The relator applied to the circuit court for mandamus requiring.the respondent to canvass the returns of the votes cast in the Fourth ward for the office of alderman, and to issue a certificate based upon such returns, the returns showing that relator received a majority of the votes cast. The petition alleged that the members of the common council, sitting as a board of canvassers, had entered upon a recount of the votes, assuming to act under Act No. 208, Pub. Acts 1887. The return to the application for mandamus showed that the recount proceeded in some of the precincts upon the application of relator. These precincts were not the ones in which it was claimed that the board of canvassers had thrown out votes sufficient to defeat relator, and elect his opponent. The circuit judge granted the writ, and the case is here for review on certiorari.
It is first contended that the action is premature, inasmuch as the petition failed to state that relator had demanded of the council that his certificate, based upon the face of the returns, issue. But it appears that the recount upon which the committee was engaged was not com*502pleted -until a late hour Saturday night. The regular meeting of the council was on Monday evening, and the petition of relator was filed Monday afternoon. If such a request had been presented, the council could have taken action upon the committee’s recount before the relator would have had an opportunity to present his application. We think it was within the discretion of the trial court to proceed without previous application to the board, if convinced that such request would not avail anything.
It is further claimed that the relator is estopped from questioning the regularity of the work of the committee, inasmuch as he himself petitioned for a recount in some of the precincts. A similar contention was made in Belknap v. Ionia Board of Canvassers, 94 Mich. 516, in which the relator had petitioned for a recount in the county of Kent, and his opponent had petitioned for a recount in the county of Ionia. It was contended that he could not question the recount in either of the counties, but it was said:
“It is, however, alleged that by the original returns relator was elected. His right, therefore, to a certificate, did not depend upon the recount in Kent, and the petition filed in Ionia county was not predicated upon nor rendered necessary by the recount in Kent. Mr. Richardson was in no sense misled or prejudiced by either the recount in Kent or the failure to object to the recount in Ionia, instituted by himself.”
We think that case decisive of this question.
Section 4, tit. 10, of the charter of 1877 (Act No. 282, Local Acts 1877), provides that “the common council shall be the judge of the election and qualification of its own members, and to decide upon and determine contested elections of members thereof.” It has been held in numerous cases that Act No. 208, Pub. Acts 1887, does not apply to a contest over an election to an office as a member of a body which, by law, is made the judge of the qualifications of its own members. This was held in *503Naumann v. Detroit Board of Canvassers, 73 Mich. 255, and was reaffirmed in Wheeler v. Manistee Board of Canvassers, 94 Mich. 448, and Belknap v. Ionia Board of Canvassers, Id. 516.
It is suggested that the present council is to be the judge of the election of the members of the body, and decide and determine upon contested elections. The reading of this clause would not indicate such a purpose. Title 2, § 20, reads as follows:
“The common council of the preceding year shall convene on the' Thursday next succeeding such election, at 2 o’clock in the afternoon, at their usual place of meeting, and the statement of votes filed with the clerk of the city by the inspectors of election shall be produced by said clerk, when the common council shall forthwith determine and certify, in the manner provided by law, what persons are duly elected at the said election to the several offices respectively.”
It is contended that this latter section confers upon the present council the authority not only to canvass the returns, but to determine what persons are elected to the several offices respectively, and that this implies the right to proceed in any manner provided by law, for the purpose of ascertaining what candidate has received the greatest number of votes. We think, however, that this section should be construed in connection with title 10, § 4, and, so construed, must be held to relate only to those officers the authority to adjudge and determine of whose election and qualification is not vested elsewhere, and that the case must be held to fall within Naumann v. Detroit Board of Canvassers, supra. Reference is made by counsel for respondent to the case of Weston v. Kent Probate Judge, 69 Mich. 600, where it is assumed in the opinion of the court that the preceding council is the judge of the election of the members of the new body. This was not a point in the case, nor was it a case in which the council had assumed to act under Act No. 208, Pub. Acts 1887. The single question in the case was whether, under Act No. 293, Pub. Acts 1887, the probate *504court had power to canvass the vote. It was held that such power did not exist, upon a ground entirely consistent with that announced later in Naumann v. Detroit Board of Canvassers, supra.
We think the order of the circuit court should be affirmed.