State ex rel. Dobbins v. Sutterfield

54 Mo. 391
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 54 Mo. 391 (State ex rel. Dobbins v. Sutterfield) 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. Dobbins v. Sutterfield, 54 Mo. 391 (Mo. 1873).

Opinion

Napton, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Dobbins and three hundred other citizens of Eeynolds county, applied to the Circuit Court of that county for a mandamus on the county justices, to appoint commissioners to select a site whereon to locate the seat of justice.

To the writ, which was issued, the County Court returned that at the general election held on the 5th of Nov., 1872, the proposition to remove the seat of justice of Eeynolds county from its present location, did not receive “ two-thirds of the legally registered votes of Eeynolds county,” nor were two-thirds of the legal voter's of said county polled at said election as appeared by the returns of said registration and election; that at a registration held for said county within 60 days preceding [394]*394the 10th day prior to said Nov. 5,1872, six hundred and ninety-four (691) voters legally registered in said county; and that the proposition to change the county seat received only 214 votes out of 691 legally registered voters, and out of 517 votes actually polled at the said election.

As a farther answer, the court averred, that there had not been raised by a tax, sufficient money from the people to pay for all the lots and improvements sold by the county at Oentreville, the present seat of justice, which had been located for twenty-eight years past, and was within five miles of the center of Reynolds county, and that no petition for the removal of said county seat had been presented within ten years after said seat of justice had been located.

This return on demurrer, or rather on a motion to strike it out and disregard it, was held insufficient, and a peremptory mandamus was awarded. To this judgment a writ of error was taken.

A motion is made in this court to dismiss the writ of error, because there was no final judgment in the case, and to sustain this, various authorities are cited to show that a writ of error only lies on a final j udgment, and that this judgment is ,not final.

But there is no force in this objection. The judgment of the Circuit Court ordering the peremptory mandamus is the end of the case, so far as that court is concerned. Its jurisdiction is certainly exhausted, and the question it decided is gone forever from its control. That a proceeding is collaterally going On, still pending in the County Court in regard to the establishment of the county seat of Reynolds county is a fact, which does not impeach the finality of the judgment of the Circuit Court on the mandamus. What is meant by a final judgment is, that it is final so far as the court which rendered it is concerned, and that court is one to which a writ of error will lie to this court.

It has been frequently held by this court that in proceedings for partition, an appeal would not lie from a judgment quod partitio fiat, because it was virtually interlocutory in its [395]*395character, and might, upon the coming in of the commissioners appointed to make the partition, be ultimately disregarded. The judgment in that case is not final, as the court in which it is rendered still proceeds with other branches of the same case. But a judgment of peremptory mandamus in a proceeding or application, which in many respects is like any other civil suit, and is attended or may be attended with all the forms of pleading and trial of issue incident to any other action, is a final judgment in that proceeding, and. is not the less so because what may be done by the court against which it is issued, in pursuance of the mandamus or otherwise, may still be pending. This point was so ruled in McVey vs. McVey, 51 Mo., 406, and in Strouse vs. Drennan, 41 Mo., 289, and is not in conflict with the decision referred to of Tetherow vs. Grundy county, 9 Mo., 118.

The question remains whether the County Court in deciding on the construction of the statute regulating their action in regard to this matter was wrong; assuming that the rule laid down in Castello vs. St. Louis county, 28 Mo., 259, is correct, and that where the inferior court, on a preliminary question arising on a statute, misconstrues it, this court may compel by mandamus the inferior court to proceed with the case.

The constitution of this State (Art. 1Y, § 30) says: The General Assembly Shall have no power to remove the county seat of any county, unless two-thirds of the qualified voters of the county, at a general election, shall vote in favor of such removal.”

The statute on the subject (Wagn. Stat., 405, § 22) says, after providing for an election : If it shall appear by such election that two-thirds of the legally registered voters of said county are in favor of the removal of the county seat of such county, then the County'Court shall appoint five commissioners,” etc.

In this case, as it appears from the return of the County Court to the mandamus, the registration immediately prior to the election showed that there were in Reynolds county 694 voters, that 547 of these duly registered voters actually voted [396]*396at the election, and only 244 voted for the removal of the county seat. It appears from the statement of the petitioners, which we will assume to be correct, that only 47 votes were cast against the removal. The County Court decided that 244 was not two-thirds of 694, nor of 547, and as the constitution required that two-thirds of the qualified voters should vote for such removal, they refused to appoint commissioners or proceed further in the matter. The Circuit Court held that, as 244 was t'wo-thirds of 291 — all the votes cast on the question of removal — the requisite constitutional majority was obtained.

There is no doubt that in general, where an election is held to determine the choice of a candidate or the determination of some question of public policy, the plurality required by the law, whether it be a bare majority or two-thirds or three-fourths, is determined by the result of the vote cast, without regard to the number of voters declining to vote, and this is upon the ground that the failure to vote is assumed or may be presumed to be an acquiescence in whatever result may be produced by the action of those who feel sufficient interest in the election to go to the polls and vote, and for the further reason that in most cases there is no mode by which the number of absentees can be ascertained. The decision of Lord Mansfield in Rex vs. Foxcroft, 2 Burr., 1017, is therefore rightly followed in many cases in this country where it might be properly applied. But the decisions in England, or in the other States, are very unsafe guides, where we are called upon to construe a constitutional or statutory provision of our own State. If the language is plain and unambiguous, its requirements cannot be set at naught upon the strength of decisions elsewhere on statutes or constitutions, essentially variant or couched in very different terms:

Our constitution, in regard to the proposed removal oí county seats, it seems to me, hardly admits of two constructions. It prohibits the legislature from removing them, unless two-thirds of the qualified voters shall, at a general election, vote for the removal. The words do not imply an ac[397]

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Bluebook (online)
54 Mo. 391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-dobbins-v-sutterfield-mo-1873.