At the city election in Charleston, March 11, 1901, Ham Morris and Will W. Wertz were competing nominated candidates for the office of recorder, and the returns showing a tie vote between them, Morris demanded a recount of the ballots, and while that recount was in progress before the city council as a canvassing board the board rejected certain ballots entirely from the recount, because all the candidates appearing to have been voted for were not in the same column on the ballot sheet, this being so as to these two candidates, and Morris applied to. this Court for a writ of mandamus to compel the council to count such rejected ballots and all similar ones that had not been acted on as yet as to said office.
The question is, must the names of all the candidates for whom a voter intends to vote be found in one column of the ballot sheet, or may one name be in one column, another in another column, and still another in another column? Certainly the popular understanding and construction of our election statute first enacted in 1891, known as the “Australian Election Law,” has been that all names of those candidates voted for must be found in one column. Such has been the uniform construction of it by the ballot commissioners acting under section 44 of that act, in their official instructions to voters previous to elections, *253posted at tbe polling places. Such has been the construction of it by the executive committees of the political parties. Is that construction wrong or right ? We have concluded that it is right. Section 34, chapter 3, Code 1899, provides that the sheets to contain election ballots shall have separate columns, that is, printed ballots, side by side for the printed names of candidates, one column for each political party, containing the printed name of its nominated candidates. The head of each column is to be distinguished from the other column by having in bold type the name of the party to whose candidates it is assigned. The section provides that the names .of all candidates of a given party shall go in the column assigned that party, and it says that no other name shall go in that column. So far the purpose to have distinct columns is clear. This direction must have some meaning, else it would not be so distinctly given. Another feature of section 34 is, that under the name of a candidate printed in the ballot shall be left a blank space half an inch wide, and in immediate connection the section says that “a voter desiring to erase the name of any candidate from the ballot he intends to vote, or to vote for any other candidate or person in his stead, may strike out the name so printed on the ballot, and write-in the blank space next following the name of the candidate or person for whom he so desires to vote.” Now, here we see that the legislature contemplated that a voter would and should select from the various columns of ballots on the sheet that column representing, either wholly or in the main, his preference, and having done this, the legislature contemplated that the ballot selected might not wholly suit the voter in its printed names; that he might want to erase a name there printed, and substitute one found elsewhere on the ballot sheet, in a ballot of some other party, or a person unknown to any ballot, and therefore the section gives him right to so erase a name from the ballot which he has selected, and write in it another name in such blank space. Thus, the statute in plain terms tells the voter that he must write that other name in that blank space. When the section tells the voter to write this new name in a particular spot, it is plain that it does not mean that he may write it in another .spot, or leave it in another column. This goes far to manifest a specific legislative intent that one ballot on the sheet, and only one, shall be used by the voter, else why does the statute tell him to erase one name from “the ballot he intends to vote,” meaning that particular selected bal*254lot, and write in the name be prefers? This operation is confined to that particular ballot. The voter is not told to leave the preferred name on another ballot if printed there, or to write it on another ballot, and that this will do if -his intent is plain but confines his change of name to the “ballot he intends to vote.” If the design was, after such specific direction, to save the vote notwithstanding the departure from the rule prescribed by the statute on account of the plain intent of the voter, we might expect some provision to thajfc end. There is no such provision. But this is not all that we see reflected in section 34. When the voter has so selected from all the ballots on the ballot sheet “the ballot he intends to vote,” and has changed it to suit his will, he is commanded by the section to destroy or cancel in one or the other of two particular modes every other ballot on the sheet. This shows that it was the design that the voter use only one ballot, because he is told to select one, to change that one if he wishes, and change it in a particular Avay, and then destroy all others. The section then closes by saying that “if more than one of said ballots have nothing on them to indicate which of them was not so voted, then neither of them shall be counted;” that is to say, if the voter does not put marks of cancellation on all the ballots except the one he selects, his vote is lost. This clause is prohibitive and mandatory. It shows further that he is to use one ballot onlyall others, are to be destroyed, else he is voiceless. The voter cannot be heard through a second ballot. This closing clause goes to show it and is alone conclusive. The ballots once on the sheet have perished, except the one selected, and arc as non-existent as if never printed on the sheet. If two ballots do not have the defacing marks to indicate their rejection, if two are uncañceled, the voter has not voted. How, then, can there be two ballots used by him? For want of cancellation marks the statute says they,shall not be counted. The statute says that certain signs of cancellation shall be used either by drawing one or more lines with pen and ink or indelible pencil, through the heading of the ticket or “from the top to the bottom thereof,” that is the ballot. Now, how can the voter draw a line partly through a ballot, leaving a name or names on it intact, when the statute tells him to draw the line clear through every name? He cannot erase a ballot in any other mode than that pointed out by the statute. Other marks have no legal significance. Parvin v. Winberg, 130 Ind. 561; Whittam *255v. Zahorick, 91 Ia. 23. And if be uses a cross or lines at the head of the ticket, or more properly speaking the ballot, the legal effect is the same as the line clear through the ballot. The section does not provide for-parts of different ballots to make np the voter’s ballot. Section 34 specifically directs, as just shown, how the voter shall prepare his ballot, and then section 57 says that he shall take his ballot sheet when handed to him by a poll clerk and go into the booth, and “shall prepare his ballot as provided in section 34.” Here is an emphatic command to follow section 34. Thus, it seems plain that the law-makers have directed that the voter shall use only one of all the ballots printed 'on the ballot sheet. As to this I have no trouble. The only question of difficulty is, whether this direction of the statute is merely directory or mandatory. Does disregard of it wholly reject the vote? If the voter selects the Republican ticket, but erases the name of Wertz, and does not write in the blank space the name of Morris for recorder, but leaves his name unerased on the Democratic ballot, and erases all other names on it, or vice versa, is the vote null? We liave come to the conclusion that the ■statute is mandatory, because the mode of voting is definitely prescribed by the act, and it should be followed. To hold otherwise we must disregard the statute. We can ^answer this question only by the statute. In the well considered and notable case of Taylor and Marshall v. Beckham, 178 U. S. 577, the unquestionable law is stated thus: “Our system of election's was unknown to the common law and the whole subject is regulated by constitutions and statutes passed thereunder.” As we have said the legislature intended only one ballot, and shall this Court repeal that statute in so grave a public matter as elections^ when the legislature has been so minute and precise and detailed in this elaborate law of elections? It was intended as, and it is, a valuable reform made to cure ills revealed by time in the most important matter connected with government, and a court ought to be cautious before frittering it away by surmising and guessing that this provision-was meant, and this was not meant to be binding. In People v. Board, 129 N. Y. 395, the court says: “The right to vote secured to the citizen by the constitution must be exercised in the manner and subject to the regulations as to time and method lawfully prescribed by the legislature.” So said this Court in the opinion in Rader v. Halstead, 27 W. Va. 808. Cooley Con. Lim. 168, says’: “The moment a court ven*256tures to substitute its own judgment for that of the legislature iu any ease where the constitution has vested the legislature with power over the subject, that moment it enters a fi'sld where it is impossible to set limits to its authority and where its discretion alone will measure the extent of its interference. The judiciary cannot run a race of opinion upon the point of reason and expediency with the law-making power.” “And where a statute limits a thing to be done in a particular form, it includes in itself a negative, viz: that it shall not be done otherwise.” 1 Kent. Comm. (5 Ed.) 467, note. Lord Mansfield’s test of whether a statute is mandatory is: “Whether a statute is mandatory or not depends upon whether the thing directed to be done was of the essence of that required.” Rex v. Loxdole, Burrows 44. In this case it is not only the essence of the thing that is required by the statute, but the very thing itself. Justice Thompson of the United States Supreme Court said: “Affirmatives in statutes that introduce new laws imply a negative of all that is not in the purview. So that a law directing a thing to be done in a certain manner implies that it shall not be done in any other manner.” U. S. v. 1 Case of Hairpencils, 1 Paine 406.
Having stated these general principles let us speak of election laws to see how far they are to be regarded as mandatory or directory. It was said in oral argument in this case, and it seems correct, that our election statute was largely taken from the Missouri statute. That statute required the voter, as we think ours does, to scratch out all the groups or columns save one, and to make all his changes on that one. A voter failed to scratch out all the columns. The court held that the statute in requiring the voter to erase all the groups and columns except one and make all changes on it, was mandatory, and if not complied with the vote should be rejected. The Missouri act said that “He shall cross out the groups he does not wish to vote.” Our statute requires the voter to select his ballot which as here used means column, and erase the name of any candidate for whom he does not wish to vote, and write in the blank space below it the name of the person for whom he votes, and by mandatory language directs that every other ballot shall be defaced, and section 57 commands him to prepare his ballot as required by section 34. Our statute is as peremtpory as the Missouri statute. Hope v. Flentge, 140 Mo. 390. In my judgment this Missouri case is potential in this case. In Kirk v. Rhodes, 46 Calif. 407, *257the court says: “There are, however, other requirements df the code within the power of the elector to control, and these if wil-fully disregarded should cause his ballot to be rejected.” Objections to the features of ballots not under the control of voters, as for instance the size and color of the paper, would be different. McCrary on Elections, s. 503, commenting on this California case, says: “The court held, and we think upon the soundest reason, that as to those things over which the voter has control the law is mandatory, and that as to such things as are not under his control, it should be held to be directory only.” In Pennington v. Hare, 60 Minn. 150, the court said: “There is a clear distinction between the provisions and prohibitions in election laws which are personal to the elector, which if he violates them it is his own fault, and those which apply to the election officers, over whose conduct he has no control. In the former case they are to be construed as mandatory as a general rule and his vote will be rejected,if he intentionally fails to comply with them, while in the latter case they are to be construed as directory, unless otherwise expressly or by necessary implication so declared by statute.” In Little Beaver Township School Directors Election, 165 Pa. St. 237, the court said: “In so far as the mode of voting is thus specifically prescribed by the act all other modes are, by necessary implication, forbidden. Expression unius, exclusio est dtterius. The ordinary rule, as has been expressed by recognized airthority, is that where power has been given to do a thing in a particular way, then affirmative words, marking out the way, by necessary implication prohibit all other ways.” In the case of People v. Board, 129 N. Y. 395, 426, the court said: “Can it be seriously contended that voters may knowingly refuse obedience to the conditions imposed by law and still claim that their votes shall be counted as lawful ballots ? Such a result would transform the elaborate scheme, adopted as a reform measure, into an elaborate farce calculated only to embarrass and hamper the citizen without adding a line or word to the statute looking to the disqualification of illegal and fraudulent voters or the purification of elections.” In State v. McElroy, 44 La. Ann 796, 16 L. R. A. 278, an act required the names to be printed, and a ballot from which printed names were erased and written ones inserted was rejected, because the language of the act relative to printed ballots was held to be mandatory, “the legislative intent must be *258taken as expressed by the words the legislature has used.” In many states the voter is not confined to one of the ballots on the ballot sheet, but he can vote for any candidate upon any ballot by marking with a cross at the place and in the manner prescribed by the statute to show the person voted for. Placing this mark is the voter’s work, as under our statute is the choice of 'the ballot, the erasure of a name and the substitution of another in ihe specified blank under the erased name. In states where the voter may thus vote on different ballots many eases have arisen. In Lay v. Parsons, 104 Calif. 662, the court said: “The law requires the voter to mark his ballot by means of a stamp by putting a cross opposite the name of each candidate thereon for whom he intends to vote. This provision is mandatory, and no other method will satisfy it.” In Parker v. Orr, 158 Ill. 617, the court says: “It logically follows that the voter’s intention must be manifested by a cross substantially in the place designated, which the judges of elections or the court on a recount can see was an honest attempt to follow the law.” In Parvin v. Winberg, 130 Ind. 564, the following propositions were laid down, and they have important import in this case: “1. A construction of the election law accepted and acfed upon by the officers of election whose duty it is to administer the law should not be ignored by the courts unless it is palpably wrong.” (This, gives force to the construction by ballot commissioners of our act under section 44).
“3. An elector must vote in the manner prescribed by law. If an elector does not choose to indicate his choice in the manner prescribed by law, he cannot complain if his ballot is not counted.”
“4. Australian System. Stamping ballot. An elector cannot indicate his choice in any other manner than by stamping one of the squares of his ballot with the stamp; and he cannot stamp his ballot elsewhere and leave the election board to guess his intention.”
In Whittam v. Zahorick, 91 Iowa 36, it is held: “Whether a ballot should be counted does not depend solely upon the power to ascertain and declare the choice of the voter, but also upon the expression of that choice in the manner provided by the statute. In that respect the statute has made a radical change in the law. The only mark which is recognized as competent to express the choice of the voter is a cross, and it is not only neces*259sary to use a cross, but it must be placed at the appropriate margin or place. * * * * It is not enough that the intent of the voter is clear; it must be expressed in the manner provided by law.” In Van Winkle v. Crabtree, 34 Ore. 462, it is held: “The construction of the election act generally known as the Australian Ballot Law relating to the space in which the marking of the ballots shall be done are mandatory, although there is no provision rendering void a ballot not marked in the prescribed planner.” In Martin v. Miles, 46 Neb. 772, it was held that the provision of the Australian Ballot Law for the expression of the 'voter’s intention by a mark opposite the name of the candidate is mandatory, and the manner so prescribed exclusive of all others. The court said: “Adjudications directly in point are not numerous, but the views here expressed harmonize with the decided weight of judicial expression, if indeed there exists any diversity of opinion on the subject,” citing cases. The same doctrine of the necessity of complying with the statute is found in Flynn’s Case, 181 Pa. St. 460. and Kelley v. Adams, 183 Ill. 195. In Apple v. Bancroft, 158 Ill. 649, it was held that: “The statute, must be substantially complied with. To permit the voter to substitute some other method of his own of making his ballot express his choice for the one provided would practically nullify the_ statute. It would not only lead to uncertainty in ascertaining the voter’s intention, but would destroy the secrecy of the ballot by means of distinguishing marks by which the ballot of each voter could be identified.” In Attorney General v. Glazer, 102 Mich. 415, it is laid down: “Exhibit P. is rejected simply because the intent to vote the ticket is not expressed in the statutory mode, though the mark is made at the point' designated by the statute. These differences of opinion are liable to arise unless the rule is adhered to that whatever marks are placed upon the ballot must be those designated by the statute and made where it indicates they should be made.” In Richardson v. Jamison, 55 Kan. 16, we read that the provisions of the statute known as the Australian Ballot Law concerning the marking of ballots are mandator}'', and must be substantially complied with by the voter to have his vote counted. In Curran v. Clayton, 86 Me. 53, the doctrine laid down in Parvin v. Winberg, 130 Ind. 564, is approved and the statute was held mandatory, and it is emphatically held that the voter must follow the statute. In Vallier v. Brakke, 7 S. D. 360, the court said; “There was *260much discussion on the argument as to the duties of judges of election and courts to carry out the intention of the voter. . This is true to a certain extent; but as the legislature has required the elector to express his intention by certain well defined markings upon the ballot, his intentions must be determined by these markings,, a.nd not by the uncertain and undefined ideas of judges of election or courts as to his intention. The legislature has clearly and precisely defined the manner in which the elector may designate the candidates for whom he desires to vote, and has prescribed definite and fixed rules to govern the voter in designating candidates. The system is simple, and there is no difficulty in the electors complying with the rules. In our view it is neither the duty of judges of election nor courts to fritter away the benefits of the system by strained efforts to get at the intention of the voter in any manner other than by following the' rules prescribed by the legislature. If the elector does not take interest enough in his vote to follow those simple rules, he can complain of no one if his vote is not counted. A system so simple and plain, and which can be comprehended by any elector of ordinary intelligence in a few minutes, must be followed.”
Under these authorities I think I may ask whether the plain requirement of our statute that the voter shall select one ballot only is not mandatory; and whether that provision that he shall place a substituted candidate’s name in a particular place, the blank space under the erased name, is not also mandatory; and whether that provision which requires him to erase all ballots but one by drawing a line through them continuous from top to bottom is not also mandatory. Counsel for defendants appropriately ask: “If the above enumerated provisions are not mandatory then what provisions are? If these provisions can be ignored by the voters at their mere will, what of the other provisions must they observe ? If one voter can prepare his ballot in a way other than that prescribed by the statute, then every other voter can do so, and the result would be that every voter is a law unto himself and confusion worse than, confounded would come about, and election officers would have no rule to pass upon the validity of a ballot, but would simply determine the result of elections by guessing, largely influenced in such guessing by party predilections or favoritism as to candidates. The whole scheme and scope of a carefully considered law making most ample, complete and- particular provision as a reform *261measure would be cast aside.” If I am asked what harm'can it do to let a vofer use parts of several ballots ? I will answer that there is no danger of the voter mistaking or omitting to carry out his real intent by letting him wander and grope through numerous long columns of candidates covering a large ballot sheet, than by con^ning him to one ballot column. His attention is then fixed and located alone upon that column. I answer further, what is of more serious consideration yet, that the officers of election at the various precincts are to go wandering over that large sheet to glean the intention of the voter, and the officers at one precinct will be of one opinion as to intent of the voter, wfyile officers of another precinct will be of a different opinion. It introduces uncertainty; puts us at sea. But in addition to all this the legislature has written its purpose in a new law tliat is recognized all over the country as a great reform of the ballot, and rigid though it is, it should be enforced.
The authorities cited above afford strong warrant for holding the statute mandatory in the respect in question, testing the matter only by the face of the statute, because the letter and frame of the statute seem to look so. But when we go outside the act to the journals of the legislature to get at its intention the construction above placed upon the face of the act is strongly confirmed, is made conclusive. As the bill passed the house of delegates it contained section 34 as now found in the statute. The senate substituted another section expressly providing that the voter could vote for any candidate on any of the ballots on the ballot sheet by designating the candidates by a cross. The house of delegates would not concur in this substituted section, and the result was a committee of conference, which reported in favor of the senate receding from its amendment, and the adoption of section 34 as it passed the house, and the legislature adopted this report, thus passing section 34 as it first passed the house and as it now is. Thus the legislature refused to let voters vote any name outside of one ticket. After this statute had been some two years in forcé so construed by the legislature, ballot commissioners and people, the legislature re-enacted the act, but made no change in this respect.
But counsel call our attention in behalf of the plaintiff to a provision of section 66 that “any ballot, or part of a ballot, from which it is impossible to determine the elector’s choice of candidates shall not be counted as to the candidate or candidates af*262fected thereby.” It is argued that this shows that if the elector’s choice can be seen, the ballot must be counted. Does this clause import that the voter need not use only one ballot, but may use parts of two or more ? I think not.' It means that when the whole of the one ballot which the voter has selected and voted is so uncertain that its intent cannot be gleaned, the whole ballot shall be rejected; and that when any part of that ballot shall be so uncertain as to a candidate, that part relating to him shall be rejected. Eeflect that this clause relates only to the ballot found in the box when the count is to be made after the election. This clause never operates till then. It presupposes that there is but one ballot left on the sheet and that the others have all been «destroyed. Can we suppose that the legislature, after plainly providing for only one ballot, containing all the candidates, would turn around and provide for numerous parts of ballots ? Such a provision would not harmonize with the scheme of regulation prescribed by the act. If the voter has complied with the law, he has left only one ballot in the box, and that is the ballot referred to in the clause in question. That clause only says that when that one ballot is opened it must have the legal certainty, required. The clause -is not telling how many ballots the voter may use. Section 34 tells that before the election. This clause has a different office. It simply defines what certainty a ballot must have to be counted.
We know of the large volume of law that statutes regulating elections are frequently treated as directory, and that mistakes and irregularities should not disfranchise a voter or deprive a candidate of his vote where the purpose and intent of the voter can be ascertained. Loomis v. Jackson, 6 W. Va. 613; Dial v. Hollandsworth, 39 Id. 1. In answer to this I call attention to the fact that authorities say that there is a distinction in this respect between errors of officers conducting elections, and errors of voters themselves; that in the former case, as a voter has no power over the officer, that officer’s blunder -shall not disfranchise the voter; whereas, the voter may by his own neglect disfranchise himself. This will be seen from authorities cited above. Having just observed section 724 of McCrary on Elections, I regard this distinction sound. It says: “The weight of authority is clearly in favor of holding the voter, on the one hand, to a strict performance of those things which the law requires of him, and on the other, of relieving him from the consequence of a failure on *263the part of election officers to perform their duties according to the letter of the statute, where such failure has not prevented a fair election. The justice of this rule is apparent, and it may be said to be the underlying principle to be applied in determining this question” of the' mandatory or directory character of the Australian Election Law. In section 720 that work says that the provisions as to marking the ballots are mandatory. Furthermore, all authorities say that where it can be seen that it was the design of the legislature that a statute should be in any of its provisions mandatory, it must be so treated, though an election law.
Great emphasis is laid by counsel for Morris on the case of Dunlevy v. County Court, 47 W. Va. 513, (35 S. E. 956), to sustain the theory that the provisions of the statute under consideration are merely directory, and the voter must get his vote no matter how many ballots he uses, and no matter how he indicates his choice, so only that choice is clear. That case did not pass on the question involved in this case. This question was not raised in argument or discussed in the opinion except inferentially. It passed on the question how the voter’s will must be manifested on one ballot, not whether he could use several ballots.
By no means do we intend to deny that the Australian law has some provisions that are merely directory. Waggener v. Russell, 34 Neb. 116; Barber v. Smith, 111 Mo. 45; Parker v. Orr, 30 L. R. A. 227. But we do say that this requirement of one ballot is not directory, and further that as the Australian system has been adopted everywhere to reform evils and defects in former election laws, and contains sedate and minute regulations for the preparation of ballots, there ought to be less disposition in the courts to evade its provisions on the theory of directoriness than in decisions on former laws, in order to effectuate the reforms contemplated.
But counsel for Morris say that if the statute in the features above discussed can be held mandatory, then it is unconstitutional, because it violates that general provision of the Constitution that “The male, citizens shall be entitled to vote at all elections,” etc. This is a vital clause, but only a general one. Under it the legislature would have the power vested in a state to Tna.lr.ft reasonable rules and regulations for elections, and to require voters to conform thereto. Even laws disfranchising for *264failure to register have been beld valid, rigid though they are, and thousands are the instances where voters’ ballots have been held speechless because not conforming to law. McCrary on Elections, s. 125; Paine on Elections 294; Cooley, Con. Lim. 599; State v. Black, 54 N. J. 446. So the regulations do not disfranchise, but leaves to the voter a means of voting, though subject to a regulation with which he can comply, it is legitimate regulation. But our Constitution gives most explicit authority to the legislature, in connection with said guaranty to the voter, to make such regulations, saying: “The legislature shall prescribe the manner of conducting and making returns of elections,” etc. Article IV, section 11. This not only allows, but commands, the legislature to make such regulations as said by Judge Snyder in Rader v. Halstead, 27 W. Va. 808. He said very correctly that the power to regulate elections is both plenary and mandatory upon the legislature. lie said that the Constitution imposed no restrictions upon this power, save that all male citizens, with specified exceptions, should be entitled to vote, and that voting should be by ballot, and that no registration should be required; but otherwise the legislature was un-trammelled in the regulation of elections. These views result in the refusal of the mandamus.
Is the remedy by mandamus proper in this case? Does that writ, in election cases, lie after election where the canvassers are in process of performing their duties, but may be acting erroneously in so doing? Does it lie to compel them, during such canvas, to exercise their judgment in a particular way, to correct errors, properly remediable, by the law as it was before the election act of 1893, by certiorari or contested election? Does that statute apply mandamus to each and every act, to all duties performed by all officers under the election law, without regard to the character of the act indiscriminately ? These questions were not raised in the argument of this case. The propriety of the writ was not made a question, and only the merits were argued, and the question of the propriety of the writ was impliedly waived; and so we have considered the case; but we do not wish this decision to be interpreted as passing on that point, though involved in the decision. How far the cases of Marcum v. Ballot Commissioners, 42 W. Va. 263, and Dunlevy v. County Court, 47 Id., define to what particular acts of election officers the writ of mandamus applies is left open for the future.
Refused.