McGregor v. Bd. of Trs. of Burlingame

114 P. 566, 159 Cal. 441, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 339
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1911
DocketS.F. No. 5636.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 114 P. 566 (McGregor v. Bd. of Trs. of Burlingame) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGregor v. Bd. of Trs. of Burlingame, 114 P. 566, 159 Cal. 441, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 339 (Cal. 1911).

Opinions

SLOSS, J.

The first of the above entitled matters is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the board of trustees of the town of Burlingame to hear and determine an alleged contest of an election. The second is an application for a writ of prohibition to restrain the superior court of San Mateo County from proceeding with the trial of a contest of the same election. Both proceedings were transferred to this court after judgment (denying the relief sought) in the district court of appeal for the first appellate district, to which court the applications had first been presented.

Burlingame is incorporated under the Municipal Corporation Act as a town of the sixth class. At a municipal election held on April 11, 1910, in said town, for the election, among other officers, of five town trustees, the petitioner and one Sheehan were candidates for said office of town trustee. The election returns showed the receipt of an equal number of votes by McGregor and Sheehan, and the town trustees, canvassing the returns, declared the result to be a tie vote between said candidates.

On April 18, 1910, McGregor filed with the town trustees his written and verified statement, contesting the election and alleging that votes had been illegally received and counted in favor of Sheehan, and that fewer legal votes had been cast for Sheehan than for the contestant. Thereupon the town trustees issued a citation to Sheehan, calling upon him to appear on the second day of May to answer the said contest.

Subsequent to April 18th, Sheehan filed with the county clerk of San Mateo County a contest likewise contesting said election, and the superior court caused a citation to be issued and served upon McGregor. On the return day McGregor appeared and objected to the jurisdiction of said court. The court held, however, that it had jurisdiction and that the town trustees had none. The trustees, learning of this, declined to try the contest before them, and the present proceedings were instituted, as above stated, to compel the town trustees to hear *444 the one contest and to restrain the superior court from hearing the other.

Under section 860 of-the Municipal Corporation Act (Stats. 1883, p. 269) “the board of trustees shall judge of the qualifications of its members and of all election returns and determine contested elections of all city officers.” If the power to “determine contested elections” includes the authority to inquire and decide whether, notwithstanding a showing, on the face of the returns, of a tie vote, one or another of the candidates in fact received a plurality, this section clearly confers upon the board of trustees the jurisdiction to hear and determine the contest instituted by McGregor. It is argued by the respondents that the term “contested elections” means no more than a proceeding to question the correctness of a finding by the canvassing officer or board that one or another of the candidates was elected. Upon a tie vote, they say, there is no election, and hence nothing to contest.

That the casting of a plurality of votes in favor of one candidate is essential to a choice or election of that candidate is true. (Const., art. XX, sec. 13; Pol. Code, secs. 1066, 1067.) But it does not follow that because no candidate is declared elected, there has been no election. If one or the other has received a plurality of the legal votes, he is in fact elected, and should be so declared. We think the grant, in general terms, of power to determine “contested elections” or “election contests” may well be interpreted to cover the case of an attack upon the correctness of a finding that there was a tie vote, as well as that of a return that one candidate, rather than the other, has been elected. This construction, which tends to prevent the nullification of the legally expressed will of the voters through the error or misconduct of the officers charged with the conduct of the election or the canvass of the returns, finds support in a number of decisions. (Erdman v. Barrett, 89 Pa. St. 321; Nicholls v. Barrick, 27 Colo. 432, [62 Pac. 202]; Bowker v. Eisenhood, 1 S. D. 577, [48 N. W. 136, 12 L. R. A. 705]; People v. Robertson, 27 Mich. 116;. Shepard v. Allen, (Ill.) 17 N. E. 756; Imboden v. Cully, 94 Ky. 45, [21 S. W. 339]; Webster v. Gilman, 91 Ill. 324.) The object of the proceeding, as is said in Erdman v. Barrett, 89 Pa. St. 321, “is to determine who has received the highest number of votes legally cast. The- court is to investigate the election, to cor *445 rect alleged errors when they are shown to exist, and to determine the true result.”

Respondents place great reliance upon the consideration that the sections of the Code of Civil Procedure (1111 et seq.) providing for the contesting of certain elections in the superior court did not, prior to the enactment of section 1124 in 1907, authorize a contest where the declared result of the election was a tie. (Lamb v. Webb, 151 Cal. 451, [91 Pac. 102, 646].) This limitation of the scope of the proceeding in the superior court resulted from the restricted language employed in the code sections. The only privilege given by section 1111 is to “contest the right of any person declared elected to an office. . . .” This language necessarily excludes the idea of a contest where no person has been declared elected. (See Sweeny v. Adams, 141 Cal. 558, [75 Pac. 182].) But this reasoning has no application to the broad and general grant of power to “determine contested elections.” No good reason appears for holding that the legislature, in enacting the Municipal Corporation Act, used the phrase “contested elections” in the narrow sense which must be attributed to the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure. The phraseology of the two enactments being essentially dissimilar, there is no ground for applying the rule that a statute embodying the terms of a prior statute must be read in the light of the interpretation given to such prior statute.

This court has held, in several instances, that the legislature may, by provisions similar to that of section 860 of the Municipal Corporation Act, vest in a city council the power of judging of the election of the city officers. Such provisions do not conflict with the constitutional declaration that the judicial power shall be vested in certain courts. (People v. Metzker, 47 Cal. 524; People v. Bingham, 82 Cal. 238, [22 Pac. 1039]; Carter v. Superior Court, 138 Cal. 150, [70 Pac. 1067].) It would follow, therefore, from the views herein-above expressed, that the writ of mandate should issue requiring the trustees of Burlingame to exercise their jurisdiction by proceeding to hear and determine the contest instituted by McGregor.

The answer which purports to have been filed on behalf of two of the respondents does not, we think, raise any issue affecting the duty of the board to proceed. The averments of *446

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Bluebook (online)
114 P. 566, 159 Cal. 441, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgregor-v-bd-of-trs-of-burlingame-cal-1911.