McMaster v. Wilkinson

15 N.W.2d 348, 145 Neb. 39, 155 A.L.R. 667, 1944 Neb. LEXIS 125
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 14, 1944
DocketNo. 31813
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 348 (McMaster v. Wilkinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMaster v. Wilkinson, 15 N.W.2d 348, 145 Neb. 39, 155 A.L.R. 667, 1944 Neb. LEXIS 125 (Neb. 1944).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This is an election contest, growing out of the Lincoln city election held on May 4, 1943, and involved only the office of city councilman. J. Lloyd McMaster is the contestant and appellee, and Rees Wilkinson is the contestee and appellant. The judgment in the district court was that contestant was entitled to the office, and ouster was issued against contestee, who appealed to this court.

At the primary election held in the city of Lincoln on April 6, 1943, they were both nominated for the office of city councilman. After the city election held May 4, and the canvass of the votes by the council on May 10, the contestee was declared elected by the city council. The contestant, claiming to be legally entitled to said office, instituted this action in the county court for Lancaster county on May 26, under the state law, without having made any attempt to contest said election under the provisions of the charter of said city.

A judgment was entered in the county court in favor of the contestant, whereupon the contestee appealed to the district court, in which court the case was tried upon the same pleadings as had been filed in the county court, except that the contestee was allowed to amend his answer. The district court found that the contestant received 4,774 16/17 votes and that the contestee had received 4,767 7/17 votes, and the contestant was declared elected city councilman, [41]*41and the sheriff was directed to oust from the office the contestee and to put the contestant into possession of said office and all its books and papers.

The original complaint was filed by the contestant against Rees Wilkinson, contestee, Arthur J. Weaver, Jr., and L. H. De Brown, being the three persons declared elected to the office of councilman by the city council, acting as a canvassing board of said city, but in the county court on July 23, 1943, a stipulation was entered into that the cause be dismissed as to Arthur J. Weaver, Jr., and L. H. De Brown, and that the sole and only issues to be determined are between the contestant and the contestee.

In the judgment entered in the county court, after all of the ballots had been recounted, it was found by the court that the contestant received 4,777 votes and the contestee 4,768 votes at the election held May 4 for the office of councilman, and that said contestant should be and is declared duly elected to said office.

Immediately after the election on May 4, it appeared from an unofficial count of the election that the contestant had been defeated by 35 votes, but when the official canvass was made by the city council on May 10 it showed that the contestee had won by four votes. A complaint in action of contest was filed in the county court within the. time permitted by law, and the decision in that court was in favor of the contestant.

There are 88 voting precincts in the city of Lincoln, and there were introduced as exhibits in this court 88 boxes containing the official ballots cast at such election, each box containing all of the ballots cast in one of the 88 precincts, the number of such precinct being duly inscribed on the outside. On top of each of the 88 boxes, there is an envelope fastened thereto, in which is the poll book of that particular precinct, bearing the signature of the judges and clerks of election and a list of every person who voted at such election in that precinct. Each box was sealed on July 20, 1943, by seals bearing the date and the signature, “Reid Co. J.”

[42]*42Exhibit No. 102 is a package containing the absent and disabled voters’ ballots, marked by the voter, together with the envelopes in which the voters sent them to the city clerk, together with all of the applications for absent voters’ ballots, and an “Absent Voter’s Identification Envelope” for each ballot, which box with its contents was also sealed in the county court by the county judge.

The action was filed in the county court under the provisions of section 32-1009, Comp. St. 1929. This law has been in force since 1879, and provides that the county court shall hear and determine contests relating to the election of officers of cities within said county.

The first error assigned by the contestee for reversal is that, as election to the city council is a'matter of local municipal concern only, neither the county court nor the district court upon appeal had any jurisdiction over an election contest between two city councilmen, but that such a contest must be brought under section 6-122 of the Municipal Code of 1936 of the city of Lincoln, which provides: “That whenever any candidate for any office, or any elector chooses to contest the validity of an election of any officer, he shall, within two days after the closing of the polls give notice in writing to the person whose election he intends to contest of his intention so to do, a copy of which notice shall be filed with the City Clerk before the time fixed for the canvass of the returns as hereinbefore provided for ;***.”

It is argued by the contestee that no such notice of a contest was given by the contestant within two days of the election, as required by this section of the city ordinance.

It is also claimed by the contestee that the general laws of the state yield to the home rule charter provision of the city of Lincoln in all matters of purely local concern, citing State ex rel. Fischer v. City of Lincoln, 137 Neb. 97, 288 N. W. 499, which was a mandamus proceeding by a former chief of the fire department, who had been discharged without a hearing, to compel a reinstatement, in which it was held that the city council of Lincoln had the right to discharge one of its firemen without a hearing before the coun[43]*43cil. This court held that this was a question of purely local concern, but such case is not an authority to control our opinion in the case at bar.

In Eppley Hotels Co. v. City of Lincoln, 133 Neb. 550, 276 N. W. 196, it is said: “A city may enact and put into, its home rule charter any provisions for its government that it deems proper so long as they do not run contrary to the Constitution or to any general statute.”

In the case of Axberg v. City of Lincoln, 141 Neb. 55, 2 N. W. 2d 613, 141 A. L. R. 894, it was held that whether or not an act of the legislature pertained to a matter of statewide or strictly local concern becomes a question for the court when a conflict of authority arises.

Under the facts appearing in the case at bar, we have reached the conclusion that a contest over the election of a municipal officer is a matter of state-wide concern; that the holding in the case of Axberg v. City of Lincoln, supra, is applicable here, and reads as follows: “Where the legislature has enacted a law affecting municipal affairs, but which is of state-wide concern, such law takes precedence over any action by a home rule city under its charter.”

The second assignment of error is that the court erred in overruling contestee’s demand for a trial by jury. The constitutional right to a trial by jury is confined to cases which were so triable under the common law, and an election contest, under the provisions of statute, is not such a suit as is guaranteed the right to trial by jury under section 6, art. I, Bill of Rights, Constitution of Nebraska. No section of, our statute has been cited to us which provides for or authorizes trial by jury in election contests.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.W.2d 348, 145 Neb. 39, 155 A.L.R. 667, 1944 Neb. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmaster-v-wilkinson-neb-1944.