200 N.W. 782 | N.D. | 1924
This is an action to enjoin defendants from perfecting proceedings for the annexation of the village of North Fargo to the City of Fargo, pursuant to an election for the dissolution of the village, held on April 30, 1923, at which the vote stood 99 for dissolution and 93 against. Plaintiffs contend that the election is void for the reason that the polls were kept open from 1 P.M. to 7 P.M. instead of from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M., which latter hours, it is said, are prescribed by the statute. This is the main issue in this lawsuit.
The case was first heard on April 2, 1924; in that hearing the trial court made findings of facts, among them being a finding that the polls were open on election day from 9 A.M. to 7 P.M. After the case had been appealed to this court it was sent back, upon the suggestion of amici curiae, and certain residents of the village of North Fargo were permitted to file a petition and complaint in intervention more fully contesting the validity of the election. More testimony was accordingly taken on May 16, mostly upon the questions as to the hours when the polls were open and as to whether any voters were in fact prejudiced or prevented from voting because of the alleged departure from the statutory hours. The trial court made additional findings. The trial court finds "that the additional testimony offered is not such as to warrant any modification of the original findings of fact, conclusions of law, order for judgment, or judgment entered therein."
Upon the second hearing all the election officers testified unequivocally that the polls were in fact not opened until 1 P.M. on April 30, 1923. The testimony to the contrary at the first hearing was rather *525 indefinite. We are constrained to the conclusion that if the trial court intends to adhere to its first finding on this point, its conclusion is opposed to the great preponderance of the evidence. The court says later, in its findings upon the second hearing: "The election officials did not assemble nor were any votes cast at such election until on or about one o'clock P.M. of election day . . .," a finding that may very properly be construed as contrary to that made on the first hearing, if not, indeed, conflicting with the statement from the new findings first above quoted.
The court also found that only two persons presented themselves at the polling place in the forenoon; that those two actually voted in the afternoon; that no voters were prejudiced or prevented from voting at the election because the polls were not open in the forenoon; and in general that the election was fairly conducted, without fraud, the result correctly announced, and the voters of the village of North Fargo were not in any manner deprived of or prejudiced in the exercise of the franchise by reason of the fact that the polls were open from 1 P.M. to 7 P.M. instead of from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. The court also found that the result of the election would not have been different had the polls been open from 9 A.M. to 4 P.M. instead of from 1 P.M. to 7 P.M.
The foregoing findings are amply supported by the testimony. One Clark, at whose home the polling place was, testified that only two voters came in the forenoon and that both of them voted in the afternoon. His daughter testified to the same effect. Both witnesses were opposed to annexation, and Clark was a trustee of the village at the time of the election, being president of the village board.
The testimony tends to show that some days after the election of April 30, 1923, the president of the village announced that the election was invalid because the polls were not kept open during the hours prescribed by law. The election notices stated the hours for voting as from 1 P.M. to 7 P.M. Thereupon those who favored dissolution and annexation to the city of Fargo circulated new petitions asking that another election be called, but the president of the village board and another trustee refused to, or at least did not call an election. The majority of the board of trustees of the village declined to take any action on the petitions, according to the petitions, according to the testimony of the third member *526
who favored the calling of another election in order to correct any irregularities in that of April 30. No return of the results of the election was filed by the village board. The alleged irregularity with respect to the opening and closing of the polls was not a sufficient legal excuse for a refusal to declare the result. 26 Cyc. 275; People ex rel. Theis v. Michaels,
The battle of the annexationists and the anti-annexationists apparently continued with unabated vigor until March 18, 1924, when a new village board was elected by a substantial majority, consisting entirely of friends of annexation to Fargo. After the election the city of Fargo proceeded to annex the territory comprised within the former village of North Fargo.
Plaintiff's Exhibit 1, containing 29 names, purports to be a list of persons who resided in the village on April 30, 1923, but who did not vote at that election. Nobody testified to all the facts necessary to show that these persons were qualified electors; nobody testified that they did not vote because the polls were not open in the forenoon; nobody testified as to which side of the controversy they favored. The defendants were not permitted to offer any evidence upon the second hearing, at which Exhibit 1 was introduced, the trial court having construed the order of this court as limiting the right to introduce new testimony to the intervenors. Exhibits 2 and 3 show that on March 18, 1924, there were 216 votes cast in the village, being 24 more than were cast at the dissolution election. It is somewhat significant that at the March election the anti-annexationists were defeated by majorities ranging from 24 to 32 votes; the issue in that campaign according to the testimony, was immediate annexation to Fargo and not the personalties of the candidates; of the 216 ballots, 211 were straight ballots, for all those who favored annexation, or for all those opposed to it. With a full vote out and the issue the same, the anti-annexationists were more decisively defeated in 1924 than in 1923. Indeed, Exhibit 3 shows that the candidates of the anti-annexationists for village trustees in the March election received 92, 93 and 94 votes. Against dissolution on April 30, 1923, 93 votes were cast. Witnesses for intervenors *527 testify that the vote at the dissolution election was the largest cast in the village up to that time.
Only three persons explained, on the second hearing, why they did not vote; one did not know that there was an election; two could not leave the children and of those two one was opposed and the other favored annexation.
On the whole record, the testimony abundantly supports the findings of the trial court that there was no prejudice and that the result of the election would not have been different had the polls been open in the forenoon. The polls were open only one hour less than the statute provides. Nobody tried to vote after 7 P.M. In Links v. Anderson,
While the principal contention is that the election of April 30, 1923, was invalid, it is also urged that the plaintiffs are estopped from asserting the validity of the election inasmuch as they acquiesced in the announcement of the president of the board as to the invalidity of the election and thereafter participated in an election — March 18, 1924 — of village officers. We do not believe it necessary to discuss this question at length. It seems that the entire village board was opposed to annexation at the time of the dissolution election, except one Randlett who thereafter resigned because, as he says, the majority would take no action on the new election petitions. Seemingly, nothing could be done until there was a new board; a new board was elected on March 18, 1924, whereupon, it seems, annexation proceedings were continued. The old board had not complied with the statute requiring the filing of a statement of the result of the election; it seems they either refused or neglected to act. No estoppel could arise, on elementary principles, under the facts in the record. See 21 C.J. 1191, ff. *528
The controversy growing out of the attempt to annex the village of North Fargo to the City of Fargo has twice been in this court. See North Fargo v. Fargo,
Section 3903, Comp. Laws, 1913: "When an application signed by one-third of the legal voters of any incorporated village shall be presented to the board of trustees in writing asking for a dissolution of the corporation setting forth the reasons therefor, it shall be competent for the board if it deems the reasons good to call a meeting of the voters of such village by giving ten days' notice thereof as provided in this chapter, to determine whether such corporation shall be dissolved. The board of trustees shall preside at such meeting and the polls shall be opened as at other elections, and the voters shall vote by ballot, `yes' or `no.' If a majority of all the votes given shall have thereon the word `yes,' and such votes shall have been given by two-fifths of all the legal voters in such village, a statement of the vote signed by the president and attested by the clerk shall be filed in the office of the register of deeds of the county, and such village shall at the expiration of six months from the time of holding such meeting cease to be a corporation, and the property belonging to such corporation after the payment of its debts and liabilities shall be disposed of in such manner as a majority of the voters of such village at any special meeting thereof may direct."
No statement of the vote was filed until the new village board qualified after the election of March 18, 1924. No time is prescribed within which this statement must be filed. We cannot say, as a matter of law, that it was filed too late.
Section 3846, Comp. Laws, 1913, reads as follows:
"At the meeting of the qualified voters as herein provided the polls shall be opened at nine o'clock in the forenoon of such day and shall be kept open until four o'clock in the afternoon, when they shall be closed."
In Kerlin v. Devils Laks,
"On reasons of public policy, courts have been reluctant to hold elections void except where imperatively necessary from the plain expressed legislative purpose." (Italics are ours.) *529
That seems to be the spirit in which courts approach this subject. Elections are held to give the electorate a fair and full opportunity to make its will effective thru the ballot; the aim of all laws regulating the conduct of elections is to further, not to hamper or frustrate this primary purpose. Strict and technical compliance with the statutes is of less importance than the attaining of the object of all elections — a free and full expression of the will of the voters without fraud, either in recording that will thru the ballot, or in announcing the result thereof by the election officials. The annotator in Ann. Cas. 1915C, 624, says: "Where the statute does not in express terms declare that the election shall be void, the election will be sustained, and the violation of statute will be treated as an irregularity going to the form, instead of to the substance, where, from all the facts, the court does conclude that, in spite of the departure from statutory requirements, a full and fair ballot has been cast and a true and fair return of the entire election has been canvassed and made."
In Kenworthy v. Mast,
"The general rule, as stated in McCrary, Elections (§ 165) is that, in the absence of a provision in the statute expressly declaring that a failure in this respect shall render the election void, it will be regarded as so far directory only, and that, unless the deviation from the legal hours has affected the result, it will be disregarded; but that if such deviation is great, or even considerable, the presumption will be that it has affected the result, and the burden will be upon him who seeks to uphold the election to show affirmatively that it has not."
In Riddle v. Cumberland County,
"If the statute expressly declares any particular act to be essential to the validity of the election, or that its omission shall render the election void, all courts, whose duty it is to enforce such statutes, must so hold, whether the particular act in question goes to the merits, or affects the results of the election or not. Such a statute is imperative, and all considerations touching its policy or impolicy must be addressed to the Legislature. But if, as in most cases, the statute provides that certain acts or things shall be done within a particular time, or in a particular manner, and does not declare that their performance is essential to the validity of the election, then they will be regarded as *530 mandatory if they do, and directory if they do not, affect the actual merits of the same."
In McComb v. Dutton, ___ Del. Super. Ct. ___, 122 A. 81, the court say:
"It seems clear to us that the provisions of a statute fixing the time of opening and closing the polls at an election are so far directory that an irregularity in this respect which does not deprive a legal voter of his vote, or admit a disqualified person to vote, will not vitiate the election."
It has been generally held that opening the pools at a later hour than fixed by the statute is an irregularity that does not render the election void, in the absence of a showing of fraud or prejudice to qualified electors, or of a statute expressly declaring that result; Clark v. Leathers, 9 Ky. L. Rep. 558, 5 S.W. 576; Chenoweth v. Earhart,
We do not deem it necessary to review the authorities further. It is no doubt true that all statutes directing how an election shall be conducted are mandatory in the sense that election officials should obey them, but it does not follow that unintentional failure on the part of such officials to comply strictly with the letter of the law imparts a fatal taint to all the proceedings. The duty of obedience is one thing; the consequence of disobedience is another matter. An examination of the authorities upon the subject discloses that, in the absence of a statute expressly invalidating the election in case of deviation from the statutory hour for opening or closing the polls, the primary consideration is whether, as a result of such departure, voters were deprived of the franchise or illegal votes admitted, so as to affect the result. That seems good sense, and, therefore, ought to be good law. There was no prejudice caused any voter and we cannot overthrow an election on purely technical grounds.
It is strenuously urged by appellants that inasmuch as the election notice incorrectly stated the hours for opening and closing the polls, *531 prejudice must be presumed and the election held void. Neither Section 3903 nor any other statute applicable requires that the notice of election should state the hours for opening and closing the polls. Manifestly, therefore, had the notice contained no statement as to the hours for opening and closing the polls, the election could not be invalidated on that ground alone. It clearly appears that the erroneous statement as to the hours was an innocent inadvertence, and that no voter was in fact prejudiced thereby. The time and place of the election were correctly stated and the voters generally, after an active campaign, participated therein. The will of the majority should not be defeated by an irregularity that does not affect the result.
Appellant relies principally on the case of Elvick v. Groves,
The trial court entered a judgment adjudging and decreeing that the election held in the village of North Fargo, April 30, 1923, was valid, legal and sufficient, and that at the expiration of six months thereafter such territory became unorganized so as to permit the same to be annexed by the defendant city of Fargo. The court further decreed that the annexation proceedings by the city of Fargo, subsequent to such election and subsequent to the 26th day of March, 1924, are in all respects valid and legal and that the city of Fargo has legal possession and jurisdiction of the territory as a part of the city and its officers are entitled to the possession of all the property within the territory of the village "for the taxes of the year 1924, as provided by law in the same manner as other portions of said city." It is then *532 adjudged that the individual defendants and the city of Fargo are entitled to recover from the auditor and treasurer of Cass county all the "proceeds of taxes levied and assessed against the property in the territory formerly comprising the Village of North Fargo, for the year 1923, and all previous years, the same to be delivered over to the individual defendants and to be by them used in the payment of the debts and obligations of the said Village of North Fargo and the residue, if any, disposed of as provided by law." The action is then ordered dismissed.
It is objected that the judgment is too broad; that it undertakes to adjudicate upon matters not properly before the court, pertaining to the validity of annexation proceedings which were not completed until after the judgment was entered, and in other ways to settle property rights arising out of the proceedings to annex the territory subsequent to the dissolution election of April 30, 1923.
The issue made by the pleadings and litigated at the trial related solely to the dissolution election of April 30, 1923. If that election is void, necessarily all subsequent proceedings for annexation fall with it. That election, however, may be valid, and yet some part of the subsequent proceedings, involving property, taxation, and the like, may be invalid for failure to comply with the statutes. Upon the latter proposition no issue was properly before the trial court and no binding adjudication could be made thereon. We think that the decree of the trial court must be modified in so far as it adjudges that steps and proceedings subsequent to the dissolution election of April 30, 1923, are legal, correct, and binding; and also insofar as it adjudges rights with respect to the possession of property and of taxation. It is to be presumed that the authorities will in all these matters proceed in conformity with the statutes, but that they have done so cannot be properly decided in this contest, where the main issue is the validity of the dissolution election.
As herein modified, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
BIRDZELL, CHRISTIANSON, and NUESSLE, JJ., concur.
BRONSON, Ch. J., dissents. *533