279 S.W. 658 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Reversing.
At the late November election appellee, William F. Clark, was the Republican and appellant, William C. Buten, the Democratic candidate for county judge of Campbell county, Kentucky. As the returns from the election were canvassed by the county board of election commissioners appellant Buten appeared to have received 12,272 votes, and appellee Clark 12,262 votes. Before the certificate of election was issued and awarded, appellee Clark instituted this action to compel the election officers of precinct A of the third ward of the city of Newport to meet again and certify to the county board of election commissioners the correct number of votes received by him and his opponent in that precinct, charging that, whereas they had certified that Buten had received 52 votes and that Clark had received 87, as a matter of fact Buten had received 83, and Clark had received 140 votes. The petition sought to have them correct the return and certify it to the county board of election commissioners accordingly, and to have the members of the county board of election commissioners reconvene and recanvass the corrected vote and to issue the certificate of nomination to him instead of to his opponent as they were about to do. The four election officers answered admitting the allegations of the petition and that they had by innocent mistake incorrectly certified the returns from that precinct as charged in the petition. Appellee Buten was not made a party to the proceeding, but interpleaded, became a party thereto and filed a general demurrer to the petition. The members of the county board of election commissioners likewise filed a general demurrer to the petition, and answered by denying that they had knowledge *437 or information sufficient to form a belief as to whether or not the mistake had been made in certifying the vote from that precinct as alleged in the petition.
The four election officers testified herein, and their testimony beyond question and without contradiction establishes that the mistake was made in certifying the vote from that precinct as alleged in the petition. The chancellor thereupon entered judgment directing the officers of the election of that precinct to reconvene and recertify the vote cast in the race for county judge, and requiring the county board of election commissioners thereupon to reconvene and recanvass the returns and issue to appellee Clark the certificate of election, which would be shown by the corrected returns to be due him. This appeal has been prosecuted from that judgment.
The sole question presented is whether in the state of case presented the relief sought by appellee Clark may be obtained by writ of mandamus, as was attempted, or whether his remedy is by contest of appellant's election.
It will be conceded, as has uniformly been held by this court, that fraud or mistake upon the part of officers of election in any precinct in counting or certifying the result of the election constitutes grounds for contest, under which, upon a proper showing that the integrity of the ballots has been preserved, a recount of the ballots may be had and the result of the recount if different from may be substituted for the result certified by the officers of the election. Consequently it must be conceded at the threshold that if, as alleged and as appears to be true from the testimony herein, the officers of the election at the precinct in question by mistake made an erroneous certification of the number of votes received for both Clark and. Buten, and that as a result of the mistake appellant Buten appeared to have been elected county judge of Campbell county by a majority of ten votes, whereas if the correct vote from that precinct had been certified appellee Clark would have been returned the winner by a majority of twelve votes, he has a remedy by instituting contest as provided for in section 1596a-12, Kentucky Statutes.
It is contended for appellee Clark, and the trial court seems to have been of the opinion, that he also was entitled to relief in the premises by writ of mandamus, and he cites and relies upon numerous opinions of this court in support of his contention. *438
The writ of mandamus, as defined by section 477 of the Civil Code, "is an order of a court of competent and original jurisdiction, commanding an executive or ministerial officer to perform an act, or omit to do an act, the performance or omission of which is enjoined by law; and is granted on the motion of the party aggrieved, or of the Commonwealth when the public interest is affected." It must be conceded that election officers and the county board of election commissioners are ministerial officers, and that in cases where they have not performed the acts enjoined upon them by law they may be compelled to do so by a court of competent and original jurisdiction. The record herein, however, discloses that after the polls had closed at the precinct in question, the election officers counted the votes cast and performed all of the duties enjoined upon them by the election laws, even to the certification on the form furnished for the purpose in the back of the stub book of the number of votes received at that precinct by each of the candidates for county judge. That certification, erroneous as it now appears to be, was returned to the proper office and remained in custody of the proper officials until delivered to the county board of election commissioners for canvassing the returns. As delivered to that ministerial body the certificate in the stub book was signed by all of the officers of election, as is required by law, and was in all particulars regular. That they had made a mistake and certified the vote incorrectly could be ascertained only by hearing extrinsic evidence.
Appellee insists that although that be true, since it now appears that they made a mistake and certified erroneously the number of votes received by the two candidates, they may by mandamus be compelled to certify the vote correctly as ascertained by their count. Many cases from this court are referred to and relied upon as upholding that contention. That many of those cases are not in point with the case now before us becomes manifest when the opinions disclose that mandamus was held to be the proper remedy when it appeared that the officers of election had made no return. Riddell v. Childers, et al.,
"While the change was made to correct the manifest mistake in the certificate by the consent of appellee, we do not think his consent was necessary. It was the duty of the officers to return a true statement of the vote as shown on the tally sheet, and until this was done they had not performed their whole duty in the premises; and had they refused to make the correction, it is well settled in this state that they could have been compelled to do so by a writ of mandamus. Batman v. Megowan, 1 Mete. 533; City of Louisville v. Board of Park Com'rs, 65 S.W. 860, 24 Ky. Law Rep. 38; id., 77 S.W. 1133, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 1309; Bennett v. Richards (Ky.),
83 S.W. 154 ; Anderson v. Likens,104 Ky. 699 ,47 S.W. 867 , 20 Ky. Law Rep. 1001."
That the quoted statements are dicta becomes manifest upon reading the opinion, from which it appears that it was written in a contested election case between the parties in which the evidence established that the integrity of the ballots had been so safeguarded as to authorize their being recounted and the result of the recount if differing from substituted for the number of *440 votes certified from the precinct in question by the election officers. As the pleadings and proof in that case authorized a recount of the ballots and a decision of the question as to which of the two contesting candidates had been elected to the office in question depended upon the showing of the ballots as the best evidence, regardless of the showing of the certificates of election returns from the various election precincts, the question as to whether the election Certificates were regular or not or could have been corrected, as was suggested in the opinion or not, was wholly immaterial. The quoted portion from that opinion was written, not to uphold a writ of mandamus granted by the court of original jurisdiction but was written in an action contesting the election of the party to whom the certificate of election had been awarded and concerning a matter wholly immaterial to the determination of the question presented by the appeal. Besides, the authorities cited as sustaining those views, upon being carefully read, will be found not to do so.
None of the cases cited and relied upon by appellee as sustaining the judgment of the court of original jurisdiction in awarding the writ of mandamus herein are in point, in that none of them presented the same question now presented to this court. In cases where the writ of mandamus has been resorted to to compel precinct election officers to act no action had been taken by them. In this case the act that they are sought to be required to perform has been performed. The argument that they have not performed the duty enjoined upon them by law until they have acted in a manner wholly free of error is plausible, but under that argument most of the questions that may be raised by contest could be raised by a proceeding for mandamus. It could as well be urged that election officers have not performed the duties enjoined upon them by law when they permit a ballot to be voted upon the table without having administered the oath required to the one offering to vote, and that by mandamus they can be compelled to eliminate all votes so cast in certifying the returns. It appears to the court that to adopt the views expressed in the dicta from McEuen v. Cary, quoted,supra, would be to open wide the door to fraud. If we may compel the election officers to change the certification of the vote as they made it, they certainly would have the right to do so without compulsion. The possibilities for fraud following a holding that after they have *441
once certified the vote the officers of election may change the certificate are too great. As was well said in Corbett v. Naylor,
"The function of mandamus is to compel the performance of a legal duty. To command action; not to review action. To complete the unfinished. It is the remedy for nonfeasance; not for misfeasance. It does not lie to correct mistakes that have been made, or to remedy wrongs that have been done; nor to undo that which is done."
The exact question here presented was before this court very recently in Savage v. Elswick on motion to dissolve an injunction. All of the members of the court considered the question and carefully reviewed all of the authorities cited as sustaining the contention that mandamus lies to compel officers of election to correct a return regular on its face which they have made and without dissent reached the opposite opinion.
We, therefore, conclude that mandamus will not lie to compel the election officers to correct the return made by them but that appellee's remedy is by contest, which he may institute under the provisions of section 1596a-12, Kentucky Statutes.
The judgment herein, therefore, is reversed and this cause remanded, with direction that the petition be dismissed. The whole court sitting.