Rogers v. Walsh

POLLEY, P. J.

This is an election contest involving t’he right to the office of judge of the -municipal -court of the city of Lead. At -the regular city election held in that -city on the 20th day of April, 1915, the appellant, John PI. Rogers, the respondent, John Walsh, and Herbert E. Dewey were candidates for that office. When the -votes were canvassed, it was found that the candidates- had received the following number of votes respectively: Appellant 683; respondent 556; and Mr. Dewey 429. Neither of the candidate's having received a majority of all the votes cast, it was declared that no one had been elected, and a second election was called for the following Tuesday, April 27th. It m-ay be remarked that Lead City is a -commission governed city. At this second election appellant and respondent only were candidates, and received the following number of votes: Appellant 786; and respondent 979. The respondent was declared duly elected, and appellant, claiming that said election of April 27th had been held *602without authority of law, and was -therefore void and oí no effect, instituted this contest under the provisions of section 1988 and succeeding sections of -the Political Code to -determine who- -was entitled to- the office. In his “notice of contest” he- set out at length and with great particularity the facts upon which 'he -bases his contention. To this notice of -contest, respondent interposed a demurrer, upon the grounds: First, that the court had no- jurisdiction of the subject of the action; second, that there is a defect of parties -defendant; and, third, that the notice of contest does n-o-t state facts sufficient to- constitute a ground of contest or cause of action. The trial court sustained this demurrer, but with leave to ap-peliant to amend his said notice of contest. Appellant declined to so amend, and- judgment was entered dismissing -the contest. From this judgment and from an -order overruling appellant’s motion for -a n-ew tria-l, he appeals.

[1] While appellant has presented and argued a number of legal propositions, there is really but one question involved: Where there are more than two- candidates for the office of judge of municipal court in -commission governed cities, is a mere plurality of votes sufficient to elect, or does it require a majority of all the votes -cast? A solution of the question depends wholly upon- -the construction to be put upon the statutes relating to the election of candidates for this office.

The creation and manner of establishing municipal courts was provided for -by chapter 191, Laws of 1907. Th-e election of judges o-f municipal -courts is -provided for in section 7 of that act, as follows:

“Election of Judge. — In case the vote upon the establishment of said court shall be in the affirmative, the. judge of the court ■shall be elected at a special -city election to- be held on the next succeeding Tuesday in June and every four years thereafter, for the term of f-o-ur years, beginning on the first day of the month following the election and until his successor qualifies. Notice of such election shall be given and s-u-ch election shall be held and the result -thereof determined in the manner in which annual municipal -election are noticed- and held and the result thereof determined in such city. * * *”

By chapter 176, Laws of 1909, § 2, said section 7 was amended so as to read as f-o-llo-ws:

*603“Election of Judge. — In case the vote upon the establishment of said court shall be in the affirmative the judge of the court shall be elected at the next annual election to be held in said city and every four years thereafter at the annual election in such city, for the term of four years, beginning on the first Monday of the month following his election and until his successor qualifies. Notice of such election shall be given in the same manner and for the same period of time as notice of election for city officers, and the result of such election shall be determined in the same manner in all respects as in the election of city officers. * * *”

Section 1290, Pol. Code, relates to general municipal elections, and provides that the person receiving the highest number of votes for any office shall be declared elected. Section no, e. 86, Paws of 1907, as amended by section 13, c. 97, Laws of 1911, which relates to municipal elections in commission governed cities, provides as follows':

“If any person shall receive a majority of all the votes cast for candidates for the office for which he is a candidate he shall be declared elected. In case no candidate shall receive such majority of the votes there shall be held upon the Tuesday following such election a secondary election, at which secondary election the only persons voted for shall be the two candidates receiving the highest number of votes at the first election. Such secondary election shall be held at the same polling- places as the first election and the same persons shall act as judges and clerks at such secondary election and vacancies may be filled in the same manner • as is provided by law for the filling of such vacancies at the first election. Within forty-eight hours after the dosing of the polls at such secondary election the ballots shall be counted and returns made out and returned by the election judges, under seal, to the city 'auditor, and upon the Friday succeeding such secondary election the board of commissioners shall canvass such returns and declare the results of such secondary election and cause a statement thereof to be made on its journal. The person receiving the highest number of votes at such secondary election shall be declared elected. * * *”

It will foe noted that the words “in such city,” found in section 7, o. 191, Laws of 1907, as originally enacted, are omitted from that section as amended. Under the law as originally enact*604ed it is not questioned that the words “in such city” had reference to the city in which the election was being held; -but it is contended by appellant that, because of the omission of these' words from the amendment, it must be inferred that the election of municipal judge, whethér in a commission governed city or not, was to be held and determined under the provisions of the general law relating to municipal elections, and that, as provided by section 1290, Pol. Code, 'he, having received the highest number of votes cast at the election of April 20th, was duly elected and is entitled to' the office. In other words, appellant contends that the provisions of section no, c. 86, Laws of 1907, as amended by section 13, c. 97, Laws of 1911, do not apply to the office of municipal judge, and do not authorize the holding of a secondary election for that office. With this contention we cannot agree. In the first place, in the absence of express language showing- such an intent, we would be very reluctant to hold that the Legislature intended that the election of part of the officers of a city should be governed by one lawi while the election of other officers of the same city and elected at the same time should be governed by another law; and, in the second place, the various provisions of the law applying- to this subject, when read tog-ether, contain express authority for holding a secondary election when neither candidate receives a majority of all the votes -cast. By an examination of section 7, e. 191, Laws of 1907, as amended by section 2, c. 176, Laws of 1909, we find that the judge of the municipal •court in any city shall be elected -at the annual election to be held in “such city.” As this section relates to the election of judge of the municipal court, it would seem that the words, “such city,” as used therein, could refer only to the city in which the municipal court -is located; but, to remove any doubt as- to what city is meant, the Legislature expressly declared, by section 6, c. 191. Laws of 1907, that the word “city,” whenever used in that act, shall mean the city “in which the municipal court is established and organized.” This section has never been repealed nor amended, but applies with full force to section 7, as amended. The effect of this provision is that the word “city,” wherever it is used in section 7, should be followed and qualified -by the ¿lause “in which the municipal court • is established and organized.” If these words are read into the amended section 7 after the word “city,” *605wherever it occurs in that section, it would then read as follows:

“In case the vote upon the establishment of said court shall be in the affirmative, the judge of the court shall be elected at the next annual election to be held in said city, in zohich the municipal court is established and organised, and every four years thereafter at the annual election in such city in zohich the municipal court is established and organised for the term of four 'years, beginning on the first Monday of the month following his election and until his successor qualifies. Notice of such election shall be given in the same manner and for the same period of time as notice of election for city officers, and' the result of such election shall be determined m the same manner in all respects as in the election of city officers, of the city in zohich the municipal cowrt is established and organised, * * *”

This leaves no doubt of the legislative intent that section no, c. 86, Laws ;of 1907, as amended by section 13, c. 97, Laws of 1911, should apply to the election of judge of municipal court in commission governed cities.

[2] It was also urged that it would be a violation of' the provisions of section 1, art. 10, Const, of South Dakota, for the Legislature to provide that it should require a majority of all the votes cast to elect a judge of the municipal court in commission governed cities, while only a .plurality of votes was required in cities under the old form. This might well be worth 'considering if the amendment to section 23 of article 5 of the Constitution did not expressly provide that:

“* * * * In cities having a population of five thousand or over the Legislature may provide, in lieu of police magistrates, for-municipal courts the judges whereof shall be chosen in such manner as the Legislature shall prescribe. * * *”

It is therefor within the legislative power to make the election laws of commission governed cities applicable to the election of judges of the municipal courts in such cities; while the election laws of noncommission governed cities apply to the election of judges of -the municipal courts in those cities.

No one having received a majority of all the votes cast at the election of April 20th, it became necessary to hold the secondary election on the 27th. Respondent, having received the highest *606number of votes at this election, was legally elected, and is entitled to hold the office.

The demurrer was properly sustained, and the judgment and order appealed from are 'affirmed.