Houser v. Hartley

Russell, C. J.,

dissenting. I am of the opinion that the judgment of the lower court should be reversed. Of course, assuming that there never was an election as to the creation of Peach County, the trial judge could very properly have issued a mandamus absolute. But to do this, in my opinion, the record would have to be disregarded, and it is by the record alone that causes in this court should be adjudicated. I shall briefly call attention to some facts in the record which are undisputed. The case arises upon a petition by one Hartley to the ordinary of Houston County, asking that an election for justice of the peace for the 528th district of Houston County be ordered as provided by law, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the justice of the peace in that district, upon the ground that there is no justice of the peace in the district to order the election, as is usually done in such cases. The petition for mandamus alleges that the ordinary of Houston County refused to perform this duty devolving upon him by law. In response to a rule nisi the ordinary, as respondent, filed first a plea to the jurisdiction, and later an answer responding to each paragraph of the petition. As it appears from the record that every allegation of fact set forth in the answer of the respondent was admitted in the trial before the judge of the superior court to be true, thus eliminating any possible issue of fact, except the creation of Peach County, and the question for our consideration being one of law only, it becomes most material that the admitted facts be clearly understood.

The respondent’s plea to the jurisdiction (and also his answer) rested upon the single admitted fact that he was a citizen of Peach County. Therefore the determination as to whether or not the case was correctly decided in the lower court depends upon a determination (from statements of fact uncontroverted and uncontradicted) as to whether there is such a political subdivision of this State as Peach County. It is admitted that by virtue of an act of the General Assembly approved August 15, 1922, there was duly submitted for ratification or rejection, at the general election held *147in Georgia on November 7,1922, a constitutional amendment creating the County of Peach. It is admitted in the amendment to,the petition that the result of the election was in favor of the ratification of said constitutional amendment, and that thereby Peach County was duly and constitutionally created. With this last admission ordinarily it would be said, that, the defendant having pleaded that he was a resident of Peach County and the petition for mandamus being addressed to the ordinary of Houston County, there could be but one judgment, and that one which would dismiss the petition for mandamus. But, conceding for argument’s sake that the case is such that admissions of the opposing party count for nothing and cannot be considered, that the court has no judicial knowledge of the existence of such a subdivision of Georgia as Peach bounty, and that despite the fact that the petitioner for mandamus admitted at the hearing the existence of Peach County, we will next inquire whether the admission of other facts set forth in the defendant’s answer established the fact o;f the existence of Peach County, independent of the admission. This court can safely take judicial cognizance of any historical fact of general interest. The court knows, as a matter of common knowledge, that an election was held at which the creation of Peach County was submitted to the people of this State, following the passage of the act approved August 15, 1922 (Acts 1922, p. 28). There is nothing to contradict the statement that this question was duly submitted at the general election of November 7, 1922. But it is insisted in the amendment to the petition for mandamus that the election did not result in creating this new county.

In the second section of the act of 1922, supra, it is provided that “If a majority of the electors qualified to vote for members of the General Assembly voting thereon shall vote for the ratification of said proposed amendment, then the Governor shall, when he ascertains the same from the Secretary of State, to whom the returns of said election shall be referred in the manner as in case's of elections for members of the General Assembly to count and ascertain results, issue his proclamation for one insertion in one daily paper of this State, announcing such results, and declaring the amendment ratified.” It will be noted that the returns are to be referred to the Secretary of State as in cases of election for members of the General Assembly, “to count and ascertain results”; *148and that when these results are communicated to the Governor, the Governor is to announce the result, and he is to declare the amendment ratified. It appears from the report of the Secretary of State to the Governor that he ascertained the results of the election and communicated his finding of facts to the chief executive. It further appears that the Governor has not issued a proclamation or declaration' of the result; so we are met here with two questions: First, did the Secretary of State “count and ascertain results,” as was his duty, and communicate his finding of facts to the Governor? Second, is the declaration or proclamation of the results ascertained by the Secretary of State essential to the adoption of this amendment to the constitution and the creation of the proposed county?

As to the first question: The certificate of, the Secretary of Statq»to his Excellency, Governor Thomas W. Hardwick, contains the statement of the result in the election held upon the subject of ratifying three other amendments besides the amendment now before us. It will be noted that in each of these reports, as in the case of the Peach County amendment, nothing more is stated than the number of votes cast for and against these amendments respectively. It appears from the facts stated in the certificate or report of the Secretary of State, that, according to the number of votes reported to have been cast, the amendment to increase the salary of the judge of the superior court of Muscogee County was defeated, while in the case of a similar amendment as to the Augusta Circuit the proposed amendment appears to have been adopted. It also would seem, from the figures reported, that the amendment creating a new senatorial district was defeated. But the Secretary of State did nothing more than to'state the facts as he had ascertained them, nothing except the bare figures giving any indication that one of these three amendments had apparently carried and two were apparently lost. A like course was pursued by the Secretary of State with reference to the ascertainment and statement as to the count and results ascertained as to the proposed amendment creating Peach County, except that the Secretary of State, having ascertained that there were defects in the returns from thirty-four counties, the names of which appear in the record, and which the Secretary of State was of the opinion should be thrown out and disregarded, reported that if his conclusion as to *149these counties was correct there was a majority (of 1,848 votes) for the ratification of the amendment creating the County of Peach of 1,848 votes. The Secretary of State concluded here his ascertainment of the result, for the sound reason, as we think, as stated in the report to the Governor that “the Secretary of State is not a judicial officer, and his functions are purely ministerial. No discretion is vested in him under the constitution or law, but apparently, if discretion is lodged anywhere, it is in the Governor, whose duty it is, under the constitution, whenever a proposed constitutional amendment receives a majority of the votes cast, to issue his proclamation declaring the same to have been ratified.” So far as the use of language could go, and so far as his legitimate powers extended, the Secretary of State, in my opinion, ascertained that the result of the election was the creation of Peach County by 1,848 votes, and informed the Governor of the result. Of course, as stated by him, the correctness of this holding rests upon the proposition that his conclusions of law as to the counties which should be thrown out or disregarded are correct. There is no question about the fullness and clearness and exactness on the votes actually cast in these counties. Under the act submitting this amendment there is no provision for review, and whatever the Secretary of State reported “to be the results” of the election is final. According to Exhibit A attached to the certificate of the Secretary of State, twenty-eight named counties apparently cast for the amendment 3,857 votes and 8,958 votes against'the amendment. Eleven named counties cast for the amendment 1,192 votes and 4,070 votes against the amendment. Five named counties cast 300 votes for the amendment and 956 votes against the amendment. The total vote apparently east both for and against the amendment was 66,408, of which 36,566 were against the amendment and 29,842 in favor of its ratification. The total vote in the thirty-four counties which the Secretary of State was of the opinion should be thrown out was 5,349 for the amendment, and in the same counties there were cast against the amendment 13,921 votes; and it thus appears that if the vote of only those counties which complied with the law is counted, there were cast only 22,645 votes against the amendment, while 24,493, a majority of the votes properly returned, voted for its ratification.

*150. But it is insisted, contrary to the opinion of the Secretary of State, that none of the defects in the returns should prevent the votes of the counties as returned from being counted. It is certified by the Secretary of State that in the counties of Banks, Cherokee, Early, Heard, and Taliaferro, in half or more of the precincts, in each of such counties, the persons purporting to have held the election as superintendents do not appear to have been qualified to hold such election. Eleven Counties, to wit, Berrien, Catoosa, Dougherty, Macon, Morgan, Pickens, Screven, Turner, Walker, Walton, and White, had no voters’ list, tally-sheet, or copies of superintendents’ oaths, as a part of their consolidated returns, all of which are required by law. In twenty-eight counties, Bartow, Butts, Carroll, Cobb, Columbia, Coweta, Dawson, Decatur, Franklin, Forsyth, Gwinnett, Hall, Haralson, Henry, Jackson, Jones, Metiwether, Montgomery, Newton, Paulding, Pike, Spalding, Sumter, Talbot, Telfair, Troup, Webster, and Wilkes, there was no> consolidated certificate subscribed by a majority of the superintendents of the election as required by law. Section 82, subdivision 9, of the Civil Code (1910), requires: “The superintendents, to consolidate the vote of the county, must consist of all those who officiated at the county-site, or a majority of them, and at least one from each precinct. They shall make and subscribe two certificates, stating the whole number of votes each person received in the county; one of them, together with one list of voters and one tally-sheet from each place of holding the election, shall be sealed up and, without delay, mailed to the Secretary of State; the other, with like accompaniments, shall be directed to the clerk of the superior court of the county, and by him deposited in his office. Each of said returns must contain copies of the original oaths taken by the superintendents at the’ court-house and precincts.” ;

It is urged that by reason of the terms of section 126 of the Code, that “No election shall be defeated for non-compliance with the requirements of the law, if held at the proper time and place by persons qualified to hold them) if it is not shown that, by that non-compliance, the result is different from what it would have-been had there been proper compliance,” the provisions of section 82 of the Civil Code are merely directory and of little, if any, importance. It will be observed, however, that there are three conditions stated in section 126, before such a deduction can be *151drawn. The caption of that section is: “Election not set aside for formal defects, when.” “If held at the proper time and place by persons qualified to hold them,” the election shall not be “defeated for non-compliance with the requirements of the law,” unless it is shown that by the non-compliance “the result is different from what it would have been had there been proper compliance.” How can any mortal man tell the results of an election from a county from which there is no return of the results? If the requirements of the law are not complied with, how can it be determined that an unsigned, unsworn paper is an accredited return of what actually transpired and of the vote actually cast? It stands as one of the necessary foundations upon which the security and purity of elections must stand, if they stand at all, that the votes cast shall be counted. It is a travesty to allow the vote to be deposited and then counted for one for whom it was not cast, or not to be counted at all. I cannot concur in the opinion that the requirements of section 82 mean any less than their language imports, nor agree that language which to my mind is plainly mandatory shall be treated as merely directory. If this argument is sound, then there is no necessity for a vote by ballot, no need for a list of the voters to be kept, no necessity for the managers being sworn, no necessity for the return of the election to be verified by oath, provided only that the polls be opened by three citizens at the proper time and place, and all persons are permitted to vote and their votes are counted as the managers decide they should be, without regard to the wishes of the voters, whether expressed orally or in a writing, by ballot. As I have before stated, the act submitting the constitutional amendment now under consideration made it the duty of the Secretary of State to ascertain the result. This he has done, and has, in effect, stated, by his final figures, that the amendment received more than 24,000 votes as contrasted with something over 22,000 in opposition to ratification.

The Governor has not declared the result, but that is not essential to the ratification of a constitutional amendment, as held in the ease of Hammond v. Clark, 136 Ga. 313 (supra). In the first headnote of that case it was held: “In the absence of some other exclusive method of determination provided by the constitution, whether an amendment has been properly proposed and adopted *152according to the requirements of the existing constitution, and has become a part of the fundamental law of the State, is generally a judicial question.” In dealing with the subject in the opinion, Justice Lumpkin, speaking for the court, says: “In dealing with the first question, counsel for plaintiff in error contended that the proclamation of the Governor declaring that the amendment was adopted was conclusive, and that the courts could not inquire into the question. To this contention we cannot assent. The constitution is the supreme State law. It provides how it may be amended. It makes no provision for exclusive determination by the Governor as to whether an amendment has been made in the constitutional method, and for the issuance by him of a binding proclamation to that effect. Such a proclamation may be both useful and proper, in order to inform the people whether or not a change has been made in the fundamental law, but the constitution did not make it conclusive on that subject. When the constitution was submitted for ratification as a whole, a provision was made for a proclamation of the result by the Governor.' Constitution, article 13, section 2, paragraph 2 (Civil Code (1910), § 6613). But in reference to amendments, there is no such provision. Constitution, article 13, section 1, paragraph 1 (Civil Code (1910), § 6610). In the absence of some other exclusive method of determination provided by the constitution, the weight of authority is to the effect that whether an amendment has been properly adopted according to the requirements of the existing constitution is a judicial question.” It certainly follows that, if the proclamation of the Governor either that an amendment has been ratified or defeated can be nullified by judicial decision, as just quoted, there would certainly be a duty resting upon the court, when no proclamation had been made, to decide whether the amendment had in fact been ratified or rejected, where the interests of one or all of the citizens of the State were directly affected by the result of the election which had been held. It appears from the record in this case that his Excellency, Governor Hardwick, declined to decide or issue a proclamation, upon the ground that it was a question which should be submitted.to the courts for decision. And bearing in mind the essential constitutional provision that the three co-ordinate branches of the government shall be distinct from and independent of each other, I think his course in the matter is not open to *153criticism; especially in view of the ruling of this court in Hammond v. Clark, supra.

Is the question properly presented ? It is insisted that sufficient facts do not appear in the record to enable the court to determine the question of the establishment of Peach County. I cannot agree with this contention. As stated before, there is no appeal from the facts as stated by the Secretary of State to have been ascertained by .him in accordance with his duty in that regard as imposed by law. He states as a fact what was the total vote of all the counties of the State. The defendant in error admits the truth of that statement. By what rule of adjudication is there a higher form of proof provided than the agreement of parties that a certain thing is a fact? It must be presumed that the worthy and distinguished Secretary of State has performed his .duty and counted the returns from each of the 160 counties in this State. It cannot otherwise be presumed, without attributing to him flagrant negligence in the performance of the specific duty of going into all of the returns from each and every county and consolidating the vote of every one of them. He states the sum total of the votes apparently cast in the entire State, thus again evidencing the fact that he has either performed his duty by ascertaining this result from actual inspection of all the returns from each county (required by law to be separately mailed to him); or else he is stating as a fact matters which he has not investigated, votes that he has not counted, and results of which he knows nothing. Assuming that the Secretary of State has done his 'duty and examined severally and separately the returns from each and all of the counties and has correctly ascertained the total vote of all the counties, he has deducted from the vote cast against the proposed amendment 13,655 votes, and from the votes apparently cast in favor of the amendment 5,700 votes, as appears from returns of counties which he says should be thrown out and should be disregarded. With these deductions, he gives as the final figures the vote in favor of the amendment as 24,493, and the vote against the amendment 22,695, leaving a net majority in favor of the adoption of the amendment of 1,848 votes. What more could possibly be shown as necessary to complete the ratification of the amendment, except the proclamation by the Governor ? And as we have already shown, the absence of this paper or the non-performance of this duty by the Governor was not essential to perfect the ratification.

*154As I see it, the question presented is substantial and of vast importance. I know of no method by which it can be adjudicated and determined whether the proposed amendment was in fact ratified which would be preferable to the particular case now before us. The question is raised, and in my opinion must be decided, and a decision cannot be escaped or avoided by reason of the fact that there is not enough in the record to enable us to determine the question presented for decision; nor is there too little matter in the record upon which to base a decision. The question turns at last on whether, as a matter of law, and properly a matter for judicial decision, votes returned according to law in 126 counties of the State shall be nullified by either the negligent or intentional sending of papers from 34 other counties which are not authenticated as required by law, not validated or vouched for by the superintendents, as ordained by law. In my opinion a paper unverified by the superintendents, a list of voters unsigned, an unsigned tally-sheet, on a paper entitled “Returns of sales of whisky,” are none of them legal papers. As evidentiary documents, without names or signatures, only supposedly emanating from legal superintendents, each of them is a legal nullius filius. It will be a sad day for popular government when the certainty of our elections will depend upon guesswork, and sadder still when any kind of a fraud can be committed in an election that those who are in charge of the election are base enough to commit, without fear of prosecution. A criminal law without a penalty is little feared. The case sub judiee differs greatly in its facts from the case of Tanner v. Deen, 108 Ga. 95 (supra). There an attempt was made to set aside the results in one of the precincts, because the return reached the court-house for consolidation a little after the prescribed hour of noon. But there was no attack upon the legality or the completeness of the return itself, as in the present case; and the case was properly decided, since it was brought by an impartial person upon whom no attack was made, and no question was raised as to his having tampered with the return itself.

In the opinion of the majority it is held that it is not now adjudicated “whether as a court, upon a record properly presenting the question, we would have jurisdiction to decide whether a proposed amendment to the constitution was ratified, without a declaration to that effect made by the officer clothed with the author*155ity under the law to make it.” In my opinion this court has already held in the case of Hammond v. Clark, supra, that the jurisdiction of this court to decide whether a proposed amendment to the constitution has been ratified, whether any declaration to that effect has been made by the Governor, is undoubted; and the proposition is supported by numerous authorities. The court said: “The decision in Combs v. State, 81 Ga. 780 (8 S. E. 318), and that in Woodward v. State, 103 Ga. 496 (30 S. E. 522), are not controlling on the contention that the Governor’s proclamation was conclusive. 'In each of these cases the legislature had passed a local-option law and provided a particular method for the declaration of the result. It is not necessary for us to consider how far the courts would go into the mere question of contesting the election or the number of votes cast, or whether they would go behind the consolidation by the Secretary of State. No such effort is made. . . It is also unnecessary to discuss the effect of lapse of time or acquiescence, or of the making of an amendment to the constitution effecting a radical change in the government. .' .' None of these things are here involved.” Article 13, section 1, paragraph 1, of the constitution (Civil Code (1910), § 6610) reads as follows: “Any amendment or amendments to this Constitution may be proposed in the Senate or House of Eepresentatives; and if the same shall be agreed to by two thirds of the members elected to each of the two houses, such proposed amendment or amendments shall be entered on their journals, with the yeas and nays taken thereon. And the General Assembly shall cause such amendment or amendments to be published in one or more newspapers in each Congressional district, for two months previous to the time of holding the next general election, and shall also provide for a submission of such proposed amendment or amendments to the people at said next general election; and if the people shall ratify such amendment or amendments by a majority of the electors qualified to vote for members of the General Assembly, voting thereon, such amendment or amendments shall become a part of this Constitution. When more than one amendment is submitted at the same time, they shall be so submitted as to enable the electors to vote on each amendment separately.” It will be seen from the above that the constitution does not provide any proclamation of the Governor as an essential prerequisite to the passage of an *156amendment to the constitution. The framers of the constitution evidently did not purpose for the will of a majority of those known to be qualified voters voting in favor of a constitutional amendment to be defeated merely because, as was said in Hammond v. Clark, supra, “such a proclamation may be both useful and proper in order to inform the people whether or not a change has been made in the fundamental law, but the constitution did not make it conclusive on that subject.”

I am therefore of the opinion that the court cannot in the case now before us hold, as stated in the opinion of the majority, “that before a court could hold that the amendment had been ratified, it must appear that the Governor actually declared it ratified, unless the question of ratification or non-ratification is presented in this court in a record properly raising the question for judicial determination.” What will constitute a record properly raising this question? It is said in the opinion of the majority: “that would involve, along with the presentation of the question, a proper exhibit of all the facts necessary for its determination.” The majority asserts: “that is not done in this case.” It is upon that point that I differ with the majority. If it be conceded, as I think it must be, that the Secretary of State is presumed to have examined all of the returns of all of the counties (and that he must have done this is apparent from his statement of the total vote of the State, exclusive of the counties whose returns were not certified as required by law), if he examined the returns of all the counties and, upon examining the returns of thirty-four of them, stated the exact facts as to what these returns disclosed, then all the facts are exhibited which are necessary for us to determine the question which the Secretary of State, as a merely ministerial officer, could not decide, and which the Governor would not undertake to decide; and therefore we have before us every fact that can be ascertained to enable us to reach a conclusion upon the question presented. Then the question resolves itself purely into one-of law, as hereinbefore stated, and the failure on the part of this court to make a decision cannot be based upon the lack of a proper “exhibit of all the facts necessary for its determination.” In fact,' the opinion of the majority proceeds finally to admit impliedly that there is a record properly raising the question; for the opinion proceeds to rule that the “consolidated returns of counties should *157not have been thrown ont for irregularities and merely because the returns were not accompanied by all. the papers required by law, and because the papers were not certified in accordance with the statute directing how they shall be certified.”

It may be insisted that the proper remedy is to be found in the writ of mandamus, by which the declaration of the result can be compelled. As hereinbefore stated, it is perfectly plain that the Secretary of State has already ascertained the result to be a majority of 1,848 in favor of the adoption of the proposed amendment. Neither the statements nor the conclusions of the Secretary of State are open to conjecture or subject to misunderstanding. Properly construing, as he did, the act of 1922 (Acts 1922, p. 28), the Secretary of State properly held that his duty was merely ministerial and that he could not declare the amendment carried, and could only declare, as he did, the “result,” so that nothing remained to be done except the issuance of the proclamation by the Governor, as required .by the aforementioned act. The Governor has not issued any proclamation, and it is said that for this reason if no other the amendment was not adopted. We have already quoted from Hammond v. Clark, supra, the ruling of this court in that case to the effect that whether or not an amendment to the constitution has been adopted is ultimately a matter of judicial determination; and whether the further ruling that this is true without regard to any proclamation of the Governor is obiter or not, it is, in my opinion, sound law. Otherwise, if in any case any constitutional amendment, no matter how important, were submitted to the people with a provision that the Governor should issue a proclamation and declare whether the amendment had been ratified or not, and any Governor should fail or refuse to issue such proclamation, the amendment would be defeated although it should have received the practically unanimous approval of the people at the polls; for the Governor is not subject to the writ of mandamus. It was held by Judge Warner in the case of Lowe v. Towns, 8 Ga. 360, that under our form of democracy with the distinct, separate and independent operation of the independent branches of the government, legislative, judicial, and executive, from political reasons, if no other, the Governor of the State could not be subjected to mandamus. He points out in this decision that unlike England, where the courts are the king’s courts and the judges his judges, *158and where the monarch cannot refuse to respond to the petition of his subject addressed really to him through his courts, in this country where the courts are not the courts of the king or the government, but one of the three independent, co-ordinate branches of the government, and the Governor the head of a separate, independent branch, mandamus will not lie. Adopted no doubt from the expressions of Judge Warner uttered in 1850, there was incorporated in the Code of 1861 the provision that the Governor should riot be subject either to writ of mandamus or of prohibition, — the one ordering him to do and the other ordering him not to do any specified act in the discharge of his public duties. Every code since that time has contained the same provision, which is now found in § 5450 of the Code of 1910, to wit: “Neither of these writs will lie to the duly inaugurated Governor of the State, but they do lie to all other executive or 'military officers.” So I repeat that any reliance upon mandamus where the act to be performed by the Governor of this State might be essential to complete the adoption of an amendment to the constitution would be a vain hope and nugatory as a remedy, and would subject the adoption or defeat of any amendment to the constitution to the mere caprice of the incumbent of the executive chair, and permit the autocratic judgment of such an executive to defeat the popular will.

As I have heretofore stated, this opinion has no reference to his Excellency Governor Hardwick, because, seemingly entertaining the same view of the law as I do, he held, I think very properly, in this case, that the matter should be submitted to judicial determination for a distinct ruling on the legal question whether the counties which the Secretary of State said should be thrown out and disregarded should be thus treated in advance of the proclamation.