Tinkel v. Griffin

68 P. 859, 26 Mont. 426, 1902 Mont. LEXIS 41
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1902
DocketNo. 1,741
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 68 P. 859 (Tinkel v. Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tinkel v. Griffin, 68 P. 859, 26 Mont. 426, 1902 Mont. LEXIS 41 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

MR. CIILEF JUSTICE BRAN TRY

delivered the opinion of the court.

At the general election held on November 6, 1900, there was submitted to the electors of Flathead county the question whether the hoard of commissioners of the county should issue its bonds to secure a loan of $55,000 to create a fund for the purpose of building and furnishing a county court house and jail. Upon canvassing the returns of the vote cast upon this question, the commissioners declared that the proposition to secure the loan had been approved by the requisite majority, and were proceeding to issue and sell the bonds under the authority thus assumed to have been given. Thereupon this action was brought by the plaintiff, an elector and taxpayer of the county, to enjoin further proceedings in the matter on the grounds that the question had not been submitted to the electors in the manner prescribed by the statute, and that less than the required number of those voting at the election had signified their approval. Upon the filing of the complaint, application was made io the district court for an injunction pendente lite. The application having been denied, the plaintiff appealed.

1. It is argued by counsel that the election was invalid for the. reason that the ballot prepared by the county clerk did not sufficiently set Firth the question to be submitted to the electors, in that it was not printed upon the ballot at length, immediately over the spaces where the electors were to indicate their [428]*428preference. The form of the ballots, so far as concerns tlie present inquiry, was as follows: *

It is admitted that, due notice was published as required by-statute; but it is insisted that the statute also requires any question submitted to the electors of the state, or of any division thereof, to be printed in full upon the ballot in the same way and in the same relative position as the name of a particular office, so that-a voter may have it before him when he marks his ballot, and that, unless this requirement is observed, the election is invalid.

Section 1354 of the Political Code, cited in support of this contention provides: “Whenever the secretary of state has duly certified to the county clerk any question to be submitted to the vote of the people, the county clerk must print in the regular ballot, hi such form as will enable the electors to vote upon the question so presented in the manner in this title provided. The county clerk must also prepare the necessary ballots whenever any question is required by law to be submitted to the electors of any locality, and any of the electors of the state generally, except that as to all questions submitted to the electors of a municipal corporation alone, the city clerk must prepare the necessary ballots. * * So far as this provision refers to the printing upon the ballot of the question submitted, its meaning is not clear. As first enacted by the legislature in the Code of. 1895, it read: “Whenever the secretary of state has duly certified to the county clerk any questioin,” etc., 4:‘ the county clerk must print on the regular ballot the question in such form as will enable the electors to vote,” etc. It was amended by a subsequent Act of the same session (Act March 19, 1895), from which the section as it now stands was taken. The omission from the amended Act of the words “the [429]*429question” was probably by inadvertence, since the active verb “print,” in the present reading, is left without an object. If' these words be supplied, as they doubtless should be, the sense is made clear, as far as concerns questions to- be submitted to the electors of the state at the general election. It is only by inference that the provision may be extended to questions submitted to the electors of a county. Nor the purpose of this case, we shall concede that this would be the proper inference to be drawn from the language used, and that it would control in- the absence of special provisions touching matters of local concern. There are, however, special provisions with reference to the issuance of bonds by counties, enacted under the authority of the constitution, and these must be deemed controlling upon this subject. The Constitution, Article XIII, Section 5, provides: “* * No county shall incur any indebtedness or liability for any single purpose to an amount exceeding ten thousand dollars ($10,000) without the approval of a, majority of the electors thereof, voting at an election to be provided by law.” Under this provision the legislature might have declared that the election should be held only at the time when a general election is held, and that the ballot used should in all respects comply with the requirements with respect to questions concerning the state at large.’ Instead of doing this, however, it has provided for a special election to be held whenever, in the opinion of the county authorities, the necessity for an issuance of bonds arises. The provisions on this subject are found in Sections 4270 to 4274, inclusive, of the Political Code. Section 4271 declares that “whenever it is necessary to submit to a vote of the electors of the county the question of making a loan, the board [of commissioners] must first determine the amount necessary to be raised.” The next section (4272) provides for the giving of notice, and then proceeds, “and the election hold and conducted, and the returns made in all respects in the manner prescribed by law in regard to the submission of questions to the electors of a locality under the general election law.” Section 4273 provides that there shall bo [430]*430printed upon tbe.ballot tlie words “Nor the Loan” and “Against the Loan/’ but nothing further; the legislature evidently proceeding upon the theory that Sectionl354 contains no explicit provision on this subject, and that the notice given by the board of the purpose and amount of the loan, which must be published, under Sections 1318 and 1321 of the general election law, is sufficient notice to the electors of the question at issue. Construing all these provisions together, we think this intention is manifest. Section 4272 therefore has no reference to the printed form of the ballot, but merely requires that the provisions of die general election law touching the qualifications of the voters, the appointment of judges and clerks, the secrecy of the ballot, and the method of voting should be observed. This must necessarily be the import of these provisions, else we must add to them a further requirement that the board may not submit the question of a loan at any other time than at a general election, whereas the clear inference, otherwise, is that this may be done at any time. The fact that the board chose to hold the election on the same day upon which the general election fell makes no difference in the requirements to be observed. The clerk followed the direction contained in Section 4273, and that was sufficient.

Counsel say that it is often advisable for the board to sub-' mit propositions for loans for specific amounts for different purposes separately at the same election, so that the electors may,-if they choose, reject one and approve another, whereas the construction we have given the provision of the statute renders this course impossible. We do not think that this result necessarily follows. There would seem to be no insuperable objection io submitting separate propositions for two or more loans at the same time, provided the ballot should be so arranged, with proper designation of the different purposes, that the electors could vote upon them separately. The question does not arise in this case, however, and we would not venture to anticipate it and decide it now.

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Bluebook (online)
68 P. 859, 26 Mont. 426, 1902 Mont. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tinkel-v-griffin-mont-1902.