This is a contest of the election of the appellee, J. H. Robertson, to the office of justice of the peace of Phoenix Precinct, at the general election held November 4, 1902. The only question involved in this appeal is the admissibility of the votes cast at school district No. 35, that being one of the polling-places within the election precinct designated as “Phoenix Precinct No. 4.” All the votes were recounted by the court. No question is now raised by appellant as to the action of the court in admitting or rejecting any of the other ballots offered in evidence, but merely as to the action of the court in rejecting the twenty ballots found by the court to be valid as far as their form is concerned, which were cast at school district No. 35, and which the court rejected because there was a non-compliance with the law, in the opinion of the court, in that particular polling or election precinct, in that the votes were received at a place other than the one designated by the board of supervisors as a polling-place in that precinct. The place designated was the schoolhouse in school district No. 35, and the place where the votes were actually cast and received was at a house known as “Heard’s Ranch House,” in the same precinct, but about half a mile distant from the schoolhouse. It appears from the record that the regular election board as appointed by the board of supervisors presided at the election held at the ranch house, and that the proceedings were in all respects proper and regular, except as to the place of holding the election. The ranch house at which the election was held was about half a mile distant from the schoolhouse, and in plain view therefrom. The witnesses for the contestant testified that the election was not held at the schoolhouse in that precinct because school was in session there that day. The only evidence in the record of any notice given of any change in the place of holding the election was the testimony of Larsen, one of the judges of the election. He stated that “some children (who attended the school) came back by our place every day, and they were notified some six or seven days ahead.” Our *364statutes (Rev. Stats. 1901) provide (par. 2305): “The board must, at least fifteen days prior to an election, issue its order designating the house or place within each precinct where the election must be held.” Paragraph 2306: “If the board fail to designate the house or place for holding the election, or if it cannot be held at the house or place designated, the justice of the peace in the precinct must, two days before the election, and by an order under his hand (copies of which he must at once post in three public places in the precinct), designate the house or place, or if there be no justice of the peace there, the election board, by similar notices posted as in this section provided, may designate the place.” It appears from the record that the board issued its order in accordance with paragraph 2305, designating the house within this precinct where the election must be held. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the election could not have been held at the house designated, further than the opinion or conclusion of the election board; and that was evidently arrived at some days prior to the day of election, because'it was stated that they notified the school children “some six or seven days ahead.” It does not appear from the record that an order designating the place at which the election would be held was made by the justice of the peace in the precinct two days before the election, or that, there being “no justice of the peace there, the election board, by similar notices,” posted as provided in paragraph 2306, “designated the place.” It is the general rule, to which there are very few exceptions, that the statutes relative to the time and place of holding an election are mandatory, and that an election held at any other than the designated place is absolutely void without proof of any fraud or injury. The sole exceptions we have found to this rule are those cases where the impossibility of holding the election at the place fixed by law was discovered immediately before the election, at a date too late to render possible a compliance with the law in the designation of another place. Dale v. Irwin, 78 Ill. 170; Preston v. Culbertson, 58 Cal. 198. This latter feature does not enter into the case under consideration. We have no evidence in the record that the election board repaired to the schoolhouse on the day of the election, and, being unable to hold the election there, selected the ranch house for that reason. The *365evidence presented by contestant that they notified the school children “six or seven days ahead” establishes the contrary, so that this cannot be considered as a case of the removal of the polling-place on the morning of election day perforce of necessity.
It is said on this subject in Heyfron v. Mahony, 9 Mont. 497, 24 Pac. 93, 18 Am. St. Rep. 757: “What, then, was the legal effect of the removal of the polling-place? . . . Mr. McCrary, in his work on Elections, writes: ‘It must be conceded by all that time and place are of the substance of every election, while many provisions which appertain to the manner of conducting an election may be directory only.’ Section 141 (3d ed.). The same opinion is expressed by Mr. Paine in his treatise on Elections: ‘The requirement that the election shall be held at the place designated by law is not directory; it is mandatory, and must be obeyed. ’ Section 327. . . . In Melvin’s Case, 68 Pa. 338, Mr. Chief Justice Thompson says: ‘A fixed place, it seems to me, is as absolutely a requisite, according to the election laws, as is the time of voting. The holding of elections at the places fixed by law is not directory; it is mandatory, and cannot be omitted without error'. I will not say that, in ease of the destruction of a designated building on the eve of an election, the election might not be held on the same or contiguous ground, as a matter of necessity. “Necessitas non habet legem.” But then the necessity must be absolute, discarding all mere idea of convenience. ... To move the place of election . . . from a designated schoolhouse to a vacant house more than half a mile distant therefrom, without authority or any absolutely controlling circumstances, must render the election therein void, and, if the votes taken be counted, constitute an undue election.’ See, also, McCrary, Elec. (3d ed.) secs. 123, 124; Paine, Elec. secs. 327-330. The circumstances which do not affect the result when the place designated for the holding of the election has been changed are shown in Preston v. Culbertson, 58 Cal. 209, wherein the court holds: ‘The polls were opened a short distance from and in plain view of the place appointed, the owner of the house selected having objected to the election proceeding at his house; and it does not appear that any voter was misled or deprived of his vote by reason of the change.’ Dale v. Irwin, 78 Ill. 180.”
*366The appellant states that paragraphs 2305 and 2306 of our Statutes of 1901 as cited are identical with paragraphs 1131 and 1132 of the California statutes, and insists, on the authority of Preston v. Culbertson, 58 Cal. 198, and Sprague v. Norway, 31 Cal. 173; that the action of the election officers in selecting the ranch house instead of the place designated by the board was a mere irregularity, which did not affect the final result; and that, as there was no fraud shown on the part of the election officers, the voters of the district should not lose their votes, and the appellant be deprived of the benefit thereof, simply because of a technical violation of the law. The holding in California on that subject is very tersely and forcibly stated in Russell v. McDowell, 83 Cal. 70, 23 Pac. 183 (decided since the cases cited by appellant), as follows: “It is well settled that disregard of directory provisions of election laws, in the absence of actual fraud, is no ground for rejecting the entire vote of a precinct. ... It is only those provisions of the statutes relating to the time and place of holding elections, the qualifications of voters, and such others as are expressly made essential prerequisites to the validity of an election, that are held to be mandatory. . . . All others are directory merely, and a failure to observe them, caused by honest ignorance or mistake, and not resulting in manifest fraud, does not afford ground for rejecting the entire vote of a precinct. . . . The law of this state is -as it is everywhere else, and ought to be, that disregard of mandatory requirements of the election law, or of merely directory provisions coupled with such actual fraud as makes the true result doubtful, is ground for throwing out the entire vote of a precinct where there is no means of purging the poll.” We accept this as not only a later utterance of that jurisdiction, but as more definitely decisive of the question under .consideration; the use of the house designated in the case of Preston v. Culbertson, supra, as a polling-place only having been denied on the day of the election. The law is mandatory that the election must be held at the place designated by the board of supervisors, unless a change of the polling-place becomes necessary, and when such necessity is known to exist a sufficient length of time prior to the election to enable the place to which such polling-place is changed to be designated as provided by the statute, such designation must be made *367in order to render valid an election held there. The action of the board in this instance in holding the election at the ranch house instead of at the place designated by the board of supervisors, without any attempt to comply with the requirements of the law relative to a change of the polling-place, and without any necessity or sufficient reason appearing to justify it, renders the election held there invalid, and the votes cast in that precinct cannot be counted.
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Sloan, J., and Davis, J., concur.