O'Hara v. . Powell

80 N.C. 103
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 80 N.C. 103 (O'Hara v. . Powell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Hara v. . Powell, 80 N.C. 103 (N.C. 1879).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

At the election held in the several counties constituting the second congressional district on the 5th day of November last, the plaintiff, who was a candidate for representative therefrom in the next congress of the United States, received a large number of votes in the county of Edgecombe. Returns from the various places of voting were made to the board of county canvassers, at their meeting on the second day after the election, at which time and place they are required by law “to open and canvass the *105 returns and make abstracts stating the number of votes cast in each precinct for each office, the name of each person voted for, and the number of votes given to each person for each different office, and sign the same.” Acts 1876 — 77, ch. 275, § 25.

Section 26 directs the abstract for representatives in congress to be made on a separate and distinct sheet. Three such abstracts for representatives in congress and state officers must be prepared and signed by the board of county canvassers, of which one is delivered to the sheriff, another filed in the register’s office for registration, and the third forwarded in a registered letter to the secretary of state, at Rale gh. § 27.

When the canvass is concluded the original returns are deposited with the clerk of the superior court for safe keeping, and the abstracts recorded in a book kept in the office for the purpose. He is then required to transmit duplicates of the abstracts, mentioned in section 27, to the secretary of state.

The canvassing board must proclaim the result of their canvass and comparison of the polls, when completed, at the court house door. Section 53 establishes á board of state canvassers, consisting of the governor, secretary of state, attorney general and two members of the state senate of different political parties to be appointed by the governor. This board shall open the abstracts in the office of the secretary of state “ on the Thursday following the third Monday after the day of election and examine the returns if they shall have been received from all the counties; and if all are not received, they may adjourn not exceeding twenty days for the - purpose of obtaining the returns from all the counties, and when these are received, shall proceed with the canvass; such canvass shall be conducted publicly in the hall of the house of representatives, § 55.

Sections 56, 57, 58 and 59 prescribe in detail the duties of *106 this board which are very similar to those imposed upon the county board as to county officers, and the abstracts prepared by them must ascertain and state what persons are elected to the respective offices.

The next section (60) is in these words: “Representatives in congress, justices of the supreme court, judges of the superior court and solicitors shall be commissioned by the governor.” Such are the general provisions of the act regulating elections and defining the duties of canvassing boards, constituting the machinery by which the popular will is ascertained and made effective in the choice of public agents and representatives.

The county canvassers of Edgecombe, as the pleadings in the case show, rejected many of the precinct returns of votes made to them, for alleged irregularities and canvassed and counted the other precinct returns, only the abstracts of which were disposed of as the law directs, and by adjournment after completing their work dissolved their organization. To compel the persons composing the board of count}7 canvassers of Edgecombe to reassemble and make a new and full recount, including the omitted votes and the required abstract therefrom, is the object of the present proceeding by mandamus, which on the hearing before the judge on the 9th day of December last, he ordered to issue against the defendants, and from whose judgment they appeal.

The state canvassing board under thelawcan extend their session for twenty days when necessary to procure absent county returns, and it would expire by limitation on the 17th day of the month, allowing the relator eight days only to derive any advantage from the award of the writ. It must be assumed that the -state canvassers have acted upon the abstracts transmitted from the several counties to the department of state, including those from Edgecombe charged in the complaint to be partial and imperfect, and declared the *107 result; and that the commissions mentioned-in section 60 have been issued to those who upon the count are ascertained to have been elected. It is not suggested that this board did not in every respect act legally'in canvassing the returns and determining the election upon the evidence before them, or that the governor, himself a member of the body, ought not to have issued, as we must presume he did issue in obedience to the law, com missions to the personshaving upon the count the highest number of votes. The case has, therefore, proceeded so far that no judicial order in this action can .change or affect the result.

If returns corrected under the mandate addressed to the defendants and substituted for those now in the clerk’s and register’s offices are sent to the secretary of state, they would remain inert and lifeless papers in his office and of no benefit to the relator. If, however, he should be disposed further to prosecute his suit and seek another writ to compel the members of thestateboard to reconvene and recanvass (and no wrong or official neglect is imputed to them) it could only end, if the majorities are thereby reversed, in making two inconsistent determinations, and perhaps a third mandamus become necessary to compel the issuing of a second commission for the same office. The result would be that two persons would possess the same evidence of his title to an office which one only can fill, and the controversy between rival claimants be left unsettled as before. The law provides in the process of quo warranto, a simple and direct mode of trying the title to office and recovering possession when it is wrongfully withheld, in which the merits may be investigated and the remedy is full and complete. For this the writ of mandamus is a very insufficient substitute.

Let us suppose the contest to be about one of the offices of the state into which the person ^declared elected by the canvassers is inducted through the regular forms of law, can his title be impeached and he superseded or affected by *108 a proceeding which exhausts itself in the correction of errors in the returns from a single county? And this, too, when the constitution provides a tribunal for the trial of the contested election? Art. III., § 3.

In the election of a member of the general assembly, or a representative in congress, contesting claims to a seat must be tried before the body to which the certificate of election or commission accredits the person holding it, and the decision there made is final and irreversible.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.C. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohara-v-powell-nc-1879.