Robertson and Blair v. Co. Commissioners Grant

1904 OK 79, 79 P. 97, 14 Okla. 407, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 3, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1904 OK 79 (Robertson and Blair v. Co. Commissioners Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson and Blair v. Co. Commissioners Grant, 1904 OK 79, 79 P. 97, 14 Okla. 407, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 97 (Okla. 1904).

Opinions

Opinon of the court by

Burwell. J.:

Wo are asked to determine the rights of the voters of one of the counties located in the Cherokee [409]*409.Strip to change its comity seat rnider the provisions of chapter 23 of the Statutes of 1893. This identical question was passed upon in the case of the Territory of Oklahoma ex rel Ridings, County Attorney, v. Board of County Commissioners, 10 Okla. 79, in whch the rule was announced, (Justice Irwin writing the opinion) that the act of the legislature authorizing such change was valid, and was not in ■excess of the legislative power, while on the other hand on the same day that this opinion was adopted by the court it also handed down an opinion, (Justice Hainer speaking for the court, and who still adheres to his views as therein expressed) in the case of George A. Allen v. County Commissioners. 10 Okla. 105, in which it is stated that congress located the county seats in the “Strip” counties; and, it having acted on the matter, exhausted the subject, and that any act of the Territorial legislature looldng toward the removal of those county seats is unauthorized, and therefore void. Chief Justice Burford concurred fully in both the judgment and the reasons given therefor in this last opinion. Justices Irwin and McAtee and the writer of this opinion concurred in the judgment, and Justice McAtee filed a separate opinion.

There were controlling reasons for the judgment in each -of those eases independent of the question of the validity of the act authorizing the removal of county seats, and while ■each of the other justices expressed his opinion as to whether or not the statute was valid or invalid, the writer concurred in such judgments without intending to decide that question, believing it unnecessary to do so in either of those cases.

ITence it cannot be said that those decisions or either -of them hare settled the question as to whether or not the [410]*410voters may remove a county seat, as in each of those cases the reasoning upon that question was concurred in by a minority of the court as then constituted, and therefore this case will be decided without regard to anything said therein upon that subject.

An election having been held by the voters of Grant county, and the returns canvassed by the board of county commissioners, that board found that a majority of the votes had not been east for any one town, and therefore ordered another election, which appellant contends should -not have been done, as a majority of the legal votes were east in favor of Medford. The trial court held that a contest could not be entertained by the court until after the board of county commissioners had formally .declared the result in favor of some particular town, either on the first or subsequent election. To determine this question intelligently, it is necessary to examine the different provisions of the Statute of 1893 in which the act is found. By section 1823, the legislature provided the form of the ballot, and further declared that if at the first election a majority of the votes cast shall be for any one town, it shall be the county seat, and within ninety days the records shall be removed to such point, and the county seat established there, but if a majority of all the votes cast shall not be for one town, then a second election shall be held. Then section 1825 provides:

“If on such canvass the majority of the votes be for any one place at the county seat, it shall be the duty of the board of county commissioners to at once so declare and make a record thereof, and order the county seat to be established at the point chosen."

,.And then section 1827 confers the right to contest upon [411]*411any legal voter: “If any legal voter in the county desires to test the legality of the election so held, and the removal of or the right to retain the county seat at the point to which it may have been so voted and established, they shall have the right so to do by proper proceedings in court, but such proceedings shall in no manner interfere with the removal*or location of the county seat. If it finally be decided that such was wrongful, then the county seat shall be returned to the place from whence it was removed.”

It is insisted by appellee that unless an order is entered by the board of county commissioners establishing the county seat at some particular town, no contest will lie. Ordinarily this contention would be correct, but it is subject to exceptions. The presumption is that an election has been regularly held, and that no fraud has been committed; but suppose, as is claimed in this case, the majority of all of the legal votes were cast in favor of Medford, but that illegal votes were cast in favor of the other towns which fraudulently prevented a majority of the legal voters from locating the county seat. Can the will of the majority of the honest voters be defeated by such fraud? We think not. It was the intention of the legislature that when a majority of the legal votes were in favor of a particular town on the first election, no second election should be held; and if Medford received a majority of the legal votes at the first election,, and the commissioners did not declare it the duly elected county seat, and ordered a second election, such order would be a refusal to order the removal of the county seat, within the spirit of the law; and we are clearly of the opinion that a voter may test the legality of the first election under the facts of this case, the same as he could test the result of [412]*412the second- election after those results shall have been declared. All the law requires is that a majority of the legal votes be in favor of one point, and if that majority is secured on the first election, why hold a second? It was not intended that a competition for the county seat should have a majority of ail of the votes in two elections; or, having .secured a majority in the first, should take the chances of losing in the second. We frankly admit that the right to test the legality of the election is purely a statutory right, but statutes should always be construed so as to carry out the object sought to be attained by the legislature, and the object of the legislature was to permit the majority of the legal voters to control, no matter whether their intention was expressed on the first or second election. We think the ■statute expressly authorizes the contest in this case. At least the intent to authorize it is clear and unmistakable, and to -deny it would be a recognition of empty technicalities, and' would destroy the fundamental rules of construction., Nor is this all. It is contended that hundreds of illegal votes were cast in favor of Pond Creek, and that those illegal votes prevented the commissioners, on the face of the returns, from ordering the county seat changed to Medford. If this is true, the courts should not aid Pond Creek in the perpetration of this fraud, by adopting the interpretation contended for, especially when such interpretation would be a standing invitation to adopt the same fraudulent methods in the future. If, by stuffing the ballot box, Pond Creek ■can prevent any other town from procuring a majority of the votes on the first election, it can prevent indefinitely the removal of the county seat, no matter how often the majority [413]*413should declare in favor of another town. The interpretation contended for not only invites fraud, but protects the perpetrators in the fruits of the same, while the one here-laid down compels an honest election, and enforces the spirit of the law.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Groves v. Board of County Com'rs, Washita County
1967 OK 147 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1967)
Groves v. BOARD OF COUNTY COMM'RS, WASHITA COUNTY
1967 OK 147 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1967)
Kewanee Oil & Gas Co. v. Mosshamer
58 F.2d 711 (Tenth Circuit, 1932)
McNeill v. County Election Board
1930 OK 446 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)
Murray v. McGehee
1926 OK 644 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1926)
Insurance Co. of North America v. Welch, Ins. Com'r
1915 OK 914 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1904 OK 79, 79 P. 97, 14 Okla. 407, 1904 Okla. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-and-blair-v-co-commissioners-grant-okla-1904.