Gooder v. Rudd

160 N.W. 808, 38 S.D. 197, 1916 S.D. LEXIS 145
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1916
DocketFile No. 4041
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 160 N.W. 808 (Gooder v. Rudd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gooder v. Rudd, 160 N.W. 808, 38 S.D. 197, 1916 S.D. LEXIS 145 (S.D. 1916).

Opinions

POLLEY, P. J.

This action was brought for the- purpose of having a certain election, held' in the township of Orient on the 7th clay of March, 1916, declared void.

The tow-ns'hip of Orient is a civil township in Faulk county,, and has a regularly elected board icf -township supervisors, a clerk and a treasurer. Within the limits o-f said township is the platted town, or village, of Orient, having.a population -of about 220 inhabitants. On or about the 5th day of February, 1916, 4here was filed in the -office -of the clerk of said t-ownshipi a petition, reques-tiong the board of -supervisors of said- township -to submit to the legal voters of -said township, at an election to ■be held on the 7th day of March, 1916, the question, “Shall intoxicating liquors- 'be sold- at retail within, the corporate limits [200]*200of said Orient township?” Said petition bore the signatures of 28 signers, all legad voters residing in said township'. Eighteen of said signers resided without the 'boundaries of the said platted town of Orient, and each owned land to the extent of one acre or more. The other 10 signers resided within the platted town of Orient, and each owned land to' the extent of one full platted lot, but less than an acre in extent. Thereafter the tO'\yn clerk gave the requisite notice of election, and, on the 7th day of March, a .purported election was held, at which the liquior license question was submitted to the voters of said township. It is conceded that a majority of the voters of the township voted- in favor of license. After the canvass of the said vote, the defendants Kelly and Bigler applied to the hoard of supervisors of said township for permits to sell intoxicating liquor, which said permits were granted by said board. Said 'defendants then filed their bonds, as required by law, with the board of county commissioners of Baulk county, which bond's were approved by said board, and said defendants paid the sum required for a county license to the treasurer of said county.

No- contest of this election was instituted within the 20 days allowed by law for that purpose, or at all; but after the expiration of more than 20 days after said election this action was commenced. Upon the trial a decree was entered, adjudging the permit issue by the board of supervisors of said township to be wholly void and of no effect whatever. It. also enjoined the defendant Gardner, as treasurer of said1 township, from1 receiving, any license money from the defendants Kelly and Bigler and from issuing to- either of them a receipt therefbr.

[1] Plaintiff bases his right to' the relief sought upon the sole ground that the petition, asking for a vote upon the license question, was not signed by the requisite number of qualified signers. An election to decide whether a liquor license is to- be granted at a certain plate is a special election (Whorton v. Bager, 36 S. D. 167, 133 N. W. 961), and the statutory requirements must be strictly complied with (Whorton v. Bager, supra; Gordon v. White, 33 S. D. 439, 145 N. W. 439; Krakowski v. Waskey, 33 S. D. 335, 145 N. W. 566; Olson v. City of Lemmon, 33 S. D. 380, 146 N. W. 592). Chapter 254, Laws of 1913, as amended 'by chapter 227, Laws of T9T5, provides that, [201]*201befare a vote can be had in a -township upon ¡the question- of issuing; liquor licenses, a- petition, asking that such -question be submitted to -the voters of the township', m-ust foe filed with the clerk of such township, which' said petition m-ust be signed foy 25 legal voters, each lo-f which- must foe the owners- of at least an acre of land in such township'. As but 18 -of the signers who signed the petition -involved in this -case- were the owners -of an acre of ground, the said petition did not comply with the provisions- of the -statute, and was therefore vlo-id for any purpose. The fact that 10 of the signers- lived in the platted town or village of Orient is wholly -immaterial. Said- town- of Orient was not incorporated, and the fact that a portion of the inhabitants of such town-ship lived ion -a 'platted- town site did1 not -change their legal status in any manner. The entire proceeding was a township proceeding, and -must be -governed -by the law applicable to- townships. The petition, asking -that a vote foe taken upon the license question, is ¡the -only authority the officials- of a city, town, or -town-ship have for the holding of such an election, and where there -is no petition, -or where the petition filed is insufficient in law (.which- -amounts to1 the same thing; as- no petition at all), such -officials are without any jurisdiction to hold such an election; and such election, if held, together with1 all proceeding's had thereunder or pursuant thereto-, are- wholly void. Such an election furnishes no -authority to ¡the board of county -commissioners, a city council, or a township- board of supervisors to issue licenses or permits to sell intoxicating liquors.

[2,3] But it is contended- by appellants- that plaintiff has not pursued -tire -proper remedy; that the proceedings1 for contesting an election provided for foy sections 1988-2000, inclusive, is an exclusive -remedy, and, the plaintiff having failed to proceed in-the manner pointed out foy those sections of the statute, within the time limited- -therein-, has precluded himself from questioning the validity -of said election. With this 'contention we do not agree. The said1 statute providing fo-r election -contests not only does not purport to -provide -an- exclusive -remedy in all cases, but it appears: affirmatively from section 1998 that said remedy is not exclusive. Said section- reads as follows:

“This article shall not he -construed -to- affect any of the remedies or rights of action or -proceedings provided for in the Code of Civil Procedure.”

[202]*202[4] But the specific contention of appellant is that sections 1988-2000 afforded plaintiff a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law, by election contest, and by which the validity of such election might have been determined, and that, under such circumstances, plaintiff cannot legally invoke the aid' of a court of equity. This conclusion does not necessarily follow. What might be the result, in this respect, in a case where the petition was upon its face sufficient to authorize the township officers to take a vote upon the question of issuing liquor licenses it is not necessary to- determine, and we express no* opinion thereon. The question to be determined is mot merely what was the result of the election, hut whether an election upon the question of issuing liquor licenses could be legally held at that time. In this case, ■the petition was insufficient on its face to' authorize the holding of any election at'ail. The said petition, after reciting that the petitioners are qualified vlcters of the township’ of Orient, and that a vote is desired1 in said Orient township upon the question of issuing- licenses, contains the following paragraph:

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Bluebook (online)
160 N.W. 808, 38 S.D. 197, 1916 S.D. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gooder-v-rudd-sd-1916.