Brooks v. State ex rel. Singer

70 N.E. 980, 162 Ind. 568, 1904 Ind. LEXIS 86
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1904
DocketNo. 20,307
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 70 N.E. 980 (Brooks v. State ex rel. Singer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooks v. State ex rel. Singer, 70 N.E. 980, 162 Ind. 568, 1904 Ind. LEXIS 86 (Ind. 1904).

Opinion

Dowling, J.

This suit was brought in the. name of the State, on the relation of James Singer, who is described in the complaint as a resident of Ripley county, and a qualified voter thereof, against the clerk, sheriff, and auditor of Ripley county, for an alternative writ of mandate requiring each of these officers to show cause why ho should not be compelled to perform the duties imposed upon him by law in regard to the election of senators and representatives to be held on Tuesday, November 8, 1904, under the act of February 25, 1897, fixing the number of senators [570]*570and representatives to the General Assembly of the State of Indiana, and to apportion the same among the several counties of this State. Acts 1897, p. 65, §6681 et seq. Burns 1901. The real purpose of the action was to obtain a decision of this court upon the question of the constitutionality of the apportionment act of 1903 (Acts 1903, p. 358). The appellants, who were the defendants below, waived the issuing and service of the alternative writ, and .demurred to the complaint. Their demurrer was overruled, and, upon their failure to plead further, judgment was rendered on the demurrer in favor of the appellee. Erom that judgment the defendants below appeal, and the error assigned is the ruling on the demurrer.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff is a resident, a citizen, and a voter of Ripley county, and that the three persons named as defendants are, respectively, the clerk of the circuit court, and the sheriff and auditor of said Ripley county; that by the act of the General Assembly of the State of Indiana approved February 25, 1897, it was provided that the General Assembly of said State should consist of fifty senators and one hundred representatives, and, among other things, that the county of Ripley should constitute a representative district; that an election for members of the General Assembly of said State will be held on Tuesday, November 8, 1904, and that under the said act one representative should be elected in the representativo district composed of the said county of Ripley; that the relator made a demand on the defendant Absalom J. Brooks, clerk of the circuit court of said county of Ripley, more than twenty days before the said election that said clerk should certify to the sheriff of said Ripley county that one representative in the said representative district composed of said Ripley county is to be elected; that said relator also made a demand upon the defendant Henry Voss, sheriff of said county, that he, as such sheriff, should give fifteen days’ notice of the election of such representative [571]*571at said general election, by posting at tbe usual places of holding elections in bis said county a copy of tbe certificates of said election so demanded by tbe relator to be issued by tbe clerk of said county when tbe same should be received by said sheriff, and by one publication thereof in a newspaper of general circulation in bis said county, if any there be, and that tbe said sheriff should also deliver a copy of said certificate to tbe township trustee of each township within said county; that tbe said relator bad made a demand upon tbe defendant Nicholas Volz, auditor of said county, that be should make out and cause to be delivered to tbe duly appointed inspectors of election for tbe several precincts of said county, at least ten days prior to tbe time of bolding said general election, a suitable number of blank forms, poll-books, and election returns, with proper captions, forms of oaths, certificates, and tally papers, to be used by tbe election officers of said precincts at said election properly to register, certify, and return tbe votes cast for tbe election of said representative, but that each of said officers wholly refused and refuses to comply with such demand, claiming and asserting that tbe said act of February 25, 18 9Y, expired by limitation, because enacted prior to tbe enumeration of tbe male inhabitants of tbe State of Indiana, over tbe age of twenty-one years, taken pursuant to law in tbe year 1901, and that the same was repealed by an act fixing tbe number of senators and representatives to tbe General Assembly of this State, and to apportion tbe same among tbe several counties of this State, approved March 9, 1903, and that said officers give out and threaten that tb.ey will proceed to perform their said duties according to said last-named act alone; that tbe said act of March 9, 1903, is in conflict with §§4 and 5 of article 4 of tbe Constitution of tbe State of Indiana, for tbe reasons that in tbe year 1901 an enumeration of tbe male inhabitants of said State, over the age of twenty-one years, was taken under tbe authority and by tbe direction [572]*572of the General Assembly, as required by the Constitution (the enumeration referred to is then set out in the complaint, the total being 694,346) ; that it became the duty of the General Assembly at its session next following such enumeration, to wit, the sixty-third regular session, to fix the number of senators, not exceeding fifty, and representatives, not exceeding one hundred, and apportion them among the several counties according, to the number of male inhabitants above twenty-one years of age, as shown by said enumeration, and that at said session the said General Assembly did attempt to discharge its duty under the Constitution by passing the said act of March 9, 1903; that' in apportioning the senators and representatives upon the basis of the enumeration of 1901, each senatorial district should have contained 13,886 male inhabitants above the age of twenty-one years, as nearly as reasonably possible, and that each representative district should have contained 6,943 male inhabitants above the age of twenty-one years, as nearly as reasonably possible. (The apportionment made by the act of 1903 is next set out.) That by said act of March 9, 1903, forty-six counties are formed' into twenty districts, to' each of which one senator is apportioned; that ten of said districts, composed of twenty-eight counties, contained, by said enumeration of 1901, 159,767 male inhabitants above the age of twenty-one years, while the other ten of said districts, composed of eighteen counties, contained, by said enumeration, only 117,369 such inhabitants; that no other senatorial representation is given by said act to any of the counties contained in said first-mentioned districts, and that by such apportionment the senatorial representation of 42,398 male inhabitants above the age of twenty-one years of said districts, being three senators, with a fraction over of 740, is wrongfully denied to the counties contained in said ten districts, and is given to said counties contained in said second ten districts, whereby their representation, which [573]*573should be but eight senators, is increased to ten, and the representation of the counties contained in the first-mentioned ten districts is reduced to ten, when of right it should be eleven.

The names of the counties composing said twenty senatorial districts are next set out, with the number of male inhabitants above twenty-one years of age in each district, as shown by said enumeration, with the excess of such inhabitants in each of the first ten districts over each of those in the second-mentioned ten districts.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.E. 980, 162 Ind. 568, 1904 Ind. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-state-ex-rel-singer-ind-1904.