Sweeny v. Adams

75 P. 182, 141 Cal. 558, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 1019
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1904
DocketSac. No. 1157.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 75 P. 182 (Sweeny v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweeny v. Adams, 75 P. 182, 141 Cal. 558, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 1019 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.—

This is an election contest. The parties to this proceeding were rival candidates for the office of sheriff of Tuolumne County, at the last general election.

The board of supervisors, sitting as a canvassing board, declared the appellant elected to such office, and a certificate of election was duly issued to him.

Respondent, in due time, commenced a contest on the ground of malconduct on the part of the board of judges of election in counting the votes. Issue was joined, the cause tried, and the court found the charge of malconduct to be *559 true, and that the respondent had received the highest number of legal votes cast for such office. A judgment was entered accordingly, annulling the certificate of election issued to appellant, and declaring the respondent elected to such office.

On this appeal no question is made by appellant as to the sufficiency ofi the evidence to sustain the findings.

His principal point is, that the lower court had no jurisdiction to hear or determine the contest, and should have granted his motion to dismiss it, and this point is based upon certain facts which the lower court found to be true, and which are not contradicted. These are that, after appellant had been declared elected to the office of sheriff by the board of supervisors acting as a canvassing board, and the proper certificate of election had been issued to him by the county clerk, he inadvertently failed to file his official oath and bond as such sheriff within the time required hy law; that such oath and bond had not been filed when the contest was commenced or thereafter, and that the office had become vacant.

To fully appreciate the claim made by appellant from these facts, it is necessary to set forth the section of the code authorizing an election contest, for it is upon his construction of the section that his point is based.

It reads: “Any elector of a county . . . may contest the right of any person declared elected to an office to be exercised therein, for any of the following causes.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1111.)

Appellant insists, that the proper construction of this section is, that it provides only for a contest where the right to an office exists at the time the contest is begun; that the right to office which is contemplated, is the right which has been made perfect by taking all the legal steps necessary to authorize him to enter upon the discharge of his official duties when the term of office commences.

And from this construction he argues that, notwithstanding the appellant was declared elected by the canvassing board, yet, as he failed to qualify, he thereby lost his right to the office, and the right being gone, there was nothing to contest.

*560 We cannot agree with this construction of the section, or accord with the reasoning which is indulged in to sustain it.

It is not the apparently perfect right to the office which alone the elector may contest; such a right as is presumed from the issuance of a certificate of election and due qualification under the law, but it is the presumptive right to the office, which results from the fact that the boa¿rd of supervisors, sitting as a canvassing board, has declared a person elected. It is this apparent official right, which their declaration creates, that may be contested. This is all the statute provides for. The canvassing board is the only body authorized under the election law to declare, from the returns, what candidates are elected, and when the section concerning contests says, that an elector may “contest the right of any person declared elected to an office,” it means the apparent right which the declaration of such board creates.

No other right is involved. And the jurisdiction of the court to entertain, or the right of the elector to commence such contest, does not, in any manner, depend upon whether the person so declared to be elected by the board qualifies for the office by filing his official oath and bond or not. It is not necessary that he qualify to confer jurisdiction, nor can the court be divested of jurisdiction because he fails to do so.

The object of a contest, which is initiated upon the ground of malconduct on the part of the board of judges of election,' is not to examine into matters transpiring subsequent to the declaration of the canvassing board, and which may strengthen or weaken the claim of the person declared elected by it. It has a far more effective and extended purpose. The contest attacks the election itself. It is not concerned with the certificate of election, or the proceedings subsequent thereto, which are merely the indicia of the right to enter upon the duties of the office, but goes back of all these to the fountain source of official title, and ascertains whether the sovereign will, as expressed at the polls, and upon which the canvassing board assumes to declare the result of the election, has by such declaration, been fairly, honestly, and legally expressed.

It probes into' and examines the conduct of the election officers upon whose returns the canvassing board acts; it re- *561 canvasses the votes cast and ascertains whether the person declared elected by such canvassing board had the highest number of legal votes, and as a result the law requires the court, “if in any . . . case it appears that another person than the one returned has the highest number of legal votes, ’ ’ to “declare such person elected.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1123.)

Prom the use of the term “the one returned” in the quoted section, it is quite obvious that the right to office which is being investigated by the court in the contest, is such right only as the “election returns” (Pol. Code, see. 1281) disclose exist in favor of a candidate, as it is from the face of these returns, and from no other data, that the canvassing board declares who is elected.

In addition to what has been said, and aside from the consideration given to the language alone of the section for the •purpose of determining its meaning, it must be borne in mind that the right to contest is not designed exclusively for the benefit of rival candidates in an election. The right to a public office is not a matter which concerns them alone, nor is it the interest alone of the contending individuals that is to be considered in a contest. As far as they are concerned, their interest is exclusively a personal and pecuniary one. Paramount to their claims is the deep public concern involved as to who are entitled to hold an office for which the suffrages of the electors have been cast. According to the view of counsel for appellant, this interest is entirely lost sight of, and the contest becomes one between individual aspirants, involving personal interests. This is not the correct view. No special right of contest is given to a candidate as such.

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Bluebook (online)
75 P. 182, 141 Cal. 558, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 1019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeny-v-adams-cal-1904.