Mauff v. People

52 Colo. 562
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1912
DocketNo. 7718
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 52 Colo. 562 (Mauff v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mauff v. People, 52 Colo. 562 (Colo. 1912).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Baieey

delivered the opinion of the court:

The suit is in mandamus by the people on the relation of the chairman of the republican city central, committee of the republican party of the city and county of Denver, wherein the chairman of the democratic central committee of the democratic party of the same municipality, by proper averments, is shown to have a like interest, and entitled to the same relief to which the Republican chairman is entitled, if any, against Albert E. Mauff and others, constituting the election commission of the city and county of Denver. It is sought to compel the [564]*564commission to select, from names submitted by the respective 'above-named chairmen, a temporary registration committee of three for each precinct in that territory, the members of which will become election judges at the May, 19x2, election, under the law of 1911 governing such matters, which a majority of the commission declined to do. The question is whether the commission is subject to and shall be guided by the state statutes, respecting the performance of its duties regarding- the control and conduct of elections. Plaintiff had judgment below and the defendants bring the case here on error,seeking a reversal thereof. Disregarding technical objections, as both parties desire and public interest requires, that the controversy be disposed of promptly on its merits, we proceed to thus consider and determine it.

If by article XX of the constitution. the city and county of Denver is freed from the constitution and general laws of the state concerning elections, then by charter the people of that political body may proceed to fix the- qualifications of electors therein, provide a complete system for the conduct of elections, declare "what shall constitute an offense against the laws so enacted, prescribe punishment therefor, say how and in what courts election contests shall be waged, and in short, upon the entire subject of elections, which it requires no- argument to show, in the very nature of things is of more than 'local concern, may act independently of the provisions of the state constitution and the general laws relating thereto. A construction of this article that leads to a result so absurd and utterly impossible is palpably wrong and should nqt have the sanction or approval of the courts. That the entire state is interested in having the qualifications of electors, offenses against election laws and, .punishments therefor, methods of conducting election contests, pro[565]*565visions for the preservation of the purity of the ballot, fixed 'and defined' throughout the state by uniform laws, and that the sovereign power of the state alone can do this, seems so plain as to amount practically to^ a demonstration.

The state constitution declares that the general assembly shall pass laws to guard against abuses of the elective’ franchise and to secure the purity of elections, and statutes have been enacted in compliance with this mandate. _ It is not possible that in the city and county of Denver this provision of the constitution, and the wise, wholesome and beneficient laws passed pursuant thereto, have been swept aside, that they are no longer in force there, and that the people of that locality are in this respect freed therefrom and have ceased to be subject thereto. Those laws, and the above referred to provision of the constitution, with others thereof, concerning elections and the exercise of the elective franchise, were in force in that territory prior to the adoption of article XX, and unless we find something therein setting them aside they are still so in force.

Tn People ex rel. v. Sours, 31 Colo., page 369, it was contended that article XX displaces and was intended to displace the constitution and the laws of the general assembly, and to give to the people of the city and county of Denver a free hand in all things, with the exclusive power to make, alter and revise their charter in any and every particular; but in the opinion in that case, emphatically' denying that contention, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Steele, said:

“Even by constitutional amendment, the people cannot set apart any portion of the state in such manner that that portion of the state shall be freed from the constitution, or delegate the making of constitutional amendments [566]*566concerning it to a charter convention, or give to such charter convention the power to prescribe the jurisdiction and duties of public officers with respect to state government as distinguished from municipal, or city, government. * * * Under the constitution of the United States, the state government must be preserved throughout the entire state; and it can -be so preserved only by having within every political sub-division of the state, such officers as may be necessary to' perform the duties assumed by the state government, under the general laws as they now exist, or as they may hereafter exist. * * * The provision that ‘Every charter shall designate the officers who shall, respectively, perform the acts and duties required of county officers to be done by the constitution or by the general law, as far as applicable,’ completely contradicts the assumption that the amendment regards such duties as -being- subject to local regulation and control. The amendment is to- be considered as a whole, in view of its expressed purpose of securing to the people of Denver absolute freedom from legislative interference in matters of local concern; and, so considered and interpreted, we find nothing- in it subversive of the state government, or repugnant to the constitution of the United States.”

And in People ex rel. v. Cassiday, 50 Colo. 503, at page 509, discussing- matters bearing directly on this same proposition, it is said:

“The people of the city and county of Denver have not been given, and do not have, the power by charter to in any way change the duties of governmental officers, so far as they relate to state and county affairs, and there can be no ground for such contention if article XX be properly read and understood. The city and count}'- of Denver has not been freed from the constitution. It. is as much subject to it as any other part of the state. Ar-[567]*567tide XX is a part of the constitution. Upon its adoption certain portions of the constitution, as it theretofore existed, became inapplicable to this particular territory, because of the express provision of the new article. This article, to the extent which it undertook to do so, being the last expression of the people upon the subject, modified the constitution so far as it applied to the territory in question, and certain provisions thereof became inapplicable therein. Article XX is a grant of power to the people of the city and county of Denver, where theretofore no power in that respect existed, to do certain specific things, relative to the designation of agencies to discharge in that territory governmental duties fixed by the constitution and general laws. They have just such power and authority in this behalf as the article gives them, no more, no less.”

And again, at page 514, in that opinion, it is said:

“As matters now stand, there is nothing whatever in article XX which gives to the people of the city and county of Denver power to legislate upon anything whatever. concerning matters of state and county governmental import, except merely the designation of certain agents to perform therein the acts and duties incident thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Colo. 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mauff-v-people-colo-1912.