Gray v. Mount

Beck, J.

i coíístitustatutes not ' c&efswamp land fund. I. It is first insisted by plaintiffs that the submission of the proposition to the voters and their adoption thereof are illegal and void, because the election at which the popular will was expressed was sPecial- Relying upon Code, § 303, par. 24, they contend that questions of this kind can be submitted to the people only at a general election. This provision prescribes that the supervisors shall not order the construction of any public building exceeding in cost $5,000, until a proposition therefor shall have been submitted to and adopted by the voters at a. general election.

Under enactments relating to the swamp lands of the State and the appropriation of their proceeds by the counties, it is provided that, upon ah affirmative vote of the people, at any general or special election, upon a proposition submitted to them, the lands or proceeds arising therefrom may be devoted to the erection of county buildings and buildings devoted to the purposes of education. Revision of 1860, Chap. 47, title 7, § § 925, 957, 986, and § § 250, 251, Chap. 77, Acts Ninth Gen’l Assembly, and Chap. 135, Acts Thirteenth Gen’l Assembly. Counsel for plaintiffs maintain that these provisions are superseded and repealed by the Code. This position presents the only disputable question involved in this point of the case. If these statutes are in force the vote of the people upon the subject of the appropriation of the Swamp Land Eund may be had ata special election; if they are repealed, such vote must be at a general election.

We must inquire, then, whether these statutes are in force. They are not revised or incorporated in the Code. They are public in their nature and special in their provisions, for they apply to a special subject and none other. Their provisions, so far as the appropriation of the Swamp Land Eund is concerned, are applicable to no other fund or public moneys. They are special statutes applicable to the acquisition, dispo*594sition and sale of swamp lands, and the appropriation of their proceeds by the counties; they are public, because their subjects are public property and public funds. They are, then, public and special statutes.

Code, § 47, provides that “ all public and general statutes, passed prior to the present session of the General Assembly, and all public and special acts, the ■ subjects whereof are revised in this Code, or which are repugnant to the provisions thereof, are hereby repealed.”

The. statutes in question, being public and special, and the subjects thereof not being revised in the Code, as we have seen, are not repealed, unless their provisions are repugnant to enactments in the Code. But no such repugnancy exists, for there is not one word upon the subject of the appropriation of Swamp Land Funds found in the Code.

2. swamp priatSi¿nPox° election?60^1 The report of the commissioners for the revision of the statutes, whose work resulted in the preparation of the Code, expressl}" states that the statutes upon the subject of swamp lands and the Swamp Land Fund (Kev., Title 7, Chap. 47), were considered by them as local and obsolete, and were, therefore, not revised and incorporated in the Code. We reach the conclusion, therefore, that it was competent for the supervisors to. submit the question of the appropriation of the Swamp Land Fund to the voters at a special election.

3. —:-: pervisors. II. Plaintiffs insist that it was not competent for the supervisors to submit the question of the location of the county high school, or the question of the appropriation of the Swamp Land Fund to building a school-house to the voters of the county. They maintain that such power is conferred exclusively upon the trustees of the high school. But it is not claimed .that these trustees are clothed with the power of submitting questions of taxation or of appropriation of funds to the voters. While they may select the site of the school-house and demand and accept, or refuse, funds appropriated by the vote of the people to the purposes of the high school, this by no means requires us to hold that the submission of all questions upon which the *595people are authorized to vote, touching these, matters, cannot be made to the electors by the supervisors. Indeed, there is no other way pointed out by which the will of the voters may be ascertained. It is not shown that the trustees of the high school have chosen another location for the institution than the one named in the proposition submitted to the people, or that they will not accept the appropriation and devote it to the uses indicated by the vote. "We conclude that the objection under consideration is without force.

4 election: ?or outlay of money. III. The next matter urged against the validity of the proceedings is the union of two objects, and two separaté appropriations for distinct objects, in one propositi°n> s0 elector could not vote for one and against the other. We think this presents a fatal objection to the legality of the proceedings.

The question to be submitted to the voters was not simply • whether it was their will to appropriate the fund; but there must be an object for the appropriation in order to constitute the proposition to be voted upon. The object is of the essence of the proposition. This cannot be denied. The appropriation for a given object is the proposition submitted. If there be two objects and a specified amount of funds to be devoted to each, it is very plain that there are two propositions submitted at the same election. If they are submitted together, it is very clear that the voter cannot vote for one and against the other. He must vote against both, whereby he may defeat one, the success of which he desires, or he must vote for both, whereby he may cause the success of one which he desires to be defeated. If he fails to vote he may thus aid in causing the defeat of his favorite measure, and the adoption of the one he opposes. He has thus no liberty of choice. The plan of submitting the questions, for there are two, resembles more the common device of an auctioneer in disposing of worthless goods, whereby a good article is mingled with them and made to draw bids, or the cunning tricks of gamesters to induce wagers of the unwary, rather than the open, direct and fair manner that always should prevail in elections by the people. The very letter as well as the spirit of our election laws con*596demns this plan. It has never been heard,of that electors were, by any plan, denied the right of choosing one, and rejecting another candidate for office, to be voted for at the same election.

This very point, thie necessity of submitting to the electors distinct propositions for the outlay of money, so that they may exercise the liberty of choice in voting for one and against another, was presented in McMillan v. Boyles et al., 3 Iowa, 311, and decided in accord with the views we have just expressed. That case and this are not different as to the controlling facts in each. .In that case several propositions were submitted to the voters of a county at the same election, each for subscribing to the stock of a railroad company, other than those separately named in the other propositions, and the payment of the stock by bonds issued by the county. .There were thus three separate and distinct propositions. But it was a condition of the submission that no subscription should be made to either railroad unless there should be a majority of votes for each proposition. The result was that a vote against one was really counted-as a vote against all. The voter could not exercise freedom of choice in voting for one and against another. The proceedings and the adoption of all the propositions in this manner were held invalid. We are able to make no distinction in the controlling fact of that case and of this. It is in both the same, namely: the voter is deprived of the liberty of voting against one proposition without giving a negative ballot to 'all. Indeed, the case before us is, if possible, more objectionable in its facts than McMillan v. Boyles et al. In that case the elector could vote upon the separate propositions; in this he could not.

The decision in the case just cited is supported by the most satisfactory reasons, presented in a clearly expressed opinion. It is not proper to repeat the argument of the learned Justice announcing the decision of the court. It is sufficient to say that we adhere to the conclusion reached therein.

•The learned and ingenious counsel for defendants points *597out, perhaps successfully, that a part of the argument found in the opinion in McMillan v. Boyles, is not applicable to this case. This may be admitted, for our present purpose, without inquiry into the correctness of the positions. But it is quite clear that the argument taken in hand by counsel was not wholly relied upon by the court. Indeed, it is used in the.opinion, as it is there stated, simply to strengthen the views advanced therein. We would not feel our confidence in the conclusions we adopt at all shaken were we fully to admit the positions of counsel in reference to that argument. Indeed, we may say that we are prepared to rest our conclusions upon the reasons we have announced, together with .those found in McMillan v. Boyles which counsel has not assailed.

It is our conclusion that, for the defects above pointed out, the proceedings against which plaintiffs seek relief are invalid: The relief, therefore, should have been granted.

Reversed.