The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Mr. Chief Justice McIver.This is an application addressed to this Court in the exercise of its original jurisdiction, praying that a writ of certiorari be issued, directed to the board of State canvassers, requiring them to send to this Court all papers, proceedings, and records, connected with the election for judge of probate for Dorchester County, in order that this Court may examine the same, and see if there is any error in the action of -said board in declaring one Joseph R. Stopplebein elected to said office of judge of probate for Dorchester County. In accordance with the prayer of the petition, the writ of certiorari was issued. The board of State canvassers made their return thereto, which was not traversed, and the case was heard upon the petition and return.
Without going into any detailed statement of the various allegations in the petition and return to the writ of certiorari, it will be sufficient to state only so much thereof as is necessary for a proper understanding of the questions presented in the argument, necessary to be considered in the decision of the case. It appears that, on the 22d day of May, 1897, an election was held for the election of a State senator, and for the various county officers, for the county of Dorchester, in pursuance of the provisions of an act establishing said county, approved 25th of February, 1897 — 22 stat., 595. At that election, it seems that the petitioner, R. C. Riggs, and the said Joseph R. Stopplebein, were opposing candidates for the office of judge of probate. On the Tuesday following said election, to wit: on the 25th of May, 1897, the board of county canvassers met and proceeded to canvass the votes cast at said election; and while engaged in performing said duty, the said Stopplebein ap*300peared and gave notice that he contested said election upon the several grounds stated in his written protest then presented. The board of county canvassers, however, made a statement of the votes cast at said election, showing that the petitioner had .been elected to the said office of judge of probate, and they so declared. Thereupon the said Stopplebein appealed to the board of State canvassers upon the various grounds set forth in the record. The board of State canvassers met on the 1st of June, 1897, “for the purpose of canvassing the returns and declaring the result of the election held in Dorchester County on the 22d day of May, 1897.” At this meeting, both parties — Riggs and Stopplebein — were present, represented by counsel. Upon examination of the report from the county board of canvassers, it was found that the only statement relative to the protest and contest of Mr. Stopplebein, was a statement signed by P. H. Hutchinson., chairman of the board, of which the following is a copy: “St. George’s, S. C., May 25th, 1897. To the State Board of Canvassers, Columbia, S. C. — Gentlemen: At the meeting of the county board of 'canvassers for Dorchester County, held this day, the board determined to declare the result of the election upon the face of the returns of the managers, without hearing the protest and contest of General Stopplebein, the papers of which were regularly served upon us. Very respectfully, P. H. Hutchinson, Chairman.” The record of the proceedings of the board of State canvassers, sent up with their return to the writ of certiorari, then shows the following: “After hearing counsel for contestant and contestee as to the jurisdiction of said board to hear and determine the contest,” a resolution was adopted: “That the papers in the Dorchester County contest case be remanded to the county board of canvassers, with the request that they act as the law in such cases require, and hear and act upon the said contest,, and return all the papers to the State board of canvassers on or before Tuesday, June 15th, 1897.” Pursuant to adjournment, the board of State canvassers met on the 15th of June, 1897, when the follow*301ing communication to that board was read: “We, the undersigned, the county board of canvassers for Dorchester County, responding to your resolution of June 1st, instant, in the matter of the appeal in the contested election case of Joseph D. Stopplebein, contestant, against D. C. Riggs, contestee, begs to return to you all papers therein, which you remanded to us, and in connection therewith, we respectfully report: 1. That we have not again passed upon the contest of Joseph R. Stopplebein, for the reason: 1st. That we had done so at our previous meeting held on May 25th, 1897, at which meeting we had declared R. C. Riggs elected to the office of judge of probate for Dorchester County. 2d. The statutory limit of ten days having expired, we no longer have power to act upon the contest in the case.” It is also added in this communication, by way of explanation of the letter of Hutchinson, as chairman, above copied, that the same was signed after the board had adjourned, and after one of the members had left, “at the earnest solicitation of Joseph R. Stopplebein, he stating that the same was a mere matter of form, and could do no harm;” and that the other member of the board, J. J. Hutto, upon being consulted, “stated that the chairman could sign it if he liked, but that he (Hutto) would not do so, and declined to do so.” The communication goes on to state that the said Stopplebein, at the meeting of the board of county canvassers on 25th of May, 1897, did not present, or offer to present, any other proof of his allegations in support of his protest, except the' two affidavits with regard to the Ridgeville precinct, both of which were received and sent up with the other papers in the case. This communication was signed by Hutchinson, chairman, and Hutto.
From this action of the board of county canvassers, the said Stopplebein again appealed. After some discussion by the board as to whether any new matter should be introduced, a number of affidavits were read, some of which appeared to be in favor of contestant and some in favor of contestee. After the matter was fully argued by counsel *302for the respective parties, the board of State canvassers resolved: “1st. That all papers not sent up by the board of county canvassers be excluded from consideration. 2d. To count the ballots and throw out all that did not come up to the requirements of the law.” Accordingly the ballots were thoroughly canvassed, and the result was declared, amongst other things, that Joseph L. Stopplebein had received the highest number of votes for the office of judge of probate for Dorchester County, and was, therefore, elected to said office. The board of State canvassers, in their supplemental return, state “that the grounds upon which they exclude certain ballots, in canvassing the ballots sent up to them by the board of county canvassers, were because the ballots so excluded were contrary to the requirements of section 169 of the Revised Statutes of 1893, in respect to size, and were not without ornament, designation, mutilation, symbol or mark of any kind whatsoever, except the name or names of the person or persons voted for, and the office for which such person or persons were intended to be chosen, as required by said section — all of which will sufficiently appear by reference to the original ballots heretofore returned to this Court.”
1 This being the state of the case, the only question for this Court to determine is, whether there was any error of law in the action of the board of State canvassers, as set forth in their original and supplemental return. We need not incumber this opinion with the discussion of several questions which have been touched upon in the argument — for example, whether this Court has jurisdiction to issue the writ of certiorari, as prayed for in this case — for we do not understand that our jurisdiction is questioned; because, whatever doubt might have arisen under the provisions of the Constitution of 1868, which was discussed in the case of Ex parte Childs, 12 S. C., 111, the provisions of the present Constitution are quite sufficient to remove any such doubt.
*3032 *302Nor need we discuss the question (if, indeed, it could be *303regarded as a question), whether an appellate tribunal can hear additional testimony to that which was presented to the tribunal from which the appeal is taken; because it distinctly appears in the return of the board of State canvassers that, though additional affidavits were read upon the hearing of the appeal, yet it likewise distinctly appears that the said board expressly resolved “that all papers not sent up by the board of county canvassers be excluded from consideration.” So that the record before us fails to furnish any basis for one of the grounds of error imputed to the board of State canvassers; for instead of showing that the board of State canvassers either considered or acted upon any new or additional evidence, the record shows, on the contrary, that the said board considered and acted only upon the papers sent up to them by the board of county canvassers.
3 The only question, therefore, for us to determine is whether there was any error of law in the action which they took. This question is narrowed down to the inquiry, whether the board of State canvassers erred in rejecting all ballots which did not come up to the requirements of sec. 169 of the Rev. Stat. of 1893, which, having been sufficiently stated in the quotation hereinbefore made from the return, need not be repeated here. No question is made, and none could have been made, that many of the ballots sent up to the board of State canvassers by the board of county canvassers did not come up to the requirements of» the section of the Rev. Stat. above referred to, as the original ballots accompanying the return of the board of State canvassers, some of which were exhibited to the Court at the hearing, very plainly showed that fact; and, therefore, the only remaining inquiry is whether there was error in rejecting and refusing to count such ballots. In view of the express provisions contained in sec. 169 of the Rev. Stat, we do not see how there can be any doubt upon this point. That section, after providing that the voting shall be by ballot, and describing what such ballot *304shall be, concludes with these words: “And no ballot of any other description found in any election box shall be counted.” In the face of this explicit declaration of the legislative will, we. are unable to see how any officers, entrusted with the duty of canvassing the votes cast at an election, or how any court can dispense with this express requirement. The law-making power having declared that voting shall be by ballot, and having prescribed the form of such ballots, and, what is more important, having in unmistakable terms forbidden a ballot, which is not in the prescribed form, from being counted, we cannot hold that the board of State canvassers committed any error in obeying this express mandate of the body entrusted with the power to make the laws. We have neither the power nor the disposition to inquire into the wisdom or policy of such a law, for ita lex scripta est is sufficient for us, and concludes further inquiry. It is true, that counsel for petitioner, in his argument, has cited several cases from other States, which seem to support his contention, that such a provision of a statute is to be regarded as directory merely, and not mandatory; but we are not informed as to the provisions of the statutes which were thus construed in those decisions, and cannot, therefore, say whether those cases would be applicable to a statute containing such explicit provisions as our statute does. In any event, however, those cases are not binding on us, and we are not willing to accept them as either authoritative or correct constructions of the very plain provisions of our statute.
We must, therefore, conclude that there was no error in the action of the board of State canvassers; and hence the application of the petitioner must be dismissed.