Brown v. Randolph County Court

32 S.E. 165, 45 W. Va. 827, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 113
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 165 (Brown v. Randolph County Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Randolph County Court, 32 S.E. 165, 45 W. Va. 827, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 113 (W. Va. 1899).

Opinion

Brannon, Judge:

At the general election in November, 1898, the voters of Randolph County voted upon the question of the removal of its county seat from Beverly to Elkins, and when the commissioners of the county court met as a board of canvassers to canvass the returns of the election for Governor and other officers, C. H. Scott, John T. Davis, and W. G. Wilson,, voters and taxpayers of the county, appeared before that board, and moved it to take up the certificates sent from the voting precincts as the vote upon the question, and declare the result; and T. P. R. Brown, a voter and taxpayer, objected, but the board overruled his objection, and proceeded to open the certificates, when Brown asked a recount of the ballots, and asked that he be allowed to go behind the returns apparent from the certificates, and offer evidence to set aside the election for fraud, and to exclude certain precincts for fraud'. The matter having been postponed till the completion of the canvass as to the election as to officers, on a later day Brown objected to any canvass by the canvassers of the a ote on tin-remoAuil of the county seat, and asked that the certificates as to it be transferred to the county court, insisting that it alone had jurisdiction to ascertain and declare the result of this vote, and not the board of canvassers; while Scott and others insisted that the canvassers ascertain and declare the result from the certificates, without recount of ballots,, and Avithout going behind the certificates, and [829]*829hearing evidence of fraud in the election. The board decided that it had jurisdiction to canvass the returns and recount the ballots, but no.further; and that, if asked then to hear evidence upon the fairness and legality of the election, it would transfer the controversy to the county court, in order that that court might determine it and declare the result. Both sides excepted to• this action. When, later, the county court met in regular session, Brown asked it to take up the returns of the election upon this question, and canvass them, recount ballots, and hear evidence as to the fairness -and' validity of the election, and ascertain and declare the result; but it refused. Brown has obtained from this Court a mandamus nisi, and now asks that a peremptory mandamus be awarded compelling the county court to exercise jurisdiction, and take up the returns, recount the ballots, hear evidence of fraud, and ascertain and declare the result of the election. We must determine whether this peremptory mandamus shall issue. Scott, Davis, and Wilson, upon a mandamus nisi obtained from thisCourt, and a peremptory mandamus to compel the board of canvassers to simply declare the result of the election from the certificates. We must determine whether this mandamus shall issue. Brown' also obtained from this Court a rule against the board of canvassers to show cause why a writ of prohibition shall not issue to prohibit it from any proceedings touching the canvass of the-returns. We must decide whether this prohibition shall issue. All these proceedings involve and turn upon the same questions of law.

The sole question in this litigation is, which body shall canvass the returns of a vote at a general election upon the relocation of a county seat, — the county court as such or the board o.f canvasser's as such? Though these bodies are composed of the-same persons,- — county commissioners, —yet they are in law not the same, but distinct bodies. The board of -canvassers is merely a body to canvass the returns of elections for public officers, acting simply on the certificates sent from voting precincts by certain' officers holding the election, and recounting ballots when demand is made. They may send for-those precinct officers to ascertain the true result; but they hear no contests ju> dicially, no evidence of fraud in the election. They act [830]*830ministerially only. If any candidate claims that the election is fraudulent or in any wise illegal, or that ballots are unlawfully counted against him, or not counted for him, he’ must get relief by contest, as provided in the statute Brazie v. Commissioners, 25 W. Va. 213. But a county court, as such, canvassing the returns of an election upon a vote upon a county-seat relocation, is an entirely different tribunal, having wider function. It canvasses the returns upon the' certificates, can recount ballots, hear evidence of fraud and illegality, and do what in the case of candidates for office can be done by that court in hearing a contest. Poteet v. Commissioners, 30 W. Va. 58, (3 S. E. 97). And that case, as also Welch v. County Court, 29 W. Va. 63, (1 S. E. 337), held that returns of elections on a county seat must go before the county court to be canvassed,, and to have the result declared, and not before the board of canvassers. Such was the law under chapter 5, section 15, Acts 1881 (Code 1887, c. 39, s. 15), as settled by those two cases. But it is insisted by Scott and others that all this has been changed by chapter 37, Acts 1895 (Code 1891, c. 39, s. 15). Scott contends that under this act of 1895, the board of canvassers must canvass the returns of such vote, if at a general election, simply by the certificates sent from the precincts, and declare the result of the vote; and that the county court has nothing to do with such canvass and declaration. If the election is a special one on the question, it is conceded that the county court makes the canvass and declaration. I do not concur in this position. If we look back through the entire life of the State, we find under the Constitution of 1863 the board of supervisors, and under that of 1872 the county court, and under the amendment in 1879, of Art. VIII. the county court, were given “superintendence and administration of the -internal police and fiscal affairs of their counties.” The.location of a county seat falls under this head. If we look at the legislation upon this subject in all this time, we find that it gave the supervisors and the county courts jurisdiction to entertain petitions for the removal of the county seats, and to order votes thereon, and to ascertain and declare their results. Acts passed in 1863, 1868, 1873, and 1881 show this. It was fit, under'these Constitutions, that the whole proceeding as to ordering [831]*831vote upon tbe question of removal of a county seat, ascertaining its result, and then providing a court house and other buildings at the new county seat, should be committed to the county court. It might be questioned whether this power could be given to other hands. It requires plain legislation, not merely doubtful construction, to revolutionize this policy, established so long. The act of 1891 is made to do so- by implication only, the chief point to sustain such implication being the omission to provide, as former ac ts did, that the clerk should lay the returns of a general election before the county court. Let us look at the act.

The controlling reason for its enactment was to authorize, for the first time, a special election upon the relocation of a county seat. I see no other great change. Under it the petition for a vote on relocation must go to the county court. It alone could order a vote, and make all provisions necessary for it up to the election. How after the election? It says: “The said vote shall be taken, superintended, conducted and returned in the same manner and by the same officers as elections for county and state officers.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 165, 45 W. Va. 827, 1899 W. Va. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-randolph-county-court-wva-1899.