State ex rel. Broadhead v. Berg

76 Mo. 136
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 76 Mo. 136 (State ex rel. Broadhead v. Berg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Broadhead v. Berg, 76 Mo. 136 (Mo. 1882).

Opinions

Norton, J.

This is a proceeding by mandamus instituted by relator, a candidate for congress at the last gen-[142]*142eral election, and he seeks in the information as amended by leave of court, to compel the respondents, as a board of canvassers charged with the duty of canvassing the returns of an election held in the city of St. Louis on the 7th day of November, 1882, to canvass and count the return of votes cast in precinct 155 in the Fifteenth ward of said city, and in precinct 189 in the Eighteenth ward of said city, which it is alleged they unlawfully refused to canvass and count.

There are but two questions presented by the return of respondents, and the reply thereto, and they are: 1st, Has this court, under the facts of the case, jurisdiction of respondents as a board of canvassers? 2nd, Was it the duty of respondents, in canvassing the election returns, to count the returns from said precincts 155 and 189, and if so, have they failed and refused to perform it? These questions will be considered in the order they are stated.

1. mandamus to COMPEL BOARD OF canvassers to COUNT ELECTION returns. That this court has jurisdiction by mandamus to compel ministerial officers to perform a duty enjoined upon them by law, which they refuse to perform, ° . _ * A at the relation or a person having a right . A O O and direct interest m the matter, and for the enforcement of which right he has no other adequate remedy, we have no doubt. Our jurisdiction in the present case is, however, questioned on the distinct ground that the respondents as a board of canvassers had completed the canvass of the votes they were required to canvass and had finally adjourned, and that respondents Berg and Raum had made and certified an abstract of the returns of said election before any legal notice had been given them of the issuance of the alternative writ. The facts as to whether the canvass had been completed and as to whether said board of canvassers had finally adjourned before legal notification of the issuance of said writ, are disputed by relator, and a number of depositions containing evidence tending to establish as well as to disprove the said facts, have been produced before us. In the view [143]*143we take of the question we deem it wholly unnecessary to determine whether the allegations as to the completion of the canvass and the final adjournment of the board are proved or disproved, inasmuch as there is no controversy about the fact that the abstract of the returns of the election as made by respondents Berg and Raum was still in the possession of said Berg and under his control at the time legal notice of the issuance of the alternative writ was given, and inasmuch as it further clearly appears that said adjournment of said board (if it took place as alleged) occurred in less than eight days after the election was held, and two days before the time allowed by law to the register and his assistants to complete the canvass.

By section 21 of the laws of 1881, page 55, it is made the duty of the register of the city of St. Louis, within eight days after the close of an election, to take to his assistance two justices of the peace and the recorder of voters, and after making proclamation at the door of his office that the returns are about to be cast up, to proceed publicly to examine and cast up the votes given to each candidate, and give to those to whom he is required by law to issue certificates, having the highest number of votes, a certificate of election.

Section 22 of said law makes it the duty of the register, within two days after the time limited for the examination of the polls and returns, to deposit in the post office, addressed to the Secretary of State, a true abstract of the votes given in such city for members of congress, governor, * * judges of the supreme court, * * and all other State officers. * * Provided that the abstract of votes given in such city shall be certified to by the register and the justices of the peace aforesaid. * *

Under the provisions of law above quoted, the register and his assistants had the full term of eight days after the election in which to complete the canvass of the votes and election returns; and if the count had been completed [144]*144and the abstract of votes made on the 13th day of November, the sixth day after the election was held, we nevertheless think that it would have been perfectly competent for the register, at any time before the expiration of eight days after the election, (he having said abstract in his pos ■ session,) to have called the board of canvassers together to correct any error, either in the abstract or count, occurring from an omission to count a vote that ought to have been counted or from counting a vote that ought not to have been counted. Suppose that after the count was made, and before the time allowed by law in which to make it had expired, it had been brought to the knowledge of the register, clearly and unmistakably, that the returns- on a poll, regular in all respects, received by him from the judges who conducted the election at a precinct in said city, from oversight or any other cause had not been placed by him before the board nor passed upon by it, what rule, either in morals or law, would forbid him from convening the board within the time in which he had a right to make the count, to correct such an omission ? Would it not, under such a state of facts, have been his plain duty to do so, and thus have honestly performed the functions devolved upon him by law? We answer that it would, and in the event of his failure and refusal to so act, on proper application made, this court would compel such action.

In returning this answer, we are sustained not only by former decisions of this court, but by those of other states. In the case of the State ex rel. Ford v. Trigg, 72 Mo. 365, Trigg was county clerk of Ray county, and it was his duty, within eight days after the election at which Eord was a candidate for congress, to take, to his assistance two justices of the peace and canvass the returns of said election, make an abstract of the votes, certify and send it tQ the Secretary of State in two days after the completion of- the canvass. Notwithstanding the fact that it appeared in that case that Trigg had called to his assistance two justices and completed the canvass, and had sent to the Sec[145]*145retary of State a certified abstract of the votes cast in said county for Eord and bis opponent,Craig, it clearly appearing to the court that said Trigg had counted and certified votes in his abstract, which he had no authority to count or include in the certified abstract, we entertained jurisdiction and compelled him by our peremptory writ to count and certify the number of votes cast for said candidates as certified by the judges and attested by the clerks of the election. It logically follows from said case that the refusal of a canvassing officer to count a return that ought to be counted is as much a dereliction of duty on the part of said officer as for him to count what ought not to be counted; and if this court had jurisdiction in a case where the canvassing board had completed their canvass, as was the fact in the above cited case, and the result of that canvass had been certified to the Secretary of State, the jurisdiction of the court in the case before us, where the result of the work of the canvassers (even conceding for the argument that they had adjourned finally) had not been sent or certified in the form of an abstract to the Secretary of State, is unquestionably established.

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Bluebook (online)
76 Mo. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-broadhead-v-berg-mo-1882.