(after stating the facts). 'By the Initiative Act of 1917, it is provided that all political parties selecting their candidates for office through primary elections shall be subject to the provisions of the act, and that all primary elections for the nomination of county, district, and State offices, shall be held on the same day. Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 3757.
Another section of the act gives any candidate the right to contest the nomination by an action brought in the circuit court.
It further provides that the complaint ‘ ‘ shall be supported by the affidavit of at least ten reputable citizens and shall be filed within ten days of the certification complained of, if the complaint is against the certification in one county. Crawford & Moses’ Digest, § 3772.
Montgomery filed with his complaint an affidavit signed by ten persons, the body of which is as follows:
“Comes J. V. Herring, Bafe Stegall, J. J. Lingar, Sam Harris, Dave Timmons, Ewell Love, J. F. Simmons, Jas. M. Lewis, E. E. Gifford, W. B. Cox, S. J. Morgan, and C. H. Love, ten reputable citizens of said county, and State of Arkansas, and state under oath that the statements made in the foregoing complaint are true to the best of their knowledge, information and belief.”
Ferguson filed a motion to dismiss the complaint on account of the insufficiency of this supporting affidavit.
The court overruled tbe motion, and error is assigned to the action of the court in this regard.
"We do not agree with counsel in this contention. In Logan v. Russe-ll, 136 Ark. 217, the court held that under the above section the affidavits of ten reputable citizens need not be separate, but may be combined in one affidavit and made upon the belief of the affiants merely, without setting forth the facts upon which their belief is based.
The court also held that the affidavits are jurisdictional, and that the complant and affidavits must be filed within the time specified.
In the instant case, the affidavits were filed within the time required by the statute, and under the decision just referred to the affidavit was sufficient in form. That is to say, all the affiants signed the same affidavit, and it was not necessary to state the facts upon which their support'of the complaint rests.
But it is insisted that the affidavit is defective because it does not state that the affiants were members of the Democratic party, and that this was necessary under the statute. On the other hand, it is claimed that the statute does not prescribe that the affiants shall be members of the Democratic party. It is true that the statute does not so state in express terms, but we think such is the necessary implication from its language when considered with reference to the declared purpose of the statute.
In Simmons v. Terral, 145 Ark. 585, the court had the section under consideration and held that the word, “citizens,” as used in the section, is synonymous with the word, “electors.” The court said that the known object of the law was to prevent fraud in the exercise of political privileges, and that, inasmuch as these privileges are accorded by the act to electors only, it was clear that the word, “citizens,” as used in the act, was intended to be synonymous with “electors.”
Now the object of primary election statutes is to give the electors of recognized political parties the immediate control in the selection of their own candidates. Therefore, only those who are entitled to participate in the primary were directly interested in the election and could be said to be reputable citizens or electors within the meaning of the statute.
' The intent of the statute was to regulate party nominations by the vote of the electors of the respective parties, and only such electors are entitled to vote in the primaries. The statute provides for primary elections for the recognized political parties, and it was evidently intended that only those might participate in the primaries who belonged to the political faith of the party holding the election. If the framers of the act meant “reputable citizens” to he “electors,” it certainly meant electors who were entitled to vote at the primary election which was to he contested. Otherwise, the members of other political parties might sign the affidavits for the purpose of creating dissension or injuring the political party holding the primary.
It does not follow, however, that the complaint should have been dismissed, because the affidavit filed followed the language of the statute, and, under the decisions cited above;, this was all that was necessary. Of course, if it had been shown by proof that the affiants were not Democrats, this would have been fatal to the complaint under the decisions above cited; and the proceedings should have been dismissed for noncompliance with the statute. In our State the primary is the means of nomination of all officers, State, district and county, and the object of our primary statute was to provide a method whereby the partisan voter could express his choice for his candidate under the protection of the State by means similar in practice to the Australian ballot in use in the general elections. The framers of the act did not contemplate that the members of any other party than the one holding the primary should be permitted to vote in it or to participate in any contest under the provisions of the statute.
It is next insisted that the court erred in permitting Montgomery to amend his complaint. In his original complaint Montgomery alleged that certain illegal votes had been cast for his opponent in certain townships named in his complaint.
In his answer Ferguson alleged that certain illegal votes had been east for Montgomery in certain other townships named in his answer. During the progress of the trial it developed that certain illegal votes were cast for Ferguson in other townships than those named in either the complaint or answer, and Montgomery was allowed to amend his complaint so as to embrace these other townships.
We do not thinlc there was any error in this regard. As just stated, the statute recognizes the use of the political parties by the people, and its object was to enable the members of the recognized political parties to express their choice for a candidate to be nominated by their respective parties by means similar in practice to those used at the general elections.
In Govan v. Jackson, 32 Ark. 553, the court said that the real inquiry in election contests was as to whether the contestant or the respondent received the highest number of'legal votes, and was not confined to the ground specified in the contestant’s notice of contest.
So here the object of the pleadings was to produce a single issue, and that issue was whether or not certain illegal votes of a designated kind had been received at the primary election. The proceeding is entirely statutory. The act contemplates that there shall be a summary trial and disposition of the case to the end that if the contestant is successful lie may be voted for at the general election or, if the contest is not finally determined until after the general election, the term of office or a material part thereof shall not have expired.
It is impossible to state with precision the rule with regard to amendments of the pleadings. Much must be left to the discretion of the court, or the very object of the statute will be defeated. On the one hand, the contestant should not be allowed to make amendments which would necessarily unduly delay the trial of the contest, and on the other hand he should be allowed to make amendments in all cases where no such delay would result and where the amendment was made for the purpose of presenting the issues with due diligence,
As stated in Mann v. Cassidy, 1 Brewster’s Penn. Repts., p. 11, “The rule must not be held so strict as to afford protection to fraud, by which the will of the people is set at nought; nor so loose as to permit the acts of sworn officers, chosen by the people, to be inquired into without an adequate and well-defined cause. ’ ’
There is no provision in the act prohibiting amendments, and there is nothing in the record tending to show that the amendment would have unduly delayed the trial of the case. Therefore, we thinlc that the court did not err in allowing the amendment.
It is next insisted that the court erred in refusing to allow Ferguson to prove that certain Republicans were allowed to vote for Montgomery and in sustaining a demurrer to his answer in which the same fact was alleged.
In this contention we think counsel are correct. Except to the extent that jurisdiction is conferred by statute or that the subject has been regulated by statute, the courts have no power to interfere with the judgments of the constituted authorities of established political parties in matters involving party government and discipline, or to determine disputes within a political party as to the regularity of the election of its executive officers. 20 C. J., par. 158, p. 137. The rule as thus laid down was recognized and' applied by this court in Walls v. Brundidge, 109 Ark. 250.
Primary election laws were unknown under the common law. They are purely the creatures of statute, and every provision for contesting such elections is directed by statute. The same object is sought in allowing contests in primary elections as is sought in general elections, and that is to throw out illegal and fraudulent votes. It has been well said that the “contest of an election is- a remedy given to the people by petition for redress, when their suffrages have been thwarted by fraud or mistake.”
The weight of authority and the better reasoning is that the people by the Legislature or through an initiative act may recognize the existence of political parties, and within reasonable limits regulate the means by which partisan voters should be protected in exercising individual preferences for party candidates, which is the general purpose of the primary election law of this State. 20 C. J., par. 110, p. 113; 9 R. C. L., p. 1072, et seq.; State of Minn. v. Moore, 59 L. R. A. (Minn.) 447; State ex rel. Miller v. Flaherty (N. D.), 41 L. R. A. (N. S.) 132; Baer v. Gore, (W. Va.), L. R. A., 1917 B, p. 723; Waples v. Marrast (Tex.), L. R. A. 1917 A, p. 253, and Phillips v. Strassheim. (Ill.), 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1135.
It is contended by counsel for Montgomery that the ruling of the circuit court should be upheld because the statute does not prohibit Republicans from voting in a primary election held by the Democratic party.
Under the authorities cited the constituted authorities of the political parties have exclusive jurisdiction as to the regularity of primary elections except as taken away by statute. The Legislature may or may not prescribe tests of the right of voters to vote at- primary elections.
As we have already seen, the act under consideration recognizes organized political parties and provides that all primary elections for the nomination of county, district, and State officers shall be held on the same day. No one could logically assert that the framers of the act intended that any elector without any party belief whatever had the right to participate in said primaries because he might be a qualified elector within the meaning of our Constitution.
The act in question prescribes no tests for party affiliations. Therefore, the duly constituted authorities of the recognized political parties had a right'to prescribe the tests for the voters at the primary elections to be held by such political parties. To hold otherwise would be to destroy the usefulness of the act and to render it unreasonable in its application or practical effect.
As bearing on the question we refer to Rouse v. Thompson, 81 N. E. 1109, where the Supreme Court of Illinois, in discussing statutory regulations for securing fair primary elections, said that if the independent voter or voter affiliating with, an opposition party can vote at the primary election of a party with which he has no political affiliation and thereby control the nomination of a party which he will Vote against at the polls, the freedom of the primary election is destroyed. Again the court said:
“The object of holding a primary election by a political party is to select party candidates, and it is too plain for argument that no voter should be permitted to vote at the primary election of a political party unless he is a member of such party, and unless provision is made to prevent persons voting at a primary election for the candidates of a party who are not affiliated with such party, the whole scheme of nominating party candidates by a primary election would fail, because of being incapable of execution.”
In Logan v. Russell, supra, the court said that the provisions of the statute under consideration should receive a liberal interpretation so as to effectuate the wholesome purposes intended by its framers.
In McDaniel v. Ashworth, 137 Ark. 280, in an election case, in discussing the interpretation of the statutes, the court said:
“The whole subject was reviewed in the case last cited, and the doctrine was made plain that the duty of the courts in interpretation of statutes was to endeavor to ascertain from the language used the true intention of the lawmakers, and when that intention was- ascertained to disregard everything which was in conflict with that intention, and, if necessary, to omit words or substitute others so as to make the statute harmonize with the manifest will of the lawmakers.”
It is contended that our primary law takes away the right of political parties to prescribe the tests of persons voting at primary elections held by such parties. Reliance is placed upon section 3778 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest. It reads as follows:
“All laws or rules of political organizations holding primary elections providing for contest before political conventions or committees other than the proceedings herein provided shall he of no further force or effect. ’ ’
The avowed purpose of this section is to take away from political parties the right to provide rules regulating contests. It has no relation whatever to the tests required of the voters at the primaries held by such parties, and does not purport to deal with that question. This view is borne out by section 3791 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, which makes it a misdemeanor for a person to vote in the primary of a party which the voter does not adhere to or affiliate with.
It is also insisted that the courts have no right to review the action of the duly constituted authorities of the party in allowing the Republicans to vote.
The act was passed for the purpose of conferring jurisdiction on the courts over contests and this makes the contest proceeding a judicial action, and it is no longer merely a political question to be settled within the party. To hold otherwise would destroy the very purpose of the act, and render it abortive. It is our duty to construe the act to advance the remedy provided by the act, rather than to render it futile or unavailing.
■ This brings us to a consideration of the rules of the Democratic party in force at the time the primary election was held on the 10th day of August, 1920. They provide that none but Democrats shall participate in said election and that a Democrat is defined to be one who supported the nominees of the Democratic party in the preceding general election, or was prevented from attending the election by unavoidable cause. ¶
As we have already seen our primary law recognizes that there are different political parties in this State, and it is a matter of common knowledge that the Democratic and Republican parties are the two great rival parties, not only of this State, but throughout the United States. The word, “Republican,” therefore, has a well-defined meaning and indicates one who affiliates with the Republican party in contradistinction to the Democratic party, or any other political party. If a Republican should quit his own party and join another one, he would no longer be called a Republican. Therefore, when counsel for Ferguson alleged that Republicans had been allowed to vote for Montgomery and offered to prove that fact, they used words which were well understood by the people and which conveyed the meaning that they were not entitled to vote at a Democratic primary election.
But it is insisted that the offer of proof in this respect, was not sufficiently definite. We can not agree with counsel in this contention. We quote from the record the following:
Q. Four name is A. J. Edwards?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. You live in Sprada Township?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Did you vote in the primary election held on thé 10th day of August?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Mr. Edwards, what is your politics?
A. Republican. Black too.
Q. Did the judges challenge your vote, Mr. Edwards ?
A. No, sir. Nothing was said to me about it.
The record further shows that the attorneys for Ferguson offered to show that the number of Republicans set out in his answer voted in the primary election and voted for Montgomery. In his answer Ferguson sets out the number of Republicans that were allowed to vote for Montgomery and the townships in which they voted.
The court not only sustained a demurrer to this part of the answer of Ferguson, but refused to allow him to make the proof just referred to. Therefore, we think the offered proof was sufficiently definite and that the court erred in refusing to allow it to be introduced in evidence.
We are also of the opinon that under our primary act Ferguson did not lose his right to object to the Republican votes because he did not challenge the voters at the polls. Such a course would have required him to have kept watchers at each polling precinct, and this would have been too expensive and cumbersome. He might have pursued that -course and have caused the judges to have thrown out these votes. It is sufficient to say that the adoption of such a course bjr him is not required by the statute as a prerequisite to his right to contest the election on that account.
It is insisted that the court erred in not throwing out the votes of Pittsburgh Township and. in not allowing the parties to the contest to prove the number of votes in their favor in that township by parol evidence under the rule announced in Williams v. Buchanan, 86 Ark. 259, and cases cited, where the contest was under the general election law. The face of the returns shows that Montgomery received 183 votes and Ferguson 125 votes, or a majority of 58 votes for the contestee. The record shows that the ballots from his township were not numbered.
Section 3765 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, provides that the judges and clerks of the election should make a duplicate register of the names of each and all the electors in -the order in which they present their ballots, placing opposite each name its number in the manner prescribed by sections 3797 to 3802 regulating general elections, which provide that every ballot shall be numbered in the order in which it shall be received and the number recorded by the election officers on the list of voters, opposite the name of the elector who presents the ballots. The object is to prevent fraud, and it is the duty of the election judges and clerks to carry out the provisions of the act in primary elections as well as in general elections. When the ballot is numbered in the order in which it is received and the number is recorded on the list of the voters, the number opposite the name of the voter on the list will also appear on the ballot, and thus there is an identification of the ballot voted by each elector. The neglect to perform this duty is an evidence of fraud under the primary election act, but it is not conclusive evidence of fraud, and it does not necessarily follow that for the failure to comply therewith the vote of the entire precinct should be thrown out. Conflicting views have been expressed by the courts as to what circumstances will justify throwing out the entire vote of a township. Such a power necessarily belong’S to whatever court has jurisdiction to pass upon the merits of a contested election case, and it is such a dangerous power that it should be exercised only in an extreme case, that is to say, a ease where it is impossible to ascertain with reasonable certainty the true vote. McCrary on Elections, (4 ed.), section 523 and 20 C. J., par. 346, p. 249.
Section 3765 of the digest regulating primary elections also provides that each ballot shall be signed by the voter at the bottom thereof at a place which shall be •provided for his signature, and that if the voter is unable to subscribe his name the same shall be signed by one of the judges and attested by all of said judges. This provision is also designed to prevent fraud and serves the same purpose as numbering the ballots as prescribed by the statute. Thus the framers of the act designed to establish a double check against fraud. Both provisions should be carried out by the judges and clerks of the primary election.
In the present case it does not appear from the record that the judges and clerks failed to require the voters to sign the ballots, and it does not appear from the record that their failure to number the ballots as required by the statute was the result of fraud. The signature of the voter served to identify the ballots, and under the circumstances disclosed in the record we do not think the court erred in not discarding .the entire vote of the precinct.
Finally, it is insisted that the ouster section of the primary act is void because it is directed solely against the contestee or the defendant in the contest proceeding and brings the act within that class of statutes condemned generally as discriminatory and void. It is also claimed that, if not void, there can be no ouster of Montgomery under the statute because he was elected county judge at the general election in November, 1920, during the pen-dency of this appeal, and that the section does not apply to biro, because be was tbe contestant or plaintiff in tbe case in the court below, and that tbe statute only applies to tbe contestee who is the defendant in the circuit court. Counsel also point to tbe fact that in this court tbe parties are designated by statute as appellant and appellee and that Ferguson is tbe appellant here. Tbe section in question is 3776 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, and reads as follows:
“ Should a proceeding under §§ 3772-3773, or a criminal prosecution under § 3774, be not determined finally until after tbe election, and tbe defendant in such proceeding is elected to tbe office as tbe nominee of tbe party, and it is determined that be was not entitled to, tbe nomination, or tbe judgment contains a finding that be violated the laws, as provided in § 3774, then such judgment shall operate as an ouster from office, and the vacancy in it shall be filled as provided by law for filling vacancies in such office in case of death or resignation. ’ ’
We think that the word “defendant” as used in tbe section was not intended to be used in its strictly technical sense, but that it should be given a broader interpretation so as to carry out the act instead of destroying or crippling its usefulness. This court has already declared that tbe act “should receive a liberal interpretation so as to effectuate the wholesome purposes intended by its framers.” o
Again in McDaniel v. Ashworth, supra, in construing an act providing for the election of directors for tbe St. Francis Levee District, tbe court said that it was “tbe plain duty of the court, in tbe construction of statutes, to arrive at tbe legislative will and to sweep aside all obstacles in the way of accomplishing it.” When we consider tbe object and purposes of tbe statute, it is plain' that tbe word, “defendant” was used to denote tbe party who defends tbe suit when it was finally determined whether it was in tbe circuit court or in this court.
Tbe section provides in brief that, should a contest proceeding or a criminal prosecution be not finally determined until after the general election, and tbe defendant in the proceeding is elected as the nominee of the party, and it is determined that he was not entitled to the nomination, or that he violated the law, then snch judgment should operate as an ouster from office. The object was to prevent one illegally nominated and thereby securing an election at the general election from holding the office during the term provided by law or a material portion thereof, and thereby rendering abortive the contest proceeding.
In Duntan v. McCook, 94 N. W. 942, the Supreme Court of Iowa had under consideration a statute as follows:
“A defendant against whom a judgment has been rendered, or any person interested therein, having matter of discharge which has arisen since the judgment, may upon motion, in a summary way, have the same discharged, either in whole or in part, according to the circumstances, ” and it was there contended that the word “defendant” was used in its strict technical sense. But the court held that the word might refer to the plaintiff as well as the defendant, and said:
“By ‘defendant’ is meant the party against whom the judgment or decree has been entered, and not necessarily the defendant in the suit; and the term ‘judgment’ is employed in the statutory sense, being any ‘final adjudication of the rights of the parties in an action.’ ”
In Thayer, Petitioner, 11 R. I., p. 160, Amy Thayer sought to be discharged from imprisonment on an execution for costs awarded against her in an action of trover in which she was plaintiff and Mary M. Thayer was defendant. The court had under consideration the construction of a statute providing for an execution against the body, which was served by arresting Amy Thayer, the plaintiff, and said that “no reason occurs to us why plaintiff, whatever be the nature of the action, against whom judgment has been rendered for costs should be dealt with differently than if the judgment were for a debt.” We quote from the opinion the following:
"It will be perceived, by reference to the section mentioned, that no provision in terms is made for an execution against the body of a plaintiff, but only for an execution against the body of a defendant. The respondent’s counsel suggests that the word ‘defendant’ should be construed to mean the defendant in execution, and not merely the defendant in suit, and, therefore, to include a plaintiff against whom a judgment has been obtained by a defendant. We think the section susceptible of this construction, and are led to adopt it, because there is no other authority for an execution against the body of a plaintiff; and we can not suppose that the General Assembly did not intend to give a defendant, who has recovered judgment for costs, or for a balance due him upon a plea in set-off against a plaintiff, the same process to compel the payment of his costs or debt which the plaintiff, if successful, wou-ld have had against the defendant.”
For the error in refusing to admit the testimony with regard to the Republican votes alleged to have been cast for Montgomery, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new -trial.