U. S. Standard Voting Machine Co. v. Hobson

109 N.W. 458, 132 Iowa 38
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 24, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 109 N.W. 458 (U. S. Standard Voting Machine Co. v. Hobson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U. S. Standard Voting Machine Co. v. Hobson, 109 N.W. 458, 132 Iowa 38 (iowa 1906).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

In a motion .submitted with the case, the defendant asks that the petition for a writ of certiorari be dismissed, and the writ be quashed; but in the main the grounds urged in the motion are such as may be considered in passing upon the merits of the case, involving the legality of defendant’s action in making the portion of the order which restrains the county of Winneshiek and its board of supervisors and auditor from using the voting machines referred to in the action of the board at the November election. It is urged, however,, that .the plaintiffs in this ..action, having [42]*42subsequently appeared in tbe injunction suit as defendants, filed an answer therein, and otherwise raised issues of law and fact, have a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal. With reference to the filing of the subsequent pleadings in the injunction suit, to which reference is made in the motion to dismiss the petition and quash the writ, it is sufficient to say that, whatever may have been the effect of such action on the part of the defendants in the injunction suit, the facts do not appear by the return, nor in any other manner, such as would enable us to take notice of them, and therefore they need not be considered. But, even if they were to be considered, we cannot see that they would affect the present proceedings, for the injunction suit was still pending, and the portion of the order restraining the county and its board of supervisors and auditor from carrying out the contract Avith the voting machine company, by accepting the machines and paying therefor under the terms of the alleged contract, Avas still in force. The voting machine company was still in court for a proper purpose, regardless of the validity of that portion of the restraining order questioned in this proceeding.

1. certiorari: review of injunctfonal order. As to the ground of the motion involving the claim that the plaintiffs cannot maintain this certiorari proceeding, because they have a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy'by appeal from the order granting the temporary injunction, it is enough to say, briefly, that our judgment the right to appeal does not preclude plaintiffs from questioning the validity of the portion of the order complained of, on the ground that it was made in excess of jurisdiction and is therefore void and should be annulled. It is provided in Code, section 4154, that: “ The writ of certiorari may be granted Avhen authorized by law, and in all cases where an inferior tribunal, board or officer exercising judicial functions is alleged to have exceeded its proper jurisdiction, or is otherwise acting illegally, and there is no other plain, speedy and adequate [43]*43remedy.” It is contended in behalf of plaintiff that “ other plain, speedy and adequate remedy ” is only a limitation of the power to issue 'the writ where the tribunal exercising judicial functions is alleged to be “ otherwise acting illegally,” and that it has no application to a case where an inferior tribunal is alleged to “ have exceeded its proper jurisdiction.” But we think that the correctness of this view need not be passed upon, in view of our conclusion that the remedy by appeal is not such plain, speedy, and adequate remedy as to preclude the right, to test the validity of the order in question, as against the complaint that it was made without jurisdiction. Of course, the right of certiorari is not available to correct mere irregularities or errors in the proceedings of the lower court. It may be that illegality of action, 'where the court has jurisdiction may sometimes be tested by certiorari, and, in such a ease, the want of a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy by appeal may be important. But, where the action complained of is in excess of the jurisdiction of the court, it is doubtful whether the remedy by appeal is ever plain, speedy, and adequate. Certainly, in this case an appeal would neither have been speedy nor adequate, for it would have postponed any test of the validity of the order prohibiting the uso of voting machines at the November election of this year until long after the election had been held. In a case involving an- injunction to test the title to an office, when the term of office would probably expire before the appeal could be heard and decided, this pertinent language was used in State ex rel. McCaffrey v. Aloe, 152 Mo. 466 (54 S. W. 494, 47 L. R. A. 393), with reference to a writ of prohibition, serving the same purpose, as we understand it, that is served by the writ of certiorari under our procedure:

It is also contended by learned counsel that relators had their remedy by motion to dissolve, and by appeal on final judgment. Prohibition is an extraordinary remedy, and will not lie where a party claiming it has adequate [44]*44remedy by ordinary means. But tbe ordinary means that will defeat the application for this extraordinary writ must be sufficient to afford the relief the case demands. If the relators should await to follow the course pointed out by their adversaries, it would, in all probability, be a year before their appeal could be heard and decided, and it would be perhaps two years, if the cause took its regular course without advancement, both in the trial and appellate courts.

In our own cases, we find nothing to indicate that an appeal is a speedy and adequate remedy, where the question is as to want of jurisdiction to make the order complained of. Indeed, it is a justifiable inference, from those cases where the question of the adequacy of the remedy by appeal has been considered, that such remedy would not preclude resort to certiorari, if the jurisdiction of the subject-matter were the question involved. See State v. Schmidtz, 65 Iowa, 566; Abney v. Clark, 87 Iowa, 727; Callanan v. Lewis, 79 Iowa, 452. We are clear that, in this case at least,-the remedy by appeal, to which plaintiff might have resorted, was not such1 a speedy and adequate remedy as to preclude his resort to this proceeding by certiorari.

2. voting machines: injunction. On the merits of the case, as made by the return to the writ, the position strongly relied upon for plaintiff is that the lower court had no power or authority, under the allegations of the petition for injunction, to interfere with the use of voting machines at the November election, 1906, as provided for by the board of supervisors. And to this broad proposition we shall now direct our attention, without attempting to follow the course of argument mapped out by, counsel on either side. The right to vote is a political, and not a civil, right, and a court of equity will not exercise its extraordinary power of injunction to protect a mere political right as distinct from a .civil right. The plaintiff in the injunction case, as a taxpayer, could no doubt- have relief by injunction to prevent the board .of supervisors and the county .auditor,, defendants in that action, from-attempting to-'earrytout-a contract which [45]*45would impose an unlawful indebtedness upon tbe county; but, as a taxpayer, he bad no interest in tbe question whether or not tbe November election in tbe county should be held by means of voting machines, and, as a voter, be had no interest in tbe method of conducting tbe election which would entitle him to control that method by tbe assistance of a court of equity. Some remedy at law be would, no doubt, have, if bis right to vote were interfered with; but a court of law would not give him relief as against a mere anticipated wrong.

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Bluebook (online)
109 N.W. 458, 132 Iowa 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/u-s-standard-voting-machine-co-v-hobson-iowa-1906.