Baldwin v. Board of Supervisors

155 N.W. 367, 189 Mich. 372, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 794
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1915
DocketCalendar No. 26,945
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 155 N.W. 367 (Baldwin v. Board of Supervisors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Board of Supervisors, 155 N.W. 367, 189 Mich. 372, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 794 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

Although issues of fact were framed and tried by the court, none of the testimony is returned or made part of the record. The plaintiffs in certiorari (relators) adopt the finding made by the circuit judge as “a true, correct, and adequate statement of the facts relative to this controversy.”

A local option election was held in. Alger county in April, 1915. The board of supervisors canvassed the returns, and from them found that 768 votes had been cast in favor of and 766 votes against prohibition. Petitions for a recount of the votes in several precincts were filed. One asked for a recount of votes in Au Train, Onota, Rock River, Limestone, Mathias, and precinct No. 1 of Munising; another for a recount of votes cast in precinct No. 2 of Munising; another for a recount of votes cast in the city of Munising; another for a recount of votes cast in precinct No. 3 of Munising. Acting as a committee of the whole, the board recounted the votes in these several precincts, and submitted to the board a majority and minority report. A change of 5 votes in favor of nonprohibition was the result of the recount, and the board declared that 764 had been cast in favor of and 766 votes against prohibition.

“It is conceded by the parties that the boxes in Rock River township and the city of Munising were properly sealed, and the recount returns therefrom are [375]*375correct. This controversy, therefore, rests upon the recount of Limestone township and precincts No; 2 and 3 of Munising township, and the whole question involved is as to whether the committee was justified^ in recounting the votes therein in view of the condition of the ballot boxes; there being no testimony here to indicate that the recount committee did not properly count the ballots found in said boxes.”

The circuit judge found and stated in detail the condition of the ballot boxes in the precincts in question. Omitting the details* the substance of the finding is that, while the boxes were not sealed in the manner required by the statute, there was no evidence that the ballots found in the boxes and recounted, were not the original ballots cast at the election.

Relators are qualified electors of the city of Munising, signed the original local option petition, and were actively interested in favor of prohibition in the county of Alger. Before asking the circuit court to compel respondents (defendants in certiorari) to reassemble and declare a correct result of the election, they applied to the attorney general to begin the proceeding or to permit the use of his name in that behalf. The request was refused. The prosecuting attorney of the county attended the sessions of the board of supervisors and the recount committee—

“advised them three or more times upon matters connected with the recount, and at the conclusion prepared the resolutions finally adopted by respondents. He states he prepared the resolutions in a clerical capacity, not advising the board as to the action it should take. His attitude was to remain neutral, and he only advised the board upon a direct request from them. Among other things, he advised the committee it might legally open the box from precinct No. 2 if satisfied with the sufficiency of the seal, that it was for the committee to determine whether or not the seal would answer the purpose of an official seal, and also advised it that the box from Limestone township was not a [376]*376proper ballot box to be opened. Mr. Simmons also appeared as attorney of record for said respondents in mandamus proceedings brought by Thomas B. Wyman et al. against the respondents herein, in this court, relative to their action in connection with the recount of the ballots cast at said election in Mathias township, which action is still pending, but he took no- active part in the case at any time. He was not requested by relators to permit his name to be used in bringing these proceedings, never refused to permit his name to be used, and testified that he officially held no views adverse to relators’ position in this proceeding.”

The contentions made and decided in the court below involve the right of relators to institute the proceeding, the conclusiveness of the supervisors’ action, the propriety of the remedy sought, and the powers of the board of supervisors in recounting votes.

Upon the facts found by the court, which are controlling, it was properly held that relators might institute the proceeding, and that mandamus was a proper remedy. In Ayres v. Board of State Auditors, 42 Mich. 422, 429 (4 N. W. 274, 279), this court said:

“The rule which rejects the intervention of private complainants against public grievances is one of discretion, and not of law. There are serious objections against allowing mere interlopers to meddle with the affairs of the State, and it is not usually allowed unless under circumstances where the public injury by its refusal will be serious. In the cases of People, ex rel. Drake, v. Regents of the University, 4 Mich. 98, and People, ex rel. Russell, v. Inspectors and Agent of the State Prison, 4 Mich. 187, the court took pains to guard against any decision that would prevent complaint by a private relator, where the public interests require prompt action, and where the public prosecutors will not interfere. There is, as there shown, more liberality in some States than in others. But we find no reason to consider the matter as one lying outside of judicial discretion, which is always involved in mandamus cases concerning the relief as well as other questions.”

[377]*377See, also, Giddings v. Secretary of State, 93 Mich. 1 (52 N. W. 944, 16 L. R. A. 402).

The almost even division of the electors upon the question in issue in the election is manifest from the vote which was cast, “indicating,” to use the language of the circuit judge, “that the interest of the electors was general and intense.” Under the circumstances disclosed, the discretion of the court was properly exercised in permitting citizens to institute this proceeding.

The relief sought by relators was not merely the setting aside of the determination of the board of supervisors. Affirmative action of the board was sought, including a determination and resolution and record which would have the effect of suspending the operation of the general liquor law of the State in the county of Alger. The duty of the board in canvassing returns and in recounting votes is ministerial. Assuming that the board acted beyond its powers in recounting the ballots in certain precincts, its plain duty was to declare a result other than the one complained of, and to pass and spread upon the record of the proceedings the appropriate resolution. To this end the writ of mandamus is the appropriate, and indeed the only, remedy of persons aggrieved by the unlawful action of the board.

The principal contention of relators is that the board had no power to open and recount the ballots found in a ballot box not closed and sealed in conformity with statutory requirements. This is a contention presented, but held not to be involved, and not determined, in Alward v. Board of Supervisors, 187 Mich. 573 (153 N. W. 1001).

There is a general law, according to which liquors may be manufactured and sold, in force in every county in the State, unless by the votes of the electors of the county its operation is locally suspended, and such [378]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 N.W. 367, 189 Mich. 372, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-board-of-supervisors-mich-1915.