Wilson v. Blake

147 P. 129, 169 Cal. 449, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 519
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1915
DocketSac. No. 2257.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 147 P. 129 (Wilson v. Blake) 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
Wilson v. Blake, 147 P. 129, 169 Cal. 449, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 519 (Cal. 1915).

Opinions

HENSHAW, J.

Petitioner applied to the court of appeal for mandate to compel the respondents, constituting the city council of the city of Vallejo, to canvass the returns of a certain election held in the city. The proceeding was heard in the court of appeal upon issue joined by general demurrer to the complaint. The court of appeal awarded the mandate *450 and upon petition to this court a rehearing of the controversy was ordered here to be had.

Under the charter of the city of Vallejo the city council consists of a mayór and two commissioners. The incumbents of those offices are the respondents herein. Defendant Tormey is the mayor, and defendants Blake and Warford are commissioners. Recall proceedings were commenced against commissioners Blake and Warford, and upon April 23, 1914, a recall election was held. Commissioner Blake at the time of this election had about one year to serve. Commissioner Warford had been elected for a four-year term, and at the time of the election had served about one year, and therefore had three years more to serve. For convenience, Blake’s term may be designated the short term and Warford’s term the long term. Two candidates had been named by petition for the office of commissioner, but without specification or designation of the particular office (long or short term) to which they aspired. These were Wilson and Jones. Thus it did not appear that Wilson was a candidate to succeed Blake or a candidate to succeed Warford, and the same is true of the candidacy of Jones. The ballots used at this election were, so far as these candidates and their offices are concerned, in form as follows:

For Commissioner Vote for two For Commissioner William P. Blake For Commissioner William A. Jones For Commissioner George H. Warford For Commissioner Joseph R. Wilson For Commissioner For Commissioner

The election returns showed the vote to be, for Wilson 2071 ; for Warford, 2024; for Blake, 2012, and for Jones, 1648. Upon the failure of the council to canvass and declare the re *451 turns of this election, Wilson filed his petition in mandate to compel action.

The council bases its failure and refusal to make this canvass, and consequently its defense to this petition, upon the ground that the election itself accomplished nothing, by virtue of the illegal form of ballot employed; wherefore, to canvass the returns of such an election would be the doing of a vain and useless thing.

The charter of the city of Vallejo (sec. 6, subd. 1) makes the law of the state applicable to its municipal elections and to the canvass of the returns thereof. The state law governing the canvass of returns (Pol. Code, sec. 1211, subd. 2) declares that “In canvassing the votes ... 2. If a voter marks more names than there are persons to be elected to an office, or if for any reason, it is impossible to determine the voter’s choice for any office to be filled, his ballot shall not be counted for such office.” The contention of respondents.is that at this election, while the title to the office is the same,—namely, that of commissioner, there were, in law and in fact, two offices to be filled—one, the office of commissioner for the short term, the incumbent of which was Blake, the other the office of commissioner for the long term, the incumbent of which was Warford. Petitioner makes answer that the matter is controlled by the provisions of the city charter; that section 5, subdivision 17 of this charter provides that on the ballot “Offices to be filled shall be arranged in separate columns in the following order: . . . For commissioner (if any) vote for (giving number) while subdivision 21 of the same section provides: “ In case there is but one person to be elected to an office, the candidate receiving the majority of the votes cast for all the candidates for that office shall be declared elected. In case there are two or more persons to be elected to an office, as that of commissioner or school director, then those candidates equal in number to the number to be elected who receive the highest number of votes for such office shall be declared elected ...” From these provisions petitioner argues that the form of ballot adopted is that prescribed by the charter, which designedly makes no distinction in the office of commissioner growing out of the duration of the terms of the incumbents. But the language of the charter of Vallejo is not all-controlling in the matter. That charter itself makes the election laws of the state applicable to the municipal elec *452 tions and the law of the state declares (Pol. Code, sec. 1197, snbd. 8), “If two or more officers are to be elected for the same office for different terms, the term for which each candidate for such office is nominated shall be printed on the ballot as a part of the title of the office.” And this is not only a most reasonable but a most necessary provision of the law. In all of those eases where the title to the office is one and officers and incumbents of the office many, as boards of supervisors, city councils, commissioners, judges of the superior court, justices of the courts of appeal and of the supreme court, it would be impossible in any election, where more than one was to be voted for, and the terms were of different periods, to determine the expressed will of the voters without such provision. And with peculiar force does this apply to recall elections. It will not be disputed that where the incumbent of an office is subjected to this form of rebuke he, upon the one hand, is entitled to the simple and uncomplicated verdict of his fellow citizens upon his right to continue in office, and, upon the other hand, the electors in turn are entitled to the untrammeled and unembarrassed right to declare, as to that officer, whether or not he shall be continued in office. The result of an election held as this one was, gives rise to endless confusion and to astounding consequences. We may pass over the fact that the opposing candidates were not nominated against either of the incumbents; in other words, that Jones was not a candidate to defeat Blake, nor Wilson a candidate to defeat Warford, nor Wilson a candidate to defeat Blake, nor Jones a candidate to defeat Warford, with the remark that since there were two offices to be filled, these candidates by petition should have looked to it that the office which they sought was specifically designated in their petitions. But when attention is paid to the possibilities which may arise from an election so conducted, the confusion destroys the possibility of the conclusion that such an election affords a fair or even a determinable answer to the essential proposition upon which the voters are to act, which proposition, under the Vallejo charter, is: “Shall A be recalled and B be elected in his place?” This we may briefly illustrate, and in so doing it is to be noted that six forms of marked ballot are permissible under this election as held: 1. Ballots for Blake and Warford; 2. Ballots for Wilson and Blake; 3. Ballots for Wilson and Warford; 4. Ballots for Jones and *453 Warford; 5. Ballots for Jones and Blake, and 6. Ballots for Jones and Wilson. Upon the basis of one hundred ballots, and thus two hundred votes, assuming that Blake received sixty and Warford sixty-one, it would appear that six out of ten, or a clear majority, had voted to retain the commissioners.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 P. 129, 169 Cal. 449, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-blake-cal-1915.