State ex rel. Navin v. Weir

Pee Curiam.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the superior court of King county awarding to the respondent a writ of prohibition against the appellants, who constitute the city council of the city of Seattle, prohibiting them from proceeding to hear an election contest between the appellant James Weir and the respondent Thomas Kavin. The facts out of which the controversy arises are as follows: On the 6th day of March, 1900, a general municipal election was held in the city of Seattle, for the purpose of electing a mayor, members of the city council, and other municipal officers. By the charter provisions of the city one member of the city council is elected from each of its nine wards, to serve for a period of two years, at every general election of the city. At the election in question, the appellant, James Weir, was the regularly nominated candidate for member of the council for the *502first ward of one political party, and the respondent ISTavin of another. Each of their names appeared upon the official'ballot. The election inspectors, judges, and clerks, duly appointed, who received and counted the ballots of the electors cast in the respective precincts, made up the returns, and transmitted them to the city council to he canvassed pursuant to the provisions of the city charter. Upon the canvass it appeared upon the face of the returns that Uavin received 485 votes and that Weir received 440 votes, there being an apparent majority for Kavin of 45. The city council, on the faith of these returns, issued a certificate of election to ISTavin. Within ten days thereafter Weir initiated before the city council a contest, . claiming that in one of the precincts of the ward the grossest frauds and irregularities were perpetrated in the interest of ETavin by his procurement and with his consent and connivance; setting out in detail the nature of the frauds claimed- to have been perpetrated. The city council caused due notice to he issued and served upon ISTavin and set the contest down for hearing, and was about to proceed to a trial and determination thereof, when ISTavin filed in the superior court of King county an affidavit and application for a writ of prohibition prohibiting the city council from further proceeding with the cause. The appellants joined issue with the application, and the cause proceeded regularly to a hearing. The superior court held that the city council was without power to hear and determine the contest, and rendered judgment granting the writ.

The city of Seattle is a municipal corporation of the first class, having a freeholders’ charter. The contest was instituted by Weir under the provisions of § 9, of art. 18 of the city charter, which reads as follows:

“A certificate of election shall he prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated, hut the city council shall de*503cide all questions as to the qualification and election of its own members, and in all cases of contested election for any office the contest shall he decided by the city council according, as nparly as may he, to the laws of the state regulating proceedings in cases of contested elections for county officers.”

USTo question is raised as to the sufficiency of the pleadings, nor is it contended that the proceedings instituted do not substantially conform to the laws of the state regulating proceedings in the case of contested elections for county officers. The sole question presented, therefore, is, has. the city power, under the constitution and laws of this state, to confer upon its city council jurisdiction to try a contest between persons claiming to he elected to a city office. In State ex rel. Fawcett v. Superior Court, 14 Wash. 604 (45 Pac. 23, 33 L. R. A. 674), we hold that no such power is conferred. The appellants, however, call our attention to the facts of that case, and argue therefrom that the only point decided was that the city did not have power to confer such jurisdiction upon the superior court of the county, and that the question whether it has power to confer such jurisdiction upon its city council is still an open one. But an inspection of that case will show that the decision was rested upon the proposition that the power to provide a tribunal and clothe it with authority to try contested election cases was not specially, nor by necessary implication, conferred by the legislature or by the constitution upon municipalities of the first class. In the course of the opinion, after quoting from the general statutes relating to election contests, it was said:

“This is all the provision the law makes for contesting election cases, and the specific provisions made in this section must, under all rules of statutory construction, he *504held to fall under the rule that the expression of one excludes the expression' of the other, and therefore it must he concluded that there is no statutory provision for contesting the election of a municipal officer. It is claimed, however, by the appellant, that the city had the right to legislate on this subject, and to clothe the court with authority to try contested election cases, and to prescribe the mode of such trials. It is true that § 10 of art. 11 of the constitution provides that any city containing a population of twenty thousand inhabitants, or more, shall be permitted to frame a charter for its own government, consistent with and subject to the constitution and laws of this state. And it is argued that it was the plain intention of the framers of said section to invest the inhabitants of cities containing a population of 20,000 inhabitants, or more, with all the authority to legislate upon local matters that had theretofore been exercised by the legislature, and that the only limitation of that power was that the same should be consistent with, and subject to, the constitution and laws of the state. But we must not lose sight of the elementary proposition that municipal corporations have only the powers which are specially conferred upon them by the legislature, or such other powers as by necessary implication flow therefrom. The power to provide a tribunal, and clothe it with authority to contest election cases was not specially conferred by the legislature, nor do we think it was necessarily implied, or implied at all, by the constitution, or by any” act of the legislature to which our attention has been called.”

As we do not feel inclined to depart from the rule there announced, the judgment appealed from must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.