(dissenting).
OFFICERS DE JURE AND DE FACTO — STATUTES MANDATORY AND DIRECTORY — IRREGULARITIES in Elections.
I dislike to differ with the inajoi’ity of the court, but my views of the recently passed election law, its spirit, design and future usefulness, are such, and the points in which its provisions were violated in this case are so vital to its efficacy in future, and the decision tends to tolerate such looseness in its execution, and the questions involved in the case are of such general importance, that I can not give my assent to that decision.
At the election in 1892, J. M. Nial and J. M. Hollands-worth were candidates for sheriff in Lincoln county. By the returns Hollandsworth received one thousand one hundred and twenty one votes; Nial one thousand and ninety three votes. The board of canvassers declared Hollands-worth elected. Nial then instituted a contest for the office, and the County Court declared Nial elected by the rejection of the vote cast at precinct No. 1, in Hart’s Creek district, where Hollandsworth received one hundred and forty eight *7votes and Dial fifty seven, and, upon appeal to tlie Circuit Court, the decision of the County Court was reversed, and Iiollandsworth given the office, and Dial brought the case here by writ of error.
Hollandsworth by counsel makes the point, that the notice is insufficient; hut we regard it sufficient. This question involves no important principle of law, being only a question whether the notice comes up to the conceded legal standard, and it is not important to discuss it. The notice is based on illegality of the election.
At the opening of the polls at precinct No. 1, Hart’s Creek district, Holton and Greer were appointed poll-clerks by the commissioners of election, as directed by section 8, c. 3, Code 1891, and qualified and acted as such. About one o’clock, on the claim that it was necessary to do so to allow all voters to vote, the two commissioners chosen from one political party against the objection of the third, appointed two additional poll-clerks, Brumfield and Fowler; from opposite parties, and they were sworn and until the closing of the polls acted as such, Holton and Greer, the two poll-clerks first appointed, still remaining and acting in the election, recording the names of voters. Brumfield, one of the additional poll-clerks, and Holton, one of the first appointees, acted all the afternoon in aiding voters to prepare tickets, and were constantly occupied, as, from illiteracy or because of the newly introduced method of voting, more than three fourths of the voters received their aid. Both Brumfield and Holton were of the same political party, and were appointed as such. These two poll-clerks did not both go into a booth with a voter to prepare his ballot, but only one went in; one seeming to attend to one, the other to the other, of the two booths. Hp to the time when these extra clerks were appointed there had been polled seventy four votes, and after they were appointed one hundred and thirty four were polled.
Here we have the fact that two persons were appointed and acted during the casting of the greater number of votes cast at the precinct as extra clerks, when the two regularly appointed clerks were still present. What is the legal effect of that fact upon the validity of the election at that precinct? Does it vitiate and exclude it from the count ?
*8Section 8, c. 8, of the Code, empowers the commissioners of election to appoint two poll-clerks. Whence came their authority to appoint more ? The legislature limited them to this number, without a hint of discretion, even for necessity, not to say on amere supposition that it is necessary in order to poll the vote to appoint more. These commissioners are officers of limited authority, with the chart for their action iixed by the statute, without discretion to do this act. Their appointment was void because unauthorized, void because against the law, and void because the offices of the two poll-clerks were filled, and there can be no appointment to an office already filled. We therefore can not treat them as officers defacto, as there was no power to appoint them, since Iiolton and Greer were in office, and there can not be an officer de facto when there is an officer dejure in possession. Mechem, Pub. Off. § 322; Boardman v. Halliday, 10 Paige, 223; Hamlin v. Kassafer, 15 Or. 456 (15 Pac. 778); McCahon v. Commissioners, 8 Kan. 437; Cohn v. Beal, 61 Miss. 398.
As said in the Kansas case, when an office is to be held by one person, two can not hold it as tenants in common (Morgan v. Quackenbush, 22 Barb. 80); and the court said, as the regular county commissioners were in office de facto et dejure, there was no room for other de facto commissioners. An officer de jure has lawful title, but is not in possession ; ah officer defacto is one who is in possession of the office, acting, but has not good title ; a usurper is one who assumes to act without title, without even color of title. But here the first appointees were dejure et de facto clerks, and then there could be no defacto clerk.
I am aware of the doctrine, that, in order to sustain the acts of public officer's in favor of the public, and especially to sustain and validate elections by the people, the courts hold good such acts, though done by officers not lawfully appointed, treating them as officers de facto; but I can not think that doctrine applies in this instance. We need not enter largely into che nice distinctions and principles re- . lating to the question of when an officer is one defacto or a mere intruder or usurper; for here are the two lawful poll clerks in office, present atthe polls, leaving no office vacant, *9and two others are appointed to these offices. The act of appointment was void, and the appointees not poll-clerks, hut usurpers. "What else can they he ? What, then, is the legal effect of the participation of these extra clerks in the election? Here I concede the principle that, generally, mere irregularity in the conduct of an election will not render it void and abortive, and disfranchise voters, and defeat the popular will, and that provisions of election-acts regulating the manner of holding elections, and ascertaining and certifying results, are usually regarded as directory not mandatory, and that the acts of election officers are, as a general rule, held good as acts of defacto officers, although their appointment or authority be irregular and defective; hut still the law is that an election, to be valid, must not he held by anybody indifferently, but by some one having some color of legitimate authority, so that we cau call him an officer de facto. A mere usurper can not hold an election. People v. Cook, Brightly, Elect. Cas. 451; State v. Taylor, 108 N. C. 196 (12 S. E. 1005); note on page 752 of 83 Am. Dec. in case of People v. Bates, giving the law on main' important points relating to elections.
In Georgia a statute required a justice to preside at a constable’s election. lie acted part of the day, as did the lawful clerks in our case. The election was held void. Franklin v. Kaufman, 65 Ga. 260. See, as to who are officers de jure and de facto, and usurpers : Monteith v. Com., 15 Gratt. 172; Griffin v. Cunningham, 20 Gratt. 31; McGraw v. Williams, 33 Gratt. 513. So, we have a case not simply of an election irregularly conducted, or in which a colorable officer took part, but one held in part by officers not colorable officers, when the law says that an election can not be held by such officers.
But are the facts and principles just stated sufficient to exclude the precinct in question ? There were lawful officers at the election ; in fact all were there — commissioners, challengers, and clerks. Then, does the part which the two unlawful poll-clerks took in the election poison it and exclude the precinct ?
Brumfield extensively, constantly participated by going alone, without any other poll-clerks, into the booths, and *10preparing tickets for dozens of illiterate voters. So did Holton, but likely not with so many voters. This was the uniform course during the casting of one hundred and thirty four out of two hundred and eight votes. Here we have three facts : First, the participation of a poll-clerk, who was no poll-clerk, as the only one preparing very many ballots cast by voters ; a'nd, second, that both clerks were not present together when they were so prepared, but the ballots were the work of only one clerk ; and, third, both these clerks were of one party, and voted for Hollandsworth— whereas section 60, e. 3, Code 1891, provides that a voter, who can not prepai’e his ballot, may declare his choice of candidates to the poll-clerks, “who, in the presence of the voter and in the presence of each other shall prepare his ballot for voting in the manner heretofore provided, and on request shall read over to such voter the names of the candidates on the ballot as so prepared.”
The function of poll-clerks is separate and apart from the other officers of election, wholly distinct from them. Can we say that the function performed by poll clerks in preparing for the helpless, illiterate voter the very ballot that tells his will, the only thing which the law allows to speak his will — are we to say this function is of minor, not vital, importance ? Can we say that the statute, in requiring both clerks present in this most important act, is simply directory, not mandatory — that it is merely directory— when in section 8 it commands that the poll-clerks shall be taken from opposite political parties ? It is a dangerous power, at best, to commit to any one not chosen by the voter himself, from bosom friendship or relationship or political fellowship, the preparation in secret of his ballot, but a necessary one under the system adopted by the act of March 11, 1891, called the “Australian Election-Law and the legislature has with sedulous care provided these and many other' guards of safety to preserve the sanctity of the freeman’s suffrage, and to secure purity and prevent corruption of elections.
So common and flagrant and dangerous throughout the nation had become the corruption of the ballot, that ballot reform became the earnest and anxious impulse of the peo-*11pie and legislatures in all the states, which resulted in the. radical amendment of former laws and the adoption of the system called the “Australian Election-Law,” the vital purpose of which was to secure to every voter a ballot reflecting his true vote, and guard the illiterate voter against the falsification of his ballot. This highly commendable purpose, among others, is spoken by the labored provisions of detail, the guarded and carefully chosen language, the severe penalties, with which the act bristles, visited upon every act of corruption of the ballot by election-officers and others, and the entire spirit of the act.
The features relating to this case, to which I have adverted above, show that the lawmakers intended, not to put the illiterate voter’s ballot in the hands of one clerk in secret, but to increase his safety by the presence of two. Fraud could he perpetrated with impunity if but one clerk and the voter incompetent to read should be alone in the secret booth, but few indeed would commit a felony with other watchful eyes upon them, especially the eyes of a political adversary. These provisions are the very core of the protection afforded by the act to illiterate voters, who,unfortunately, are numbered by thousands. I can name none more essential, more important, in the whole process of holding elections. It is the only citadel of safety of that class of voters — the only class needing help — and of candidates and of the public.
As was said in People v. Board of County Canvassers of Onondaga Co., 129 N. Y. 395 (29 N. E. 327), in discussing the New York ballot-reforrn-act, if the courts, under the idea that in these matters the statute is only directory, fritter away the most essential provisions, they defeat the legislative design and the public policy of late years of ballot-reform and betterment of elections, on which the highest interests of government rest. That this new election-law has many provisions simply directory is true; but it has many others mandatory, necessarily to be regarded mandatory, in order to remedy the evils sought to be cured by its enactment. Judge Cooley, in Constitutional Limitations (page 618) quotes as a very satisfactory general rule, what I notice is often quoted approvingly in *12books and decisions, the ruling in New York in People v. Cook, 14 Barb. 259, and 8 N. Y. 67, which is:
“Any irregularity in conducting an election which does not deprive a legal voter of his vote, or admit a disqualified person to vote if it cast no uncertainty on the result, and has not been occasioned by the agency of a party seeking to derive a benefit from it, may be overlooked in an action in the nature of a quo warranto” (6 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 325).
Try the p resent case by this rule. Can we say that the act of an unlawful clerk without color of authority to act) in preparing alone dozens of tickets in secret with no eye to overlook his action casts no uncertainty over the result at this precinct ? Can we say that the action of the-two poll clerks in preparing more than one hundred tickets in secret booths, with no detective eye, casts no uncertainty over it? Gross irregularity it was, aside from the fact that one clerk was no clerk, arid, before we can call it harmless, we must, under the above rule, be able to assert with confidence that it did no harm. It may be that these officers acted with the utmost honesty ; it is not necessary to predicate the decision on the affirmative assertion that they falsified ballots, but neither can we assort that they did not. If we say that a great- number of ballots can be prepared for illiterate voters in the booths by one poll-clerk in the absence of the other, and that the only clerks acting therein may both be of the same political party, what becomes of the command of the legislature that two clerks of different politics shall be present ? ■ This would be carrying the doctrine of directory statutes to the nullification of legislative enactment touching the very soul of the pui’ity of the ballot. We can not be told that, while the law does make such provisions, it yet does not say that departure from them shall invalidate; for a statute may be mandatory, not only where it contains negative words, but also from its spirit and purpose and the point wherein there is a violation of its provisions; it may be mandatory not only in its language, but also by fair implication. We should construe the act as declaring that ballots of illiterate voters shall be prepared by two poll-clerks of different politics, present at the same time, and as prohibiting any other mode of preparation.
*13In State v. Russell, 34 Neb. 116, (51 N. W. 465) it is laid down that “when a statute, expressly or by fair implication, declares any act to be’essential to a valid election, or that an act shall be performed in a given manner and no other» such provisions are mandatory and exclusive.”
If a statute expressly declares any particular act to be essential to the validity of an election, or that its omission shall render the election void, the courts, whose duty it is to enforce the law as they find it, must so hold, whether the particular act in question goes to the merits or affects the result of the election or not; for such a statute is mandatory, and the court can not enter into the question of its policy. On the other hand, if a statute simply provides that certain things shall be done within a particular time or in a particular manner, and does not declare that their performance shall be essential to the validity of an election, they will be regarded as mandatory, if they affect the merits of the election, and as directory only, if they do not affect its merits. I consider this a correct statement .of law, and it is supported by Parvin v. Wimberg, 130 Ind. 561 (30 N, E. Rep. 790); Gilleland v. Schuyler, 9 Kan. 569; Barnes v. Board, 51 Miss. 305; McCrary, Elect. § 190.
In Juker v. Com., 20 Pa. St. 493, it is conceded that, if the irregularity tend to affect results, it avoids the vote; and in Thompson v. Ewiny, 1 Brewst. 67, it is said that the whole conduct of the officers (though actual fraud be not apparent) may amount to such gross and culpable negligence, such a disregard of official duties, as to render their doings unintelligible or unworthy of credence, and the results of their action unreliable for any purpose.
In Piatt v. People, 29 Ill. 72, it is admitted that, if the irregularity cast uncertainty on the result, it is fatal. In reason and common sense, aside from authority, it must be so. In section 207, McCrary, Elect., the true rule is laid down from Duffy’s Case, 4 Brewst. 531: “In the case of Duffy the court laid down the rule that iucompetency, inefficiency and a reckless disregard of essential requirements of the law on the part of officers conducting an election, to such an extent as that their acts become unreliable, must of necessity work the same result as actual fraud.”
*14The case of Loomis v. Jackson, 6 W. Va. 613, was not under such a rigid statute as the late election act, and did not concern misconduct in the election of so vital a character as is involved in this case ; and even that case, with all its liberality in overlooking irregularities, concedes in point thirteen that, if the irregularity render the result uncertain, it can not be overlooked.
Perhaps no better concise rule has ever been given on the subject than that by Lord Mansfield in Rex v. Loxdale, 1 Burrows, 447, that the question whether a given statutory provision is mandatory or directory depends on whether that which is directed to be done is or is not of the essence of the thing required.
In People v. Shermerhorn, 19 Barb. 558, the Supreme Court of Hew York said statutory provisions are deemed directory only when they relate to some immaterial matter, where a compliance is matter of convenience rather than of substance. See Cooley, Const. Lim. 75.
Lord Campbell speaking of the many cases bearing on the definition of mandatory and directory statutes, said: “I believe, as far as any ruléis concerned, you can not safely go further than that in each caseyou must look to the subject-matter, consider the importance of the provision, and the relation of that provision to the general object intended to be secured by the act, and, upon a review of the case in that aspect, decide whether the enactment is what is called imperative or directory.” Howard v. Bodington, 2 Prob. Div. 211; Suth. St. Const. § 447.
"Was it not the special purpose by the provision for two clerks of opposite parties to prepare ballots to guard the voter against fraud, and thus secure au expression in the election of the real popular will, and give the candidate who is the choice of the majority his office? When we look at the importance of the provision, and see how intimately it concerns the main purpose — a fair election reflecting the people’s will — we can not help concluding that these provesions are imperative. How can we say that plain requirements to protect voter, candidate, and public are trivial and only directory ? Courts should be cautious in declaring provisions of the reformed ballot-act, seeing *15the great ills they were designed, to remove, and the desirable ends to be subserved, to be merely directory. We must not loose the reins and curbs made by the law against fraud upon the ballots of the illiterate, else the steed will run away with us. They relátelo the very essence of the purity of elections.
One fact single and alone is enough to set aside this precinct, and that is the fact that many ballots were pre-pai'ed by a person not a poll-clerk, without color of'authority. They were mere nullities, not ballots. They were not prepared by the voter, nor by two poll-clerks, not even by one. Should ballots prepared by any one, no matter by whom, be counted? I think not. Then, why count these ? Bor which of these candidates such ballots were voted we know not — -can not know. They leave the result iií a fog of uncertainty. It requires a great stretch of liberality to overlook these things, a liberality endangering the usefulness of the statute.
But it maybe said that though some of the officers acting in the election were no officers, and conceding that the statute directions as to the presence of two clerks in the preparation of ballots are imperative, still the complaining-candidate must show that ballots were falsified, and just how many and whose ballots were falsified. This is not so. He has the right under the law to immunity from danger. To require him to specify would impose a duty on him impossible of performance. TIow can he know whose ballots were corrupted? The ballot must not bear the slightest earmark to point to its depositor-. The secrecy of the ballot is sacred. The illiterate voter can not inform the wronged candidate, because that voter does not know, and the clerk will not expose an act which will commit him to the penitentiary, and the other clerk was not present. Once establish the doctrine that the complaining candidate must show fraud or falsification of ballots, and you give immunity to fraud. It makes no difference how gross the departure from the conduct of the election as required by law, it is harmless error only; it is presumed that nobody was hurt until proven. It is a free pass to fraud on the ballot, because the crime is hidden safely under the secrecy of the ballot, *16beyond proof or specification, in a great majority of cases.
Under the decision in this case, upon the evidence of the poll clerks alone, the purity of the election is established. Upon this principle, in any election, the very men who plan and perpetrate fraud upon the ballot may by their evidence make their fraud triumphant, and there is no evidence possibly obtainable to repel it and sustain the law. Under this construction, the prime objects of the late statute may be frustrated. If such irregularity as exists in this case will not sustain the charge of illegality of an election, I think it would be difficult to specify one that would. Here the objection is to the legality of the election, not to particular votes. Where the contest is based not on that but on a challenge of votes, of the votes specification is necessary; but, whei’e it is based on illegality of the election, the statute and reason require no specification of votes, but only grounds on which the charge of illegality rests. Code 1891, c. 6, s. 1.
“While mere irregularity, which does not affect the result, will not vitiate the return, yet where the provisions of the election-law have been entirely disregarded by the officers, and their conduct has been such as to render their returns utterly unworthy of credit, the return must be rejected. In such a case the returns prove nothing.” Mc-Crary, Elect. §476.
As showing how one thing may from its importance vitiate, while another will nqt, suppose we say that the action of Fowler, one of the extra clerks, in recording names of voters, would not hurt, because of the nature of the work he did, and because his record was tested by a duplicate, and under the eyes of the commissioners; but the nature of the work of a poll-clerk preparing ballots is of a wholly different cast, and there was nothing to correct it by, and uo one to discover it.
It is charged, in behalf of Dial, that the appointment of extra clerks was on a mere pretext of necessity, and it would seem from the number of votes polled before their appointment at the noon recess and the number afterwards that there was no necessity. It is charged that one of the extra clerks was chosen because a partisan of Hollandsworth, and *17two clerks of his party were put to the work of preparing ballots, and that these clerks were eager in their office, and would go unasked into the booths with voters, and often volunteer their services when not asked. The record does not make a showing above reproach in these matters, but gives evidence tending to sustain these claims. Still, the appointment of these clerks may have been bona fide, and tlieir entire action likewise. But the letter and spirit of the new and valuable election-law, made designedly rigid and exact as to the conduct of election, were violated, the door of wrong left open, the true result left uncertain and unreliable, • to say the least. I would therefore reverse the Circuit Court, and affirm the County Court, declaring Dial elected by the exclusion of Hart’s Creek precinct.
Circuit Court affirmed.