for grievances which may be redressed, in the ordinary course of judicial proceedings, by appeal. It is not a writ of right, but one of sound judicial discretion, to be issued or refused according to the facts and circumstances of each particular case. Like all other prerogative writs, it is to be used with caution and forbearance, for the furtherance of justice, and securing order and regularity in
If the trial court should admit the ballots from Churchill Precinct, and if it were, as contended by counsel for petitioner, that the trial court has no jurisdiction so to do, and injury results therefrom to petitioner, the remedy by appeal, we think, is adequate to afford full relief. It is not alone requisite that the trial court be without jurisdiction in the premises, but it must satisfactorily appear that wrong, damage, or injustice is likely to follow from the threatened action, and that no other remedy will afford full relief. The trial court unquestionably has jurisdiction of election contests between rival claimants to a county office. If the contest is improperly instituted, or if the complaint sets forth matters not within the court’s jurisdiction, or if incompetent evidence is admitted upon the hearing, the remedy by appeal will ordinarily, at least, afford full relief, provided the proper objections and exceptions are taken in the trial court.
We think the showing insufficient to entitle petitioner to the writ, and the same is denied.