Board of Election Commissioners v. Wayne Circuit Judges

137 N.W. 1089, 172 Mich. 430, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 937
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1912
DocketCalendar No. 25,406
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 N.W. 1089 (Board of Election Commissioners v. Wayne Circuit Judges) 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
Board of Election Commissioners v. Wayne Circuit Judges, 137 N.W. 1089, 172 Mich. 430, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 937 (Mich. 1912).

Opinions

Ostrander, J.

On or about October 12, 1912, the attorney general filed in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, upon the relation of Hugh Shepherd, an information in the nature of a bill in equity for and on behalf of the people of the State, in which it is charged that at a general election held in November, 1910, Philip T. Van Zile was elected to the office of prosecuting attorney for the county of Wayne for the term of two years, commencing January 1,1911, ending December 31,1912. He performed the duties of said office until September 16, 1911, at which time he resigned the office. The circuit judges of Wayne county on October 4, 1911, made and entered an order appointing Hugh Shepherd to fill the vacancy, and to perform the duties of the office of prosecuting attorney for the county for the time being. Mr. Shepherd took the oath of office, and entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office of prosecuting attorney, and has since performed, and is now performing, said duties. He paid the necessary fee and filed a petition with the county clerk of Wayne county to have his name placed upon the ballot at the primary election held August 27,1912, as the republican candidate for the office of prosecuting attorney for the county of Wayne for the term of two years, beginning January 1, 1913. His name was placed upon the ballot, and at the primary election he was declared to have received the greatest number of votes on the republican ticket for said office for said term. No notice was given to the electors before said primary election was held that a candidate was to be nominated thereat to fill a vacancy in the office of prosecuting attorney for the county, but at the election so held on August 27, 1912, three votes were cast for Proctor K. Owens as the nominee of the republican party for the office of prose[432]*432cuting attorney for said county to fill a vacancy in such office. These three votes were cast in one voting precinct of the city, were written upon the ballots, and no other votes were cast for any person to fill such alleged vacancy. On the 16th day of September, 1912, the board of canvassers certified to the board of election commissioners that said Proctor E. Owens had received the greatest number of votes cast at said primary election as nominee of the republican party for the office of prosecuting attorney for Wayne county, to fill vacancy, to be voted for at the general election to be held November 5, 1912. Mr. Owens demanded that the board of election commissioners print his name on the ballots to be used at the said next November general election as nominee on the republican ticket for the office of prosecuting attorney for Wayne county to fill vacancy. The board of election commissioners for said county propose and threaten to print or cause to be printed the name of said Proctor E. Owens on said ballots as the republican nominee for the office of prosecuting attorney to fill vacancy. It- is further charged that no notice was given to the electors of the county, and that they were not informed that a candidate was to be nominated at said primary election to fill any vacancy in the office of prosecuting attorney, and there was not any general knowledge or belief or supposition on the part of the voters of any political party that any such vacancy existed to be filled at such general election or at any special election. Republican nominees for county officers nominated at said primary election received votes ranging in number from 13,279 to 20,883. It is alleged that, if the board of election commissioners causes the name of said Proctor E. Owens to be placed upon ballots to be used at the November election, it will be contrary to law, and will result in irreparable injury to the public and to relator, and in damage to the people of the State of Michigan.

It is prayed that said Proctor E. Owens and the board of election commissioners be made defendants and required to answer the bill; that the said three votes certi[433]*433fied by the said board of county canvassers to have been cast for the said Proctor K. Owens at the primary election for the office of prosecuting attorney to fill vacancy be declared void; that said Owens be restrained and enjoined from any further proceeding and from making any further demand upon the board of election commissioners of Wayne county with reference to the printing of his name on said ballots; that the board of election commissioners be enjoined and restrained from printing his name upon said ballots as they threaten and propose to do. Upon filing and reading said information of the attorney general, Proctor K. Owens and the board of election commissioners were required to show cause on the 16th day of October, 1912, why the prayer of the bill of complaint should not be granted. The defendants joined in a demurrer to the bill, and on the 16th of October the demurrer came on to be heard and was overruled. By an order made the same day by three of the judges of the Wayne circuit court, sitting in chancery, an injunction issued as prayed for in said bill of complaint. In said order for injunction, it is recited that it is agreed between counsel that the demurrer theretofore filed should be considered as a return to the order to show cause. A motion to dissolve the injunction was denied. Thereupon the board of election commissioners and the said Owens applied to this court, and this court granted an order requiring said circuit judges to show cause why a writ of mandamus should not issue requiring them to set aside the order overruling the said demurrer and to set aside the order granting the said temporary injunction and to dissolve the same. The return to the order to show cause embraces so much of the records, orders, and proceedings of the court below as relate to the matter in question.

The principal subject discussed in the briefs is the jurisdiction of the court of equity in cases like the one presented. That it has jurisdiction to prevent the threatened action of the board of election commissioners of Wayne [434]*434county is asserted by tbe attorney general and denied by the relators. The matter is not one which ought to be determined in mandamus proceedings, unless the short period of time before the ballots are required to be printed will operate, in fact, to make the temporary injunction which was granted by the court below final and decisive of the main controversy and of the right of Mr. Owens, thus creating an exigency in which there is no other adequate relief. Nor is it important to consider the question of jurisdiction, unless it appears that some right of Mr. Owens is involved or performance of some legal duty by the board of election commissioners is interfered with.

Article 10, § 3, of the Constitution of 1850, provided:

“In each organized county there shall be a sheriff, a county clerk, a county treasurer, a register of deeds and a prosecuting attorney, chosen by the electors thereof, once in two years, and as often as vacancies shall happen, whose duties and powers shall be prescribed by law.”

Article 8, § 3, of the Constitution of 1909, provides:

“There shall be elected biennially in each organized county a sheriff, a county clerk, a county treasurer, a register of deeds and a prosecuting attorney, whose duties and powers shall be prescribed by law.”

The words found in the old Constitution, "and as often as vacancies shall happen,” are omitted from the new Constitution. We do not intimate there is significance in the change in the constitutional provision.

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State ex rel. Patterson v. Lentz
146 P. 932 (Montana Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 N.W. 1089, 172 Mich. 430, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-election-commissioners-v-wayne-circuit-judges-mich-1912.