Adamic v. People

49 Colo. 546
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1911
DocketNo. 6994
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 49 Colo. 546 (Adamic v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adamic v. People, 49 Colo. 546 (Colo. 1911).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Hill

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff in error was convicted on the charge of selling intoxicating liquors in anti-saloon territory, and brings the case here for review upon error.

The prosecution was based upon the statute commonly known as the Local Option Act, approved March 25, 1907. The record shows, that the defendant conducted a saloon in the incorporated town of Prospect Heights, in Fremont county; that the electors of that town, at its municipal election held on April 7th, 1908, voted upon the question: “Shall this town become anti-saloon territory ? ’ ’ The result was in the negative.

On July the 8th, 1908, the board of county commissioners of Fremont county reconstructed the boundary lines of several county voting precincts, including the one which the entire town was theretofore located in. This placed a part of the town, including the defendant’s saloon building, in precinct No. 20, which was made up of fractional parts of former voting precincts. This new precinct, as then constructed, consisted of a part of the incorporated town (which had voted upon the question at the preceding April city election), also considerable area of country district which had not theretofore voted upon the question. At the general election held November 3rd, 1908, this new precinct voted upon the anti-[548]*548saloon territory question; the result of this election, if lawful, made of this precinct anti-saloon territory.

It stands admitted that the defendant made the sale' for which he was convicted, hut his contention is that the territory in which his place of business is situate had never become anti-saloon territory, for reasons hereinafter referred to.

The first assignment urged is the insufficiency of the title to the petition presented to the county clerk calling for the submission of this question. It is claimed, it is not in compliance with the statute which says it shall he addressed to the county clerk. The address upon this petition was as follows: “To Geo. P. Nix, County Clerk & Recorder, clerk of the County of Fremont in the State of Colorado.” It is urged, that an instrument thus signed would not convey title to1 real estate; that the requirements concerning such provisions are mandatory; that the words “County Clerk & Recorder,” etc., are merely descriptive to the official Mr. Nix, and that' inasmuch as the word “as” does not follow the word “Nix,” the petition is totally defective. The purpose of the statute is plain. It is not claimed that Mr. Nix was not the county clerk or that the election was not called by the county clerk; when presented to him qs such, and when he accepted it and acted upon it as such, there seems to be no reasonable ground for asserting that the petition is defective in this respect.

Second; it is claimed that an examination of the petition will show that only one affidavit was taken and attached to the several sheets of paper, in disregard of the requirements necessary, to' wit, ‘‘ an affidavit at the bottom of each sheet.” It is further urged that the affidavit does not appear at the bottom of any one of the sheets, hut appears upon the last one. at the end of all of the sheets so pasted together. [549]*549Counsel urge that this is an absolute violation of the express mandate of the statute.

We find nothing in the act which requires that a petition should consist of several sheets of paper. From an examination of this petition it discloses that the names of the signers are all upon one paper, and at the bottom thereof is attached the verification as required by law. ’Tis true, this one sheet consists of several different pieces of paper which appear to have been pasted together so as to form but one sheet as a. whole, and it appears to have been executed as one sheet with the affidavit at the bottom thereof. In the absence of any showing that they were signed upon separate sheets or that the verification was not taken as the instrument purports to show, we find nothing to sustain the claim that the law was not complied with in this respect.

The third objection pertains to the description of the place of residence of the signers of the petition. It is claimed that certain citizens mention only their street address, also that the petition does not show that the signers were residents of the precinct. In this connection, it is also urged that the name of the street was given only in a few cases and that the same is true of the date of signing; as to others the streets and dates are indicated by ditto marks. These ditto marks, counsel assert, cannot be construed as a compliance with the statute, which requires the residence and date to be written opposite the name. These identical questions were given consideration in the case of The People ex rel. John Arfman v. Olney Newell, etc., as clerk of the county of Boulder, state’ of Colorado, ante, 349, wherein they were decided adversely to the contention of the plaintiff in error. The reasons there given by Mr. Justice White are a complete answer to the contention of counsel here, upon the same questions.

[550]*550It is earnestly urged that no valid election could be held in this new precinct 20 at the time it was attempted, for the reason that it had but recently been created, and no previous general election having ever been held in it, hence, no vote had ever been east in such political subdivision at the last general election therein, as contemplated by section 2 of the act which provides that, “the signatures of qualified electors of any political subdivision in number not less than forty per cent, of the total vote cast in such political subdivision at the last general election therein. ’ ’ Standing alone, section 2 of the act might consistently be given the construction contended for, and from its language counsel urge that it must have been intended by the legislature .that this question could only be submitted in political subdivisions that were in existence at the general election preceding the one upon which the vote-is to be taken, and in case a precinct was not in existence at the preceding general election, for that reason it was not intended that this question should be submitted at the first general election after its creation and, therefore, under the act, the petitioners were precluded from having it submitted at the election which they did. It is urged that this position is in harmony with its rational construction, for the reason that it then leaves a basis upon which the county clerk may determine as to what constitutes this forty per cent., namely, from the abstract of the canvassers upon the vote cast at the preceding election, as shown by the records on file in his office. It will be noted that this section does not state the manner in which the county clerk shall ascertain this fact. It does not state as shown by the returns in his office, nor in any manner provide the method whereby the county clerk shall make his findings upon this subject.

Further, it will be noted that the exception contended for by counsel, namely, that it cannot be sub[551]*551mitted in such a precinct, is not so stated in the act. When we turn to section 1 of the act, which includes the definition of terms employed in it, we find it states:

“ ‘Election’ shall mean any general election at a time fixed by law for choosing county, city or town officers, as the case may be; and in no case shall it mean a school election or a special election to fill a vacancy. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
49 Colo. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adamic-v-people-colo-1911.