State Ex Rel Ferris v. Knight

6 Del. 146
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 5, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Del. 146 (State Ex Rel Ferris v. Knight) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel Ferris v. Knight, 6 Del. 146 (Del. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

ON motion for a rule on Edmund C. Knight and George W. Kennedy, Sr., the defendants, to show cause wherefore a writ of mandamus should not issue out of this court commanding them, the first named, as the presiding officer, and the second as a judge of the late election of assessor and inspector for the ninth ward of the fourteenth district of the city of Wilmington, held therein on Tuesday, the fifth day of the present month of October, to make, sign and deliver to him, Ziba Ferris, a certificate of his election as inspector for said ward to which office he was duly elected by a majority of the votes polled therefore at the said election. The motion for the rule was founded on the petition and affidavit of the relator supported by the affidavits of other persons filed with it, all substantially setting forth the following statement of facts: That at the close of the said election the votes were read and counted by the proper officers of it as directed by the statute in such case made and provided, when it was ascertained that the whole number of votes cast for inspector was four hundred and seven, of which two hundred and four were cast for Ziba Ferris, the relator, and two hundred and three were cast for Jesse U. Johnson, the only other candidate for inspector, thus giving the former a majority of one vote, and thereby electing him to the office, so far as it depended on the votes cast, and that result was thereupon publicly announced in the room in which the election was held by officers of it to the *Page 147 persons then in it, and to persons outside at the back window on inquiry made by them as to the result of the election, and also by one of the clerks of it at the front-door of the building with the sanction of the presiding officer of the election, Edmund C. Knight. During the afternoon the number of certificates required by law to be made and signed at the election of the person chosen inspector by the officers of the election, had been prepared in due legal form with blanks in them for the name of the person who should be elected, to be filled at the proper time, and were signed immediately after the close of the election by the said Edmund C. Knight, the presiding officer, and by the two judges of it, but without the filling of the blanks left in them with the name of Ziba Ferris, the relator, or of any other person at that time; that they were then taken in hand by the said presiding officer of the election and carried away by him from the place of it, and afterwards the blanks in the certificates were filled, not with the name of the relator, Ziba Ferris, but with the name of Jesse U. Johnson, the opposing candidate for the office of inspector, and one of which so filled as aforesaid he afterwards delivered to the said Jesse U. Johnson, and the others of them as required by law. The evidence in the case afterwards produced on the return and hearing of the rule will sufficiently appear in the opinion of the court. After Francis C. Gallagher, who was one of the clerks, and Linsley L. Pearce, one of the judges of the election in question had been sworn, and testified as witnesses in the case, Edmund C. Knight, the presiding officer of it, was next called as a witness by the counsel for the State, when Mr. Robinson, counsel for the defendants, requested the court to admonish the witness that he was not bound to answer any question in the case that would subject him to a criminal prosecution, which the court did, and he declined to answer any questions in it.

Bradford for the State. We have come to the Superior Court of the State in and for Sussex county for this redress of a gross *Page 148 violation of law and the flagrant wrong committed in New Castle county upon a citizen of it, and by officers or ministers of the law, sworn to execute it faithfully, because of the urgency which characterizes the application, and because that court which alone has jurisdiction of this writ in this State happens now to be in session in this county, and this specific remedy is the only one adequate to redress the wrong committed and to prevent the consummation of the fraud contemplated by the projectors of it, and unless it is obtained here and now, it can be of no avail whatever a few weeks hence, or by the time it sits again in either of the other counties, as the main function of the office will have expired before that time; and we must therefore ask of the court that a peremptory writ of mandamus may at once be issued in the case, as may be done in any and every case where the law fixing the duty in question is perfectly plain and free from doubt, and due notice has been given to all the parties in interest, or where a plain and imperative duty is incumbent by law on public officers, and the facts are not disputed, the court will not require the parties to go through with the form of an alternative mandamus, and they have been notified and have been heard by counsel, and the court is fully satisfied as to the legal duty; on the contrary it has been held proper in all such cases to grant the peremptory writ without first issuing an alternative mandamus. Tap. on Mand., 407; 2 Dill, on Mun. Corp., § 707; High on Ex. Leg. Rem., §§ 504, 552; Commissioners v. Aspinwall, 24 How., 376; ex parte Goodell, 14 Johns., 325; ex parte Rogers, 7 Cow., 526; People v. Pearson, 1 Scam., 458. A rule to show cause may properly take the place of the alternative writ for the purpose of laying the foundation for granting a peremptory mandamus. People v. Throop, 12 Wend., 183; People v. Brennan, 39 Barb., 522. And where the case has been fully heard upon the rule to show cause, and the facts of the case are sufficiently established, or the cause shown against the issuing of the writ is insufficient, there can be no impropriety in allowing the peremptory writ in the first instance, especially when a delay might render the interposition of the court of no benefit to the party *Page 149 aggrieved. Tap. on Mand., 407; People v. Assessors of Boston, 44 Barb., 148; People v. Wendell, 71 N.Y., 171.

According to the evidence in the case and the provisions of the statute in relation to the matter, there never were any valid certificates made and signed by the presiding officer and the judges of the election of any one to the office of inspector; for having been made and signed by them without the name of Ziba Ferris being then or afterwards inserted in them as the person who received the highest number of votes for inspector, it rendered them wholly nugatory and void, as well as false and fraudulent in law. And it was therefore the duty of the court to compel them to make, sign and deliver such certificates of the election of Ziba Ferris as inspector, as the law imperatively commanded them to make and deliver, by the writ of mandamus applied for in this case. The King v. The Mayor of York, 4 T.R., 699; 17 Ill., 167; 27 Ill., 242; 29 Ill., 413; 2 Gray, 370; 20 Pick., 484; 39 Ind., 488; 7 Wolfer Dew's Elec. Ca., 573; 9 Ala., 338. These are but a few of the many cases in which it has been held that the writ of mandamus will lie to compel election officers to issue a correct and rightful certificate of election to a person proved to have been elected to an office, notwithstanding they had already issued a wrongful certificate to another who was not elected to it. An information in the nature of a writ of quowarranto is not applicable in such a case as this. 2 Dill. on Mun. Corp., § 65; 2 Barn. Ald., 646; 5 T.R., 85; 73 N.Y., 743

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Bluebook (online)
6 Del. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-ferris-v-knight-delsuperct-1880.