Appeal from a decree granting an injunction,, enjoining appellants from canvassing the returns of an election held January 8, 1910, the purpose of which was the-annexation of territory to the city of Tacoma. The complaint alleged respondent to be a resident and freeholder within the territory sought to be annexed, and then followed *387a number of alleged illegal features in the holding of the election, only a few of which we will notice, as the decree was entered upon motion for judgment upon the pleadings. We will, therefore, only refer to those charges which are admitted in the answer and upon which the judgment must rest, if at all.
The complaint charged, and the answer admitted, the places fixed in the notice where the election would be held, which places in some instances were not within the regularly established voting precinct of the county within the district sought to be annexed. It is also admitted that, in eight of the precincts of the county, portions of the territory of which were included within the district sought to be annexed, no polling places were established by the notice calling for the election. The election was held under Laws 1907, ch. £45, p. 676 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 7445 et seq.), providing that, upon the presentation of a petition signed by twenty per centum of the qualified electors resident within the territory sought to be annexed, the board of county commissioners, after due hearing and determination of regularity, shall call “an election to be held in such proposed territory to be annexed,” notice of which shall be given in form not material to be here inquired into. “Such election shall be conducted in accordance with the general election laws of the state, and no person shall be entitled to vote thereat unless he shall be a qualified elector.” The general election laws, under which an election of this character is, by the terms of the act, to be held, provide that the board of county commissioners in each county shall divide their respective counties into election precincts, establish the boundaries thereof, and designate one voting place in each precinct. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 4798. This annexation act also provides that the question of annexation of the proposed territory shall be submitted to the qualified electors of the territory. Among the necessary qualifications of an elector is residence within the precinct for thirty days preceding an election. Manifestly, then, a *388resident of the proposed territory would not be a qualified elector therein, except as he was a qualified elector of some already established precinct. Residence within the precinct being a necessary qualification, one could not be a qualified elector except within the precinct in which he resided; and any attempt to exercise the right of franchise under the general law must be made within the precinct in which the elector resides. Outside of the boundaries of that precinct he is not a qualified elector for the purpose of there voting. When, therefore, an elector in “White” precinct was compelled to go to a designated place in “Black” precinct to cast his vote, he lost his right thereto. When he left the boundaries of “White” precinct in which he resided and attempted to cast a vote in “Black” precinct, such a vote was not the vote of a qualified elector, and any election affected by such votes would not be an election by qualified electors. The question of convenience of the voters is not to be considered. It is rather one of qualification, and each elector must cast his vote within that precinct residence in which clothes him with the qualifications of an elector. The residents of these eight precincts who were compelled to go outside of their resident precincts in order to vote, lost the right to vote by doing so, and the question was not, as provided for in the act, submitted to the qualified electors of the territory.
Counsel for appellants argues such is not a correct construction of the statute, because in school elections voters may vote in places outside of the election precincts in which they reside. True; but in school elections, residence within election precincts is not a qualification of the voter. The qualification is special; not at all according to the general election laws as provided for in this statute, the qualification as to residence being residence within the school district. Manifestly, upon the same reasoning one could not vote at a school election in a district within which he did not reside. There is nothing contrary to these views in Mayor of Val*389verde v. Shattuck, 19 Colo. 104, 34 Pac. 947, 41 Am. St. 208, and State ex rel. Birchmore v. State Board of Canvassers, 78 S. C. 461, 59 S. E. 145, 14 L. R. A. (N. S.) 850, cited by appellants. It follows that the election was not legal in that it was not an election by qualified electors.
Appellants contend that the court below had no jurisdiction; that the question is purely a political one. We concede that a court of equity has no jurisdiction over a purely political question, such as is involved in many questions growing out of some matters pertaining to or involving elections. But the question here submitted involves more than a political right; it reaches farther and touches the property right of the citizen. Such, we think, is established by previous holdings of this court upon a like question. State ex rel. West Seattle v. Superior Court, 36 Wash. 566, 79 Pac. 29; State v. Nicoll, 40 Wash. 517, 82 Pac. 895; Brown’s Estate v. West Seattle, 43 Wash. 26, 85 Pac. 854. The freeholder in the rural and the freeholder in the urban district hold their property subject to different rights of taxation, special assessments, and different regulations as to sanitary and other regulations affecting the public health, safety and general welfare. It is too clear for argument that property in a city is subject to many restrictions which create a burden not borne by property outside of the municipal boundaries. When, therefore, the property of a citizen is brought within the municipal boundaries of a city, his property rights have been affected. He must now hold that property subject to many regulations, restrictions, and burdens not previously attaching to it. And in seeking to prevent such a transfer he presents more than a political question; it is one which affects him in his property as well as his political right.
Appellants further contend that respondent, in describing himself as “a resident and freeholder within the territory,” pleads himself out of court, in that he fails to describe himself as an elector, and the general election laws provide that *390“No person shall be competent to-contest an election unless he is a qualified elector of the district, county, or precinct, as the case may be, in which the office is to be exercised.” Rem. & Bal. Code, § 4945. This is not an election contest. Respondent is not here contesting the right of any person to hold office. Rather, he is seeking to protect an infringement of his property rights, attempted to be made without compliance with the law giving the right of such infringement.
Believing, therefore,- that the failure to follow the mandate of the law as to the manner of holding this election rendered the same illegal, the respondent was entitled to the decree appealed from, and the same is affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Crow, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.
Chadwick, J., took no part.