Lower Terrebonne Refining & Manufacturing Co. v. Police Jury

40 So. 443, 115 La. 1020, 1906 La. LEXIS 450
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1906
DocketNo. 15,643
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 40 So. 443 (Lower Terrebonne Refining & Manufacturing Co. v. Police Jury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lower Terrebonne Refining & Manufacturing Co. v. Police Jury, 40 So. 443, 115 La. 1020, 1906 La. LEXIS 450 (La. 1906).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

The validity of a special election held in a drainage district for the voting of a tax and the issue of bonds is contested in this case by taxpayers of the district, on two grounds:

First, that the notice of the election was not published for full 30 days as was necessary ; and, second, that the vote of Mr. R. R. Barrow, which changed the result of the election, was cast before the time fixed by the statute for the opening of the poll, and before any one of the commissioners of election had reached the polling place.

The notice of the election was required to be published “in the official journal of the parish.” Section 2, Act No. 145, p. 250, Acts 1902. This “official journal” appeared only every Saturday. Hence a publication in this journal every Saturday was sufficient. The election was held 32 days after the first publication, and during that time the notice was published every Saturday. This was clearly a full compliance with the law.

Interpreting Act No. 104, p. 157, of 1878, providing for judicial advertisements in the parish of Orleans, this court has held that a publication “once a week” is sufficient (In re City of New Orleans, 52 La. Ann. 1073, 27 South. 592) ; and that it may be on any day of the week, so long as it precedes the sale (In re Lindner, 113 La. 772, 37 South. 720). Quoting these decisions, the learned counsel for plaintiffs argue that “there must be a publication once a week, during the weeks embraced within 30 full days, and the last publication must precede the election.” As we understand this contention, it is that the • statute under which the publication was made,, in the- instant case, divides off the 30 days into weeks and requires one of the publications to appear within each one of these weeks. In answer to this argument, [524]*524it suffices to say that the statute does nothing of the kind. All that it requires is that the notice “shall he published for 30 days in the official journal of the parish.”

Mr. Barrow was the president of the drainage district. He was anxious to vote, but was also anxious to catch an early train. When he reached the polling place, no one was there. Being pressed for time, he started 'out in search of the commissioners, instead of waiting for therp to arrive. Commissioner Aycock, whom he met, could not come immediately, as he had to go to his house and change clothes. While he was with Aycock, Mr. Theriot came along, having the ballot boxes in charge. He and Theriot drove back to the polling place, and found there Boudreaux and Duplantis. These two and Theriot at once opened the poll as commissioners, and Mr. Barrow voted before the hour fixed by law for the opening of the poll. The vote changed the result of the election.

Neither Theriot, Boudreaux, nor Duplantis was a commissioner. Boudreaux was the clerk of election. Theriot had been appointed commissioner, but had subsequently been appointed deputy sheriff for the poll, and since it was he who carried the ballot boxes, a function of the sheriff, and since he signed the election returns as deputy sheriff, we infer that he had accepted the appointment, thereby renouncing and vacating his appointment as commissioner. Duplantis was a mere bystander. Later the two commissioners, Aycock and Caillouet, appointed him commissioner in the place vacated by Theriot.

Barrow, as president of the drainage district had appointed the commissioners; but he had made the appointment by simply directing the secretary of the drainage board to appoint the same list of commissioners the president of the police jury had appointed for the election for public officers to be held at the same time and place.

The evidence leaves no doubt that the entire proceeding was in the best of good faith. Had any one challenged the vote on the grounds now urged, the probability is that Mr. Barrow, rather than jeopardize his vote, would have waited the two or three minutes until the commissioners and the time for opening the poll had arrived.

Under these circumstances, the learned judge a quo held the vote was good. We regret we cannot agree with him. His decision is founded on two well-recognized principles : First, that in the absence of fraud the courts are disposed to give effect to elections where possible (Webre v. Wilton, 29 La. Ann. 610) ; and, second, that the acts of de facto officers are valid (Cooley, Const. Lim. [6th Ed.] pp. 750, 777).

But the latter of these principles does not apply to the facts of the case, and the former, if stretched to the cracking point, cannot manufacture a vote; and that is what would have to be done in this case before this so-called vote of Mr. Barrow could be counted. Of itself it is not a vote.

Before there can be a vote there must be an election, and it stands to reason that the act of three bystanders in opening a so-called poll at a time not appointed by law for the holding of an election is not an election. Boudreaux, Theriot, and Duplantis had no better quality to act as commissioners than any other bystanders would have had; and the time fixed by law for the holding of the election had not yet arrived. The time had not arrived for holding an election; and there were no officers qualified to hold an election. Hence there was no election, and, as a consequence, no vote.

Time may not be so very sacramental that, in the absence of fraud, the election would be vitiated if-the commissioners anticipated by a trifle the hour fixed by law for the opening of the poll. Their official character would give a legal color to their act. But, [525]*525when bystanders Undertake to anticipate the time fixed by law for holding the election, there is nothing in the situation from which even a color of legality can be derived, unless, indeed, it be from the mere presence of the ballot boxes and election paper.

But, conceding, for argument, that even in such a case a vote cast by a voter who in good faith supposed the election to be going on regularly would be good, under the principle of the validity of the act of de facto officers, still the vote of Mr. Barrow is not good.

In the first place, there can be no de facto commissioner of election at a time not fixed by law for the holding of an election, on the principle that there Cannot be a de facto officer unless there is a corresponding office in existence. A. & E. E. of Law, vol. 8, p. 799.

In the second place, for the purpose of Mr. Barrow’s voting, the three gentlemen in question were not officers de facto for the further reason that Mr. Barrow knew, or must be held to have known, that they were not the commissioners.

A de facto officer is defined in the A. & E. E. of Law, vol. 8, p. 781, as follows:

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40 So. 443, 115 La. 1020, 1906 La. LEXIS 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lower-terrebonne-refining-manufacturing-co-v-police-jury-la-1906.