State ex rel. Bancroft v. Frear

Siebeckee, Kebwin, and Timlin, JJ.

(dissenting). We are of the opinion that sec. 34, Stats. (1898), pertaining to general elections is made applicable to primary elections. The legislature provided in the primary election law (sec. 25, eh. 451, Laws of 1903) that:

“The provisions of the statutes now in force in relation to the holding of elections, the solicitation of voters at the polls, *85the challenging of voters, the manner of conducting elections, of counting the ballots and making return thereof, and all other kindred subjects, shall apply to all primaries in so far as they are consistent with this act, the intent of this act being to place the primary under the regulation and protection of the laws now in force as to elections.” (Italics ours.)

This section in terms makes sec. 34, Stats. (1898), relating to general elections, applicable to primary elections, and thero-fore the following provision, in cases where a candidate for nomination on the official ballot at such election dies, governs this case:

“If the nominee die after the ballots are printed, and no nomination shall be made as herein provided, the votes cast for him shall be counted and returned, and if he shall receive a plurality the vacancy shall be filled as in case of vacancies occurring by death after election.” Sec. 34, Stats. (1898).

Under these provisions the votes east for Mr. Tucker are legal ballots and must be counted and returned, and when so counted and returned the result shows that neither of the other candidates for nomination for the office of attorney general of the state received as great a number of votes as were east for him, hence the relator is not entitled to have his name placed on the official ballot as the nominee of his party.

The defendant moved for a rehearing and also moved that Supreme Court Bules 37-41, relating to motions for a rehearing, be suspended. The latter motion was denied October 25, 1910; and the motion for a rehearing was denied December 6, 1910. '

The following opinions were filed December 6,1910:

Barnes, J.

The exigencies of this case called for a speedy decision thereof, so the mandate of the court was filed in advance of the time at which the decision would have been announced had the ordinary course been pursued. Before the opinion of the court was prepared, a motion for a rehearing was made, and thereafter, and within the time prescribed by *86the rules of the court, a brief was filed in support of such motion. The delay in filing this opinion was due largely to-the fact that such motion was pending and undetermined. Nothing was said in the brief filed on the motion for rehearing which changed the conviction of the court that its former-judgment was correct. With these explanatory remarks by way of introduction, we proceed to state the reasons which impelled the court to reach the conclusion which it did.

The first and second grounds of demurrer were not urged upon this court. The action was brought by the relator after the attorney general refused to institute the same and after leave was granted by this court, and there is no want of capacity to sue on the part of the relator and no lack of jurisdiction in this court to hear and decide the cause on it» merits.

The defendant contends (1) that at common law the votes-cast for Mr. Tucker were not nullities, but should be counted, and that he having received a plurality of the votes cast, and’ being dead, there was a vacancy which should be filled in some-lawful manner; and (2) that by virtue of sec. 25, ch. 451, Laws of 1903, being the primary election law, the provisions-of sec. 34, Stats. (1898), pertaining to the conduct of general elections were incorporated into the primary law, and that under the terms of said sec. 34 the votes cast for-Mr. Tucker should be counted, and a vacancy resulted if he-received more votes than any other candidate.

1. Assuming that sec. 34, Stats. (1898), has no application to the case, we thiuk there was no vacancy for two reasons: (a) Because of a provision in the primary election law itself, and (b) because under the common law votes knowingly cast for a dead man cannot be counted.

(a) Sec. 18 of the primary law provides:

“The person receiving the greatest number of votes at a primary as the candidate of a party for an office, shall be the candidate of that party for such office, and his name as such *87candidate shall be placed on tbe official ballot at tbe following election.” Sec. 11 — 18, Stats. (Supp. 1906: Laws of 1903, cb. 451, sec. 18).

We do not tbink tbat a dead man is a “person” within tbe meaning of this statute. Tbe word “person” as it is ordinarily used means a living human being. It is so defined in Webster’s and in Johnson’s and in tbe Century dictionaries. It is so defined by tbe courts. Sawyer v. Mackie, 149 Mass. 269, 21 N. E. 307; U. S. v. Crook, 5 Dill. 453, 25 Fed. Cas. 695, 697; Morton v. W. U. Tel. Co. 130 N. C. 299, 41 S. E. 484; Caldwell v. Wallace, 4 Stew. & P. (Ala.) 282, 285; Morrill v. Lovett, 95 Me. 165, 169, 49 Atl. 666. In tbe latter case it is said: “Tbe natural and obvious signification of tbe word ‘person’ in a statute is a living human being.” Both tbe Maine and Massachusetts courts significantly say tbat when statutes refer to one who is dead they speak of him as a “deceased person” or a “person deceased.”

It would seem ridiculous to place any other interpretation on tbe statute under consideration, because it expressly provides tbat the person receiving tbe greatest number of votes at tbe primary shall be tbe candidate, and tbat his name shall be placed on the election ballot. Tbe legislature did not intend tbat if a dead man received a plurality of tbe votes cast be became tbe candidate of tbe party and tbat bis name must go upon tbe ballot, to be voted for at tbe ensuing general election. If tbe word “person” as used in tbe statute means a living human being, then tbe relator satisfies tbe call of the. statute in every particular. He is tbe person who received tbe greatest number of votes at tbe primary.

(b) It is well settled tbat where electors vote for an ineligible candidate without knowledge of bis disqualification,, and such candidate receives a plurality of tbe votes cast, bis disqualification does not result in electing tbe candidate receiving tbe next highest number of votes. In such a case tbe votes cast for tbe ineligible candidate must be counted, and *88there is a vacancy in the office instead of an election of the candidate receiving less than a plurality of the votes. State ex rel. Dunning v. Giles, 2 Pin. 166; State ex rel. Off v. Smith, 14 Wis. 497; State ex rel. Holden v. Tierney, 23 Wis. 430; 1 Dillon, Mun. Corp. (4th ed.) § 196; Cooley, Const. Lim. (7th ed.) 931; Uaar, Suffrage & Elections, 163; Barnum v. Gilman, 27 Minn. 466, 8 N. W. 375; Opinions of Judges, 38 Me. 597; People ex rel. Crawford v. Molitor, 23 Mich. 341; Saunders v. Haynes, 13 Cal. 145; People ex rel. Furman v. Clute, 50 N. Y. 451; State ex rel. Hardwick v. Swearingen, 12 Ga. 23; State ex rel. Goodell v. McGeary, 69 Vt. 461, 38 Atl. 165, 44 L. R. A. 446; In re Corliss, 11 R. I. 638, 23 Am. Rep. 538, 544; Comm. ex rel. McLaughlin v. Chuley, 56 Pa. St. 270, 273; Dryden v. Swinburne, 20 W. Va. 89, 137.

The cases where the death of the candidate voted for took place before the polls closed on election day are not numerous. The courts that have passed upon the question hold that, where the electors cast their ballots for a dead man, in good faith and in ignorance of his death, the votes should he counted, and that if the decedent received a plurality of the votes cast there was no election. So held in State ex rel. Sheets v. Speidel, 62 Ohio St. 156, 56 N. E. 871, and in Howes v. Perry, 92 Ky. 260, 17 S. W. 575. In each of these cases the candidate died on election day before the polls closed, and there was no way in which it could be ascertained how many votes for him were cast before his death and how many afterwards.

There is a third class of cases in which the votes were cast for a candidate known to he dead or disqualified or for a fictitious person. The great current of authority is to the effect that such ballots are ineffectual for any person and cannot he counted in determining the result of the election. The English cases almost uniformly so hold. King v. Hawkins, 10 East, 211; King v. Parry, 14 East, 549; Gosling v. Veley, *897 Q. B. Rep. 406; Trench v. Nolan, 2 Moak’s Notes, 711; Reg. ex rel. Mackley v. Coaks, 3 El. & Bl. 249; Rex v. Monday, 2 Cowp. 530; Rex v. Foxcroft, 2 Burr. 1017. Our otra court, iu State ex rel. Holden v. Tierney, 23 Wis. 430, 435, said that if the “person voted for had been a fictitious person, and this appeared on the face of the ballot, it might be said that the canvassers could reject it, and consider the ballot as being only for the real persons whose names were on it. This might have been done if one of the persons had been, as Lord Campbell suggested in Reg. ex rel. Mackley v. Coaks, supra, The man in the moon.’ ” The foregoing excerpt cannot be regarded as passing upon the question even inferentially. The Rew York court holds that the “knowledge [i. e. of the disqualification] must be such, or the notice brought so home, as to imply a wilfulness in acting, when action is in opposition to the natural impulse to save the vote and make it effectual. He [the voter] must act so in defiance of both the law and the fact, and so in opposition to his own better knowledge, that he has no right to complain of the loss of his franchise, the exercise of which he has wantonly misapplied.” People ex rel. Furman v. Clute, 50 N. Y. 451. Approved in Barnum v. Gilman, supra, and in People ex rel. Sherwood v. State Board of Canvassers, 129 N. Y. 361, 374, 29 R. E. 345.

It is held in Indiana that, where voters at an election either know as a matter of fact, or are bound to know in law, of the ineligibility of a candidate, the election does not result in failure, but the eligible candidate receiving the highest number of votes is legally elected. So it was decided that voters were chargeable with knowledge that the office of mayor was a judicial one, and that therefore under the constitution such officer during his term was not eligible to hold any office other than a judicial one. Gulick v. New, 14 Ind. 93, 77 Am. Dec. 49. It is said in this ease that the main purpose of elections is to elect candidates to office, and that where *90votes are knowingly cast in such a way that this end cannot be effected, the votes are powerless to prevent the election of any other person. Other Indiana cases to the effect that votes cast for a candidate who is ineligible cannot be counted are State ex rel. Morley v. Johnson, 100 Ind. 489, and Copeland v. State ex rel. Davis, 126 Ind. 51, 25 N. E. 866. These-cases, however, have been modified by later decisions, and it is now held that, unless there is knowledge of the ineligibility on the part of the voter at the time he casts his ballot, the candidate receiving less than a plurality of the votes cast is not elected. State ex rel. Clawson v. Bell, 169 Ind. 61, 82 N. E. 69; Hoy v. State ex rel. Buchanan, 168 Ind. 506, 81 N. E. 509; State ex rel. Heston v. Ross, 170 Ind. 704, 84 N. E. 150. The Maryland court at an early day decided that votes cast for an ineligible candidate were thrown away even though the-voters were ignorant of the disqualification, and that the eligible candidate receiving the greatest number of votes was elected. Hatcheson v. Tilden, 4 Harr. & McH. 278.

Cases intimating that votes cast with knowledge of the ineligibility of the candidate for whom they are cast should not be counted are Comm. ex rel. McLaughlin v. Cluley, 56 Pa. St. 270, 274; Howes v. Perry, 92 Ky. 260, 17 S. W. 575; Gill v. Mayor, etc. 18 R. I. 281, 27 Atl. 506; and Saunders v. Haynes, 13 Cal. 145.

The contrary rule was adopted by the St. Louis court of appeals in State ex rel. Herget v. Walsh, 7 Mo. App. 142, where it is held that votes cast for a candidate with knowledge of his death should be counted against the other candidates. This case is approved in Sheridan v. St. Louis, 183 Mo. 25, 81 S. W. 1082, 2 Am. & Eng. Ann. Gas. 480, although there was no question of knowledge involved in that case. As far as we can discover, the Missouri court stands alone on the question.

The great weight of authority,' English and American, is to the effect that votes knowingly cast for a candidate who can*91not possibly exercise the functions of tbe office if elected, are thrown away, and it seems to us that this should be so. Elections are held for the purpose of selecting officers, not for the purpose of creating a vacancy to the end that the place may be filled by appointment or even by a new election. The function of the voter is to express an affirmative choice of some person; not to content himself with merely expressing his disapproval of certain candidates. If a vote for a man known by the voter to be dead can be counted, then a vote for a stick or a stone or for “the man in the moon,” as is said in the English cases, should be counted. It is true that in this country the majority rules, but the majority should not pursue a policy of mere negation. If the majority should contumaciously persist in voting for candidates notoriously ineligible, it might not be possible to fill the office at all. The illustration may be somewhat far-fetched, but instances have occurred in England where an ineligible candidate for member of parliament received a majority of the votes cast at election after election, and such occurrences are by no means impossible in this country. Besides, there can be no affirmative choice by the electors unless a new election is provided for and held. Either the Eepublican state central committee or the governor must select the new candidate, if there is a vacancy in the instant case. It may be that a single officer or a committee consisting of a couple of dozen members could make a selection that would be more acceptable to the majority in the present instance than would be the candidate for whom over 56,000 votes were cast, but conditions might easily change so that the contrary would be true.

It is argued that the court cannot assume that any considerable vote, or in fact any vote, was cast for Mr. Tucker by electors who knew of his death at the time .they voted, and that therefore the rule as to votes cast for an ineligible candidate with knowledge of the fact of ineligibility does not apply. The complaint does not aver actual knowledge of *92Mr. Tucker’s death, on the part of a sufficient number of electors to give him a plurality of the votes cast. It sets up the facts from which knowledge is to be inferred, if inferred ■at all. The facts are admitted by the demurrer. It is only by proving such facts as are alleged that the relator could show knowledge at all, on the part of the electors, because it would be impossible to subpoena several thousand voters to ■testify as to how they voted and as to whether or not they knew of Mr. Tucker’s death if they voted for him. Before .-such an inquiry could be concluded another primary election would have come and gone, and the delay and expense attendant on it would work a denial of justice. Mr. Tucker was a candidate for an important office in a more or less acrimonious campaign where factional lines were closely drawn. The complaint shows that the fact of his death was generally ■stated and published in newspapers throughout the state, as well as the fact that if he received the greatest number of votes at the primary the state central committee could fill the vacancy, and that such statements were repeated in circular letters addressed to many parts of the state, a sample copy of which will be found in the statement of facts. In addition to this 169 telegrams were sent out by a prominent supporter of ■one of the factions in the Eepubliean party to 169 different prominent supporters of said faction, in different parts of the state, calling upon them to urge voters to vote for Tucker, and •advising them that the committee could fill the vacancy. Thus, through the medium of the press and by means of telegrams and circular letters, the members of the faction in the party to which Tucker in his lifetime belonged were advised to vote for him notwithstanding his death. .We think the court would be justified in assuming that a great majority of the electors of Wisconsin read one or more newspapers. Since the advent of rural free delivery the daily newspaper finds its way into the country districts with very little loss of *93time in transmission. News is disseminated rapidly. With the newspapers publishing the fact of Mr. Tncker’s death, and the well known tragic circumstances under which it occurred, and the members of the wing of the party with which he affiliated vigorously calling on its supporters to vote for him regardless of that fact, it may fairly he assumed that the electorate of Wisconsin was very generally informed of his-death on election day. Certainly we think a court should find on the admitted facts that enough votes were cast for Mr. Tucker by electors who knew he was dead when they cast them to give him a plurality over the relator; or, in other words, that at least 5,287 of the 63,482 persons who voted for him knew he was dead when they so voted.

2. It remains to he determined whether what we find to he-the common-law rule has been modified by statute. The following provisions are the only ones which have any material bearing upon the subject:

Sec. 13 of the primary election law reads:

“Vacancies occurring after the holding of any primary shall be filled by the party committee of the city, district,, county or state, as the case may be.” Sec. 11 — 13, Stats. (Supp. 1906: Laws of 1903, ch. 451, sec. 13).

Sec. 25 of the primary election law reads:

“The provisions of the statutes now in force in relation to the holding of elections, the solicitation of voters at the polls, the challenging of voters, the manner of conducting elections, of counting the ballots and making return thereof, and all other kindred subjects, shall apply to all primaries in so far as they are consistent with this act, the intent of this act being to place the primary under the regulation and protection of the laws now in force as to elections.” Sec. 11 — 25, Stats. (Supp. 1906: Laws of 1903, ch. 451, sec. 25).

Sec. 34, Stats. (1898), relates to holding general elections and provides that any person nominated for an office may decline in the maimer therein prescribed. The statute then *94provides Row a new candidate may be nominated in case of the death or declination of a nominee before the ballots are ■distributed. The statute further provides:

“If such declination, death or the permanent removal of a nominee take place after the ballots are printed and before election, the proper chairman of the committee of the political organization of which such candidate was the nominee may make a nomination to fill the vacancy and provide the election boards with pasters containing the name of such nominee only, which shall be pasted upon each of the official ballots by the ballot clerks, before signing their initials thereon and delivering them to voters. If the nominee die after the ballots are printed, and no nomination shall be made as herein provided, the votes cast for him shall be counted and returned, and if he shall receive a plurality the vacancy shall be filled as in case of vacancies occurring by death after election.”

As will be observed, sec. 25 of the primary law makes the provisions of law in force when it was enacted, in relation to the holding of elections, the solicitation of voters at the polls, the challenging of voters, the manner of conducting elections, of counting ballots and making return thereof, and all other kindred subjects, applicable to all primaries in so far as they are consistent with the primary election law. The section then recites that it is its intention to place the primary under the protection and regulation of the laws in force pertaining to elections. It is argued that this provision incorporates sec. 34, Stats. (1898), into the primary law, and that, inas'much as Mr. Tucker died after the ballots were printed, the votes cast for him should be counted and there is a vacancy by reason of his death, he having received a plurality of the votes cast. There are a number of reasons why we think sec. 34 is no part of the primary election law.

We should have as little confusion as possible in our statute law. Where the attempt is made to incorporate parts of a former law into one that is being presently made, the language used should be such as to indicate with a reasonable degree of *95■certainty what was in the legislative mind. A careful and intelligent reading of the two acts should he sufficient to indicate to the reader what parts of the old law were applicable to and were incorporated in the new. People are obliged to obey the laws, and in order that they may do so they should he put in a position where they can ascertain what they are. A study of the two sections convinces us that the legislature never intended that sec. 34 should have any application to a primary election.

In the first place the legislature made a special provision in the primary election statute (sec. 13) pertaining to the filling of vacancies. It is reasonable to suppose that when it under-look to specifically legislate on the subject of vacancies it did so fully. The legislature also had in mind the general provisions of the election law, because such law is referred to and its provisions are adopted so far as consistent with the primary law. The special provision found in the primary law in reference to the filling of vacancies is wholly redundant if it was intended to incorporate sec. 34 into the primary law. Sec. 34 deals specifically with matters arising after party nominations are made, and sec. 13 deals with matters arising •after the primary election to nominate candidates is held. Sec. 34 of the general statute fully covers the subject that is ■covered by sec. 13 of the primary election law.

Again, sec. 34 relates in terms only to a person already ■nominated by a party, and it provides for the filling of a vacancy when one happens, by giving the party committee of that party power to fill it. This is logical, because the party ■committee is the executive arm of the party and very properly should represent it in such an emergency. But before the primary there is no party nominee. True, there may be •several persons whose names have been properly put forward by nomination papers and who are thus entitled to have their names on the primary ballot, but these nominating signers have no executive committee recognized by law to act for *96them. It must frequently happen that these persons nominated before a primary represent factions in the party, and,, in all probability, one at least represents a faction whose object it is to overthrow the faction which has control of the party and is represented by the party committee. Now, if sec. 34 be imported into the primary law, the party committee, under its terms, would be authorized to fill a vacancy occurring in the leadership of the party faction which was endeavoring to defeat and supplant the faction to which the committee belonged. This seems absurd. It is logical and sensible to enact that the party committee shall act for the party as a whole, because it represents the party. It is neither logical nor sensible to enact that a party committee shall act for a faction of the party or a mere group of party members, because it does not represent the faction or group. Indeed, it may be fighting such faction or group with all its power.

Another inherent difficulty in the way of holding that sec. 34-is a part of the primary law is the fact that we must supply words therein and eliminate words therefrom in order to make it applicable, which it is the function of the legislature to-eliminate or supply rather than of the courts. THe last sentence of sec. 34 is the only one that can have any application to the facts presently before us:

“If the nominee die after the ballots are printed, and no nomination shall be made as herein provided, the votes cast for him shall be counted and returned, and if he shall receive a plurality the vacancy shall be filled as in case of vacancies-occurring by death after election.”

The “nominee” referred to in sec. 34 is the person who has-received the party nomination for an office. If the section is part of the primary law we shall have to substitute for the-word “nominee” the words “candidate for the nomination.” The clause “and no nomination shall be made as herein provided,” found in said sentence, can have no possible application to a primary election. The provision quoted recites that *97tlie vacancy is to be filled as in case of vacancies occurring by death after election. It would he absurd to say that this part of the law could apply to primary elections, unless we interpolate words therein that wholly change its meaning. A vacancy in the ofiice of attorney general occurring after election is filled by appointment by the governor. Row, the legislature could not have intended that the governor should fill a vacant place on a party ticket. That would enable him to name candidates for parties with which he was not affiliated and in whose success he had no interest and whose defeat he earnestly desired. This interpretation of the law would place him in a position where he might have the naming of a rival candidate if he were himself seeking a re-election. So we must either lop off this part of the sentence or supply words from some other statute so as to place the appointing power elsewhere. It should be just as permissible to amputate the first part of the sentence as it is the last, and if either can be eliminated we see no good reason why a combination of words found in the middle that make a complete sentence when standing alone may not be lifted out of see. 34, or any part of the general election law for that matter, and be transported into the primary law. The possibilities of adding to the primary law in this way, as occasion arises, are boundless, but this method of lawmaking is too indefinite and uncertain to receive judicial sanction.

Again, sec. 34 provides for filling a vacancy caused by the death or declination or permanent removal of the party candidate. The death of Mr. Tucker created no vacancy. In the event of the death of a nominee of a political party there is a hiatus in the election ticket of the party nominating him, which very properly should be filled. The word “vacancy” conveys to the mind the idea of a place once filled but not so any longer. The primary election is held to enable the electors to select one of the few or many candidates who may invite the favorable consideration of the electors as a fit repre*98■sentative of the party for some particular office. To say that, if there are ten candidates of a party for one office, and one ■of them dies before the primary is held, there is a vacancy, seems illogical. So long as there is presented to the electors ■one or more eligible candidates for their suffrage, how can it be said that there is any vacancy in the primary ballot ? The primary election presents a very different situation from the general election. At the latter each party presents one, and ■only one, candidate for each office, and if he dies after nomination his place must be filled or the party can have no candidate. The primary is a free-for-all, where any member of a party, by getting the requisite number of signers to his nomination papers, may do his best to convince his fellow party men that he is the logical candidate who should be selected by the party for a place on the election ballot. But if death overtakes him before the primary is held, and there are other patriots who are not only willing but anxious to secure the prize, we fail to see where there is any vacancy.

Indeed, the defendant, in the brief filed on the motion for a rehearing, frankly makes concessions which coincide with the view above expressed. His counsel say:

“It is perhaps true that a 'declination’ or 'death’ before the primary may or may not create a vacancy; for instance, where there are several candidates for the 'office of Republican nominee,’ the declination or death of one would perhaps create no such vacancy as is contemplated by this provision. The legislature had no such situation in mind as more than one candidate of a single party for an office. It had the general election in mind where there is but one party candidate. It had in mind a vacancy occurring at or during a convention, or thereafter when there was an organized party committee. Before the primary, it is possible there is no vacancy by the declination or death of one of several candidates. There is no party committee representing a particular candidate among the several. Hence there is force to the argument that the vacancy which can be filled under this provision by party committee is one occurring or found to exist when the primary is over.”

*99Counsel seek to avoid the apparent difficulty by proceeding to read or construe the troublesome provision as not being applicable to the primary law. Counsel have not favored us with their views as to how sec. 34 should be reconstructed so as to meet the case in hand. By generously carrying out the algebraic processes of elimination, by substitution and by addition and subtraction, it is possible to so remold sec. 34 as to make it fit this case; but we do not think the legislature intended that we should do so or that the citizen should be obliged to go through such a process to determine what the statute law of the state is. We fail to see how the word “vacancy” can be stricken from the statute, if it is to retain any life that would be helpful to the defendant, because it is only where a vacancy occurs that action'can be taken by the party committee.

■■ It may be said that sec. 13 of the primary law authorized the Eepublican state central committee to make a nomination under the facts before the court, although it was not seriously contended in the briefs of counsel or on the oral argument that such was the case. Unless a vacancy occurred after the primary was held, sec. 13 has no application. Mr. Tucker died and his supporters voted for him before the primary election was over. If the death of or the casting of votes for the deceased, or both, caused a vacancy, it did not occur “after the holding of any primary.” If a vacancy occurred after the primary was held, it must have been because the votes were counted after the election. It is hot apparent how the counting of votes can create a vacancy. If there was one, it was because the electors voted for a dead candidate. We have already given our reasons why the electors cannot create a vacancy by voting for a man known to be dead when the votes are cast.