5 Mont. 202 | Mont. | 1884
This is an application filed in this court by Frank Wells, Henry B. Berkley, Edwin M. Bachelor, P. B. Clark and Charles Furgerson, citizens of Badersburg, Jefferson county, for a writ of mandate against Joel M. D. Taylor, clerk and recorder; John McDermott, sheriff; Edward McSorley, treasurer, and David G-. Warner, probate judge, officers of said Jefferson county, residing and exercising the functions of their respective offices at Boulder City, in said county, to compel said officers to return the books, records, archives, papers and
The questions to be determined arise upon a demurrer to the application of petitioners, no writ having issued in pursuance of the prayer of the petitioners, and hence no answer having been filed by the respondents. A brief statement of the facts, as they appear in the application, will be necessary in order to present the questions to be decided:
The legislative assembly of the territory, at its thirteenth regular session, 1883, passed an act authorizing the citizens of Jefferson county to vote upon the question of removing the county seat of said county from Radersburg to Boulder City, and providing the notice to be given, and the day when such election should be held. The act further provided that the county commissioners should appoint judges and clerks of said election in the several precincts as now established, who shall qualify as other clerks and judges of election, and that said judges and clerks should receive, count and make return of all legal ballots “in the manner and at the time as is provided in this bill.” Also, that the canvassing board shall, within twenty days after such election, make an abstract of all the votes- cast, and that the clerk of the board shall make out an abstract of the votes cast, and deliver one copy thereof to the secretary of the territory and another to the clerk and recorder of the county; that if the vote is in favor of changing the county seat, the commissioners shall, within six months from the date of the election, cause the books, records, papers and effects of the county to be removed to the place designated as the county seat; and that the several county officers thereafter shall hold-and keep all county books, papers and records, and their offices, at such new county seat.
1. There is no allegation of fraud by the petitioners. An abstract of the vote of the county at the different precincts is attached to and made a part of the application, showing that a majority of the votes as cast 'were in favor of changing the county seat from Radersburg to Boulder City, and there is nothing whatever in the application showing or tending to show that any illegal or fraudulent votes were cast at said election. The purpose of this act of the legislative.assembly was to give to the qualified electors of Jefferson county an opportunity to express their wishes upon the question of changing their county seat from Radersburg to Boulder City, in said county. In pursuance of this purpose an election was held at the time appointed in the act. We must take it for granted that there was not a fraudulent "or illegal vote cast at the election, for the petitioners charge no fraud or illegality in that regard. The vote, then, contained in the abstract attached to the application of petitioners for the writ, is an honest expression of the electors upon the question submitted. But the petitioners say .that the vote was not counted or canvassed by the proper
The canvassing board is a board provided by the general election law. It was already in existence when this special act became a law. ' It was not necessary that the special act specify of whom this board should be composed, for the general law had already made such specification. If the special act had provided that the board of county commissioners should make the abstract, it would not have been necessary to have named the persons of whom such board is composed. The general law speaks upon that subject. The board of commissioners and the
2. In election cases the great question is whether the voice of the majority has been honestly and fairly expressed. A qualified voter should not be disfranchised because a judge of the election or a clerk was not prop
In the last-named case the court say: “ A more manifest fault is in the fact that neither the judges nor clerks of the election appear to have been sworn. In the case of each of these townships before named the officers signed a form of oath, but there is no evidence of the oath having been administered. It is urged that this defect entirely vitiates these returns. But the law is not so. While it is the law that the canvassers cannot adjudicate upon the sufficiency of returns, as we have held in the former case, where a case of this kind comes into a court of justice, such court, or a jury trying it,
And so we say that the election, and not the question as to whether the judges and clerks thereof were properly appointed, must determine whether this county seat was changed from Radersburg to Boulder City. If the election was fair and honest, and no illegal votes were cast, it is not of much consequence who counted the votes, provided they made an honest count and a correct abstract thereof.
In the case of People v. Cook, supra, the court say: “It is the election, and not the certificate of the canvassers, that gives the right to the office. ... The neglect of the inspectors or clerks to take any oath would not have vitiated the election. It might have subjected those officers to an indictment if the neglect was wilful. ”
Prom these authorities it seems settled beyond question that mere irregularities that do not affect the general result will not vitiate an election. If the votes are legal and the voters qualified, mere irregularities in the appointment and qualification of the officers conducting the election will not have the effect to make the election void. It is not very material who counts or makes an
3. The petitioners further rely upon the allegations of their application, that prior to the election there was presented an offer to the voters of the county in the form of a bond, conditioned for the building a courthouse at Boulder City, provided a majority of the votes cast at the election were in favor of changing the county seat of the county to that place. This offer was not bribery. A proposition of this kind, looking to the public welfare, and for the benefit of all the people alike, contains no element of criminality or immorality. The thing offered is of a public nature, pertaining to the public and not to individuals, and the party to be influenced is a whole county, and in a manner to benefit every inhabitant thereof. This is not the case of a candidate for public office, who, in order to secure votes, promises, in case he shall be elected, to donate a portion of his salary or other valuable thing to the county or state. This would be simply a proposition to purchase an office in consideration of personal services or money, or both. Such a proposition the law condemns as against sound policy, and as tending to corruption. A man who is so infirm in morals as to be willing to purchase an office would probably resort to corrupt practices in order to extort from the people the price paid. Public buildings and places to transact the public business of. the people are in every county a necessity. They are j>rovided, and rightfully, by a tax upon the whole people, for the reason that all are benefited by their erection. But if, during the pendency of an election to change a county seat, a man or company of men should erect at a certain place a court-house and county offices in order to retain the county seat at such place, could such man or company be charged with bribery or the exercise of an undue influence upon the election? Reasonable men in casting
Says Woodward, J., speaking for the supreme court of Iowa (10 Iowa, 220): “We do not think the giving facilities for public convenience to the whole county, such as furnishing a building for the courts and offices, and thus relieving the county from a burden of expense, amounts to bribery. Nor would the giving property, though not of that specific character, but yet adapted to reducing the expense of a change. If the people of a town desire a county seat located at such place, there is no wrong and no corruption in their offering and giving facilities to produce that result. Either in buildings and offices direct, for the use of the public, or in property or money to procure the facilities, they may offer to take away or to lessen the pecuniary burden which would come upon that public, the county, by the location, or by a change of location. And this cannot be bribery. And it may be doubted whether such an act can become brib
Says Lyon, J., for the supreme court of Wisconsin (State v. Purdy, 36 Wis. 225): “References should be made to the cases which have sustained the validity of bids or pecuniary offers to secure the location of public buildings at some particular place. We have no controversy with these cases here. The distinction between the election of public officers to whom, for the time being, the exercise of the functions of sovereignty is intrusted, and the mere choice of a site for a public building, is quite apparent. The former involves, or may involve, the integrity of the government, and the preservation of the principles upon which it is founded; while the latter is only a matter of public convenience or pecuniary interest, involving no fundamental principles whatever.” 4. Boulder City became the county seat of Jefferson county, by virtue of the election. This result could not be changed or modified by reason of the county commissioners failing to make the order contemplated by section 6 of the act, causing the books, records, papers and effects of the county to be removed to that place. The result of elections cannot be defeated by the failure of officers to perform an act of this kind. And Boulder City having become the county seat of the county, by virtue of the election, it follows that the application for a writ of mandate, requiring the county officers, the respondents herein, to show cause why they should not remove their offices and records to Radersburg, is insufficient to warrant the issuance of the writ, and the demurrer thereto is sustained.
Judgment for respondents accordingly.