State ex rel. Kustermann v. Board of State Canvassers

130 N.W. 489, 145 Wis. 294, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 49
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 130 N.W. 489 (State ex rel. Kustermann v. Board of State Canvassers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Kustermann v. Board of State Canvassers, 130 N.W. 489, 145 Wis. 294, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 49 (Wis. 1911).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed February 21, 1911:

KeewiN, J.

Many interesting questions are raised upon this appeal and exhaustively argued by counsel on both sides. On the part of the relator it is insisted that upon the face of the returns he was entitled to the certificate of election, and that the board of state canvassers, without authority of law and contrary to the returns, gave the certificate of election to Thomas E. Konop, Democratic candidate. It is therefore claimed that this court should award a peremptory writ of mandamus compelling the board to re-assemble and give the [302]*302certificate to relator, and that under see. 3452, Stats. (1898), this court should inquire into the facts of the election irrespective of the election returns and determine who was in fact entitled to the certificate of election by the greater number of legal votes cast.

On the part of the respondents it is insisted that, the board having performed its duties, issued the certificate of election to Mr. Konop, and adjourned sine die, it became functus of-ficio and cannot be compelled by mandamus or otherwise to reconvene and issue a certificate to relator; and further that the returns show that Mr. Konop was elected and therefore the respondents were right in issuing the certificate to Mr. Konop.

Whether the board after it had performed its duty, issued a certificate, and adjourned sine die can be compelled to reconvene and issue a certificate to another is a delicate question and one upon which there is conflict of authority. It is claimed that State ex rel. Rinder v. Goff, 129 Wis. 668, 109 N. W. 628, is controlling here, and that upon the doctrine laid down there no relief can be had by mandamus to compel the issuance of a certificate in any case after the board has performed its duty and adjourned. But this court did not go to that extent in the Binder Case. However, we do not regard it necessary to consider or decide whether mandamus will lie in any case, after the board of state canvassers has determined the result, issued the certificate of election, and adjourned sine die, to compel the issuance of a certificate to another candidate under existing laws.

A very able argument is made by counsel for relator based upon the proposition asserted by them that upon the face of the returns it was the duty of the board of state canvassers to determine that Mr. Kustermann received a plurality of all the votes cast, and that he was entitled to the certificate; therefore the certificate should have been issued to him. The return of the respondents to the writ is quite fully set forth in [303]*303the statement of facts and need not be repeated here. Erom rsnch return it seems clear to us that the respondents were warranted in issuing the certificate to Mr. Konop, and that the returns of the county canvassers justified such action. The trouble seems to have arisen out of the return from Oconto county. The board of county canvassers of that •county made and filed with the county clerk their statement of the result of the election in that county for representative in Congress, by which they certified that the

'“foregoing and within tabular statement is correct and true, ■as compiled from the original returns made to the county clerk of said county, and as compared therewith by us, and that from such returns it appears that at the general election held in the several towns, wards, villages, and election districts of said county, on the first Tuesday succeeding the first Monday of November, A. D. 1910, being the. eighth day of said month,
“The whole number of votes given for representative in •Congress for the Ninth Congressional district was thirty-three hundred eighty-eight (3,388), of which number Thomas E. Konop received fourteen hundred fifty (1,450) votes;
“Alexander McEathron received thirty-nine (39) votes;
"Gustave Kustermann.received seventeen hundred twenty-five (1,725) votes;
“Thomas J. Oliver received one hundred seventy-four {174) votes.”

The certificate is in conformity with statute and in the usual form, except as to the tabular exhibit respecting the voting precinct in Oconto county called “Pensaukee 1st precinct.” In the vertical column under the name “Thos. E. Konop” and opposite “Pensaukee, 1st precinct” are the figures “16,” and just to the right of these are the figures “22,” followed by a brace to the right of which appear the words “Shown on tally sheet. Inspectors’statement shows 16.” The addition of the •column immediately under the last precinct vote is given “1,444.” Under the units in the figures 1,444 is the figure 6, and immediately under an addition showing “1,450,” so. [304]*304that tbe column as finally added gives Thomas F. Konop 1,450 votes in Oconto county. The controversy is over the six votes — whether the respondents were warranted in counting them for Mr. Konop. In other words, whether the state board should have determined that Konop received 1,450-votes in Oconto county or 1,444. Now if we take the second footing in the Konop column of the tabular exhibit and the certificate of the whole number of votes as heretofore quoted,, both the tabular exhibit and the certificate are in harmony, each giving 1,450 votes, while if we take the first footing and, the certificate they do not agree. But it is said by counsel for relator that the respondents were not authorized in crediting the six votes to Konop, but were bound by the number ra-the column of the tabular exhibit opposite each voting precinct. True, the tabular exhibit is a part of the return and is entitled to weight. But the statement of the number of' votes in the body of the certified statement is at least as strong-evidence as the tabular exhibit. And with the notation on the tabular exhibit and the second footing making the tabular-exhibit correspond with the statement in the certificate, there seems to be no doubt that the county canvassers determined, and rightly, that Mr. Konop received 1,450 votes in Oconto-county, and that upon the face of the returns the respondents-were justified in so finding. It is quite obvious upon the-face of the return of the county canvassers that they determined that the figures in the Konop column opposite the words “Pensaukee, 1st precinct,” should be 22, not 16, and so-, made the corrections indicated on the face of the tabular exhibit. Nor can it be said that the county canvassers improperly made up the tabular exhibit, but on the contrary it must, be presumed that they performed their duty.

Sec. 82, Stats. (1898), respecting the county canvassers,, provides:

“On the assembling of the board they shall open and examine the returns, . . . and if, on examination of any returns-[305]*305received, they shall he found so informal or incomplete that the hoard cannot intelligently canvass them, they shall dispatch a messenger with such returns to the inspectors who made them with a written specification of the informalities or defects, and command them to forthwith complete the same in the manner required by law and deliver them to said messenger, which such inspectors shall do. . . . For such purposes the board may 'adjourn as may he necessary, not more than four days at one time nor more than eight days in all.”

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Related

State ex rel. Barber v. Circuit Court for Marathon County
190 N.W. 563 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1922)
Barlow v. Foster
136 N.W. 822 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1912)
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134 N.W. 673 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
130 N.W. 489, 145 Wis. 294, 1911 Wisc. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kustermann-v-board-of-state-canvassers-wis-1911.