Hurley v. Coursey

265 N.W. 4, 64 S.D. 131, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 16
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1936
DocketFile No. 7867.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 265 N.W. 4 (Hurley v. Coursey) 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
Hurley v. Coursey, 265 N.W. 4, 64 S.D. 131, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 16 (S.D. 1936).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

This appeal presents a further chapter in the history of the attempt to establish a municipal court for the city of Rapid 'City in Pennington county, S. D. The matter in its earlier stages has been previously dealt with by this court in Bronson v. Rapid City (1935) 63 S. D. 408, 259 N. W. 674, to which opinion we now refer for a statement as to what the relevant facts were and as to what proceedings had been attempted down to that date.

At the regular municipal election held in' Rapid' City on the third Tuesday in April, 1934, there was submitted to the electors (section 5206, R. C. 1919) the question of establishing a municipal court in said city. Upon the following Friday (April 20, 1934), the governing body of the municipality assembled for the purpose of canvassing and declaring the result of the election (section 6326, R. C. 1919). Just what was done and just what happened from that moment forward with reference to the question of the establishment of a municipal court is not in all respects entirely clear. The difficulty of ascertaining the precise facts and the impossibility of discovering upon what theory of counsel the various subsequent proceedings were undertaken and attempted was adverted to in the Bronson Case.

There were eleven precincts in Rapid City in 1934. Following the 1934 municipal election, two of said precincts (being election districts 5 and 6) failed to make any return whatsoever of the result of the vote on the question of establishing a municipal court. Consequently, no returns from those two precincts were before the canvassing board when it met on April 20, 1934. There were before the board, however, the returns on said question from the other nine precincts. Upon the face of the returns from those nine precincts the question of establishing a municipal court lost by quite a margin. At the time of writing the opinion in the *133 Bronson Case, it was our impression (which impression we think was shared by all counsel who participated in the argument and submission of said case) that the board on April 20 did, in fact, canvass the returns presented to them by the nine precincts making returns (marking districts 5 and' 6 as having no votes either for or against on the question) and did “declare the result and cause a statement thereof to be made on its journal” by entering therein a vote of 968 in favor of said proposition and 1,077 against.

Thereafter, one Bronson apparently undertook to contest said election under the provisions of sections 7336-7347, R. -C. 1919. He succeeded in getting the circuit court to count the ballots cast upon the question in all the eleven precincts and to- announce that said question had carried by a vote of 1,293 for and 1,283 against. Later Fred C. McCain and: -Steve Hurley undertook to invoke the jurisdiction of the circuit court of Pennington county with reference to said matter. These two proceedings, the one attempted by Bronson and the other attempted- by McCain and Hurley jointly, ultimately got into this -court and are the ones dealt with in the opinion- in the Bronson Case, 63 S. D. 408, 259 N. W. 674, 677, to which we again refer. We have never been able to -discover anything more about the nature or theory of those two proceedings than we knew when the Bronson opinion was written, and we conceded then that we were not able to understand very much about it.

By our opinion in the Bronson Case we held-, so far as concerns the contest attempted by Mc'Cain and Hurley, that they had never succeeded in invoking the jurisdiction of the circuit court and, so far as concerns any judgment entered by the circuit court in that matter, it was reversed and the cause remanded with directions to dismiss the M'cCain-Hurley proceedings. In so far as the case purported to present an appeal from the circuit court judgment upon the contest instituted by Bronson, we held that the attempted appeal to this court was a nullity because not taken within the time contemplated by statute. In our discussion in that opinion, however, we very definitely treated the proceeding instituted by Bronson in the circuit court as an attempted election contest, and so likewise did the counsel who argued the case. Also (although admittedly obiter) it was the very clear inference from our opinion that Bronson had likewise failed successfully to invoke *134 the jurisdiction of the circuit court for the reason (inter alia) that he had made no attempt to comply with the requirements of section 7338, R. C. 1919. That view, too, was shared by the then counsel for Bronson who, upon the oral argument, as stated in our opinion, “frankly admitted that in their opinion the circuit court was without jurisdiction to enter the judgment in the Bronson proceeding.” AVe considered the proceeding instituted by 'McCain and Hurley and likewise the proceeding instituted by Bronson to be attempted election contests, and we still entertain that view. AVe squarely and necessarily held in the former opinion that McCain and Hurley had failed effectually to invoke the jurisdiction of the circuit court. Counsel at that time admitted, our former opinion obiter indicated, and we now squarely hold, that Bronson’s attempt to invoke the circuit court’s jurisdiction was equally ineffectual.

After the opinion in the Bronson 'Case was handed down, the attorneys for respondents therein filed a petition for rehearing in which they argued eloquently, lengthily, and for the first time that “no canvass was made by the canvassing board] when it met for that purpose” and that our opinion in the Bronson Case proceeded on “the erroneous theory that a canvass was actually made and that the Bronson Case was a contest of the result of a canvass.” AVe disregarded this petition for rehearing because we thought that the matter therein urged was immaterial, since even if it were true it would have brought us to the same identical result that we had airead)' reached. The document whereby Bronson undertook to initiate his proceeding in the circuit court was entitled “Notice of Election Contest” and) is very plainly an attempt to proceed to contest the result of an election under section 7336 et seq., R. C. 1919. If it is not that, it is nothing. AVe have recently had occasion to point out that an integral and essential part of an election is a determination and declaration of the result thereof by the board or body upon whom such duty is by law imposed and until such declaration has been made there is nothing to which any proceeding under a contest statute can be applicable. See State ex rel Ingles v. Circuit Court (1934) 63 S. D. 313, 258 N. W. 278. If there had been no canvass and declaration of the result of this election by the governing body of the city, then certainly there was nothing which Bronson could undertake to contest and his effort *135 to invoke the jurisdiction of the circuit court by filing a notice of contest was for that reason utterly ineffectual. It was argued in the petition for rehearing that: “The total inability of the board to canvass, determine and declare the result of the election on the municipal court proposition shows the sole reason for the Bronson contest, namely, that a judicial determination might be had1 by a count of the votes.

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Bluebook (online)
265 N.W. 4, 64 S.D. 131, 1936 S.D. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurley-v-coursey-sd-1936.