People ex rel. Pixley v. Pond

Paterson, J.

— This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondents — the registrar and board of election commissioners — to count the votes in certain precincts of the city and county of San Francisco, alleged to have been cast for candidates to fill the office of supervisor for the first board of supervisors, and also those cast for candidates for the office of police commissioner. The first twelve petitioners named herein were candidates for the office of supervisor, and the last three named were candidates for the office of police commissioner. It is alleged that every one of the petitioners received about fifteen hundred votes, and was elected to the office for which he was a candidate, there being no opposing candidate; and petitioners ask that the respondents be required, after counting the votes, to declare the result, and to issue certificates of election accordingly.

*143The questions argued by counsel for petitioners are not new. They may not have been presented so forcibly or with as great perspicuity before, but they have been determined adversely to the contentions of the petitioners, after careful consideration of the constitutional and statutory provisions germane to the subject, and we feel constrained to adhere to the construction heretofore adopted. The contention of petitioners who claim to have been elected as members of the first board of supervisors has been settled adversely to them by the decisions in Desmond v. Dunn, 55 Cal. 248, 249, and People v. Board of Election Commissioners, 2 West Coast Rep. 366; and the claim of the others, by the decisions in Staude v. Board of Election Commissioners, 61 Cal. 313; Heinlen v. Sullivan, 64 Cal. 378; and Peoples. Hammond, 66 Cal. 655. The effect which a decision overruling those cases would have upon municipal proceedings for over ten years past is so apparent, that it is unnecessary for us to point out the reason why we should adhere to the decisions referred to,— at least so far as the board of supervisors is concerned,— even though we should believe that they were based upon an erroneous construction of the provisions involved. And although the rule applies with less force to the case of the police commissioners, no good reason has been shown why the decisions heretofore rendered should be departed from. If the principle is wrong, or the system works unsatisfactorily, the remedy remains with the people.

Writ denied.

Harrison, J., De Haven, J., Garoutte, J., McFarland, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.