v.
William W. Caldwell
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The title to the office of mayor of the city of Concordia is involved in this proceeding. An election was held on April 7, 1903, when William W. Caldwell and S. C. Wheeler were candidates for mayor, and the result, as found by the canvassing board, was that Wheeler received 809 votes, while Caldwell received 808 votes. A certificate of election was issued to Wheeler, and on April 12 he qualified and entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office. Caldwell brought this proceeding, alleging that he had received the greater number of legal votes and was entitled to the possession of the office. Upon a trial, the district court.found that 1597 legal ballots had been cast by qualified voters for mayor, of which Caldwell received 799 and Wheeler 798, and therefore gave judgment in favor of Caldwell.
[*778]
It is contended, however, that at common law a party was entitled to a jury trial in quo warranto proceedings, and that the common-law right was preserved and continued by virtue of section 5 of the bill of rights, which provides that “the right of trial by jury shall be inviolate.” This provision means that the right of trial by jury shall be and remain as ample and complete as it was at the time when the constitution was adopted. (The State, ex rel., v. City of Topeka, 30 Kan. 653, 2 Pac. 587.) What; then, was the status of the law as to the right to a jury in quo warranto cases at that time ? If the common-law rule is to control, the question arises, as to what common-law rule was in effect in this respect when the constitution was [*779] adopted. The first act adopting the common law as a rule of action in Kánsas was passed by the first legislature held in Kansas, and so much of it as is pertinent reads as follows:
‘ ‘ Section 1. The common law of England and all statutes and acts of parliament made prior to the fourth year of James the First, and which are of a general nature, not local to that kingdom, and not repugnant to, or inconsistent with, the constitution of the United States, and the act entitled ‘An act to organize the territorj7 of Nebraska and Kansas,’ or any statute law which may from time to time be made or passed by this or any subsequent legislative assembly of the territory of Kansas, shall be the rule of action and decision in this territory; any law, custom or usage to the contrary notwithstanding.” (Ch. 96, Territorial Statutes 1855.)
This act was repealed, and then reenacted in substantially the same language, in 1859. (Laws 1859, ch. 121, § 1.) According to these acts of adoption, the common law as it existed in England in the fourth year of James the First, which was 1607, became the common law of Kansas, and remained such at least until the state constitution was adopted. (Kansas Pacific Rly. Co. v. Nichols, Kennedy & Co., 9 Kan. 235, 12 Am. Rep. 494.) At the date fixed in the act of adoption, the common law did not award a jury trial as a matter of right in quo warranto proceedings, nor was such right given until the passage of the act of parliament in 1730, known as 3 Geo. II, ch. 25. In Taliaferro v. Lee, 97 Ala. 92, 13 South. 125, the supreme court of Alabama had under consideration the right to a jury in a quo warranto proceeding, and it was said:
“At no period in the history of the information in England, so far as we are aware, was the relator or respondent ever regarded as entitled to trial by jury [*780] until that right was expressly conferred by act of parliament. (3 Geo. II, ch. 25.)”
See, also, State v. Johnson, 26 Ark. 281; State, ex rel. Att’y Gen., v. Vail, 53 Mo. 97 ; State, ex rel. Norton, v. Lupton, 64 id. 415, 27 Am. Rep. 253 ; State, ex rel. Mullen, v. Doherty, 16 Wash. 382, 47 Pac. 958, 58 Am. St. Rep. 39 ; State v. Moores, 56 Neb. 1, 76 N. W. 530.
Then, again, the statutory law, as it existed when the constitution was adopted, did not give the suitor a right to trial by jury in cases of this kind. Even if the common law had accorded this right, it was competent for the legislature to modify it and to make such cases triable by the court. In 1859 the legislature passed an act specifically providing what cases and issues should be tried by a jury and what should be triable by the court. (Laws 1859, ch. 25, §§274, 275.) Whether the question is determinable by the common law as adopted in. Kansas, or’by the statute as it existed when the constitution was framed, a jury cannot be required, as a matter of right, in this proceeding. If the rule of the present code is applied the same result will be obtained,’ and hence we conclude that no error was committed in denying the application for a jury.
Looking at the testimony as it is brought to us in the record, we strongly incline to the opinion that McCullough and Garder were legal voters, and that their votes should have been counted, but we are aware that the trial court had superior opportunities to measure the testimony, and since it cannot be said that its findings are without support, we are bound by them.
One Creaghor, who voted in the third ward, was found not to be a qualified voter, and the court concluded that he had voted for Wheeler, and deducted a vote from the number credited to Wheeler. This was error, as the testimony shows that Creaghor voted for Caldwell, and if not qualified, the vote should have been taken from Caldwell instead of Wheeler. When his vote was challenged, he was sworn to answer as to his qualifications, after which his ballot was received. The word “sworn’’ was written on the ballot, and the number opposite to his name on the poll-book should have corresponded with the number on the ballot. [*782] There was no such conformity, and because of this discrepancy it was impossible, from the numbers alone, to identify the ballot cast by Creaghor. It was otherwise identified. It appeared beyond dispute that his was a challenged vote ; that his ballot was so marked; that there were only four challenged votes cast in the ward, and that each one of them showed on its face that it was in favor of Caldwell. Under this showing, mainly record proof, there is no escape from the conclusion that Creaghor voted for Caldwell. The lack' of agreement between the numbers on the poll-book and the ballot is accounted for on the theory that the ballot was given to him and numbered by the election officers when he approached the polls, instead of after the challenge. Then he was challenged, and some time was occupied by the challenge and the swearing in of his vote. In the intervening time others approached and voted, and one of their names was written on the poll-books opposite the number placed on Creaghor’s ballot. In that case the number on the ballot was the number reached when the ballot was handed to him, while the number opposite his name on the poll-bpok was the number reached when the challenge had been decided and the ballot received. The four challenged votes, one of which was cast by Creaghor, were sufficiently identified; the ballots themselves were indubitable proof that all of them were for Caldwell; and such proof is not overcome or affected by the mere circumstances that Creaghor was •accompanied to the polls by a friend of Wheeler and was challenged by a friend of Caldwell. The illegal vote should have been taken from the Caldwell count, and not from that of Wheeler.
In the second ward a ballot which was marked 809 and was cast for Wheeler was rejected by the court.
[*783]
Nothing in the statute, nor in reason, warranted the rejection of the last ballot that the election officers chanced to take from the box. Besides, the testimony to which we are referred does, not warrant the conclusion that ballot numbered 309 was the last one taken from the box. Here, then, was a properly marked ballot which was apparently legal in every respect, and in the absence of a statute declaring such a rule of eliminating an excess ballot, or of proof that it was illegal, we know of no reason' for disfranchising the one who cast it, or for deducting it from the count of the candidate for whom it was cast. In the absence of proof, there is as much reason to assume that the clerks erred in registering the names of voters as that an extra ballot was wrongfully thrust into the box, and there appears to have been some discussion among [*784] the officers as to whether the names were correctly enrolled. It appears that one of the three ballots returned' in the envelope was blank ; that it had never been numbered, and that the corner had never been clipped from it. The judge in charge of the numbering said that no ballot was .given out to voters that was not numbered, and there is reason to think that this blank ballot, which had not been numbered, marked, or clipped, had never, in fact, been voted. If voted, two of the judges must have failed in the performance of their duties, the one who numbered and the one who clipped the ballots; but this cannot be presumed. So it is claimed that the blank ballot was probably picked up from the .table and accidentally placed in the envelope which was returned. But whether accounted for in that way or not, there was nothing in the circumstances of the case, nor in the testimony, which justified the court in discarding ballot numbered 309, or in deducting that vote from the count for Wheeler.
Of this rule, in the abstract, there is no good reason for complaint; but we are unable to agree with the court in its application. For instance, there was a bállot numbered 100, cast in the fourth ward and counted for Caldwell, on which there was a cross in the circle composed of three lines. One of the arms of the cross was substantially paralleled by a third distinct line. There is nothing to indicate that the extra line was an attempt to retrace an indistinct line, or that it was made by one who was nervous or unused to a pencil. The departure from the prescribed form is patent, easily described, and it would be difficult to invent a better distinguishing mark. There was a like defect on ballot numbered 344, cast for Caldwell in the fourth ward, where parallel lines were used in making the cross. Neither of these ballots should have been counted.
[*786]
Wheeler has good reason to complain of the exclusion of ballot numbered 427, cast for him in the fourth ward. It was excluded because the marks opposite the names of Bowman and Blair, who were candidates on the same ticket with Wheeler, were not proper cross-marks. One of the lines of each of the cross-marks was shorter than the other, and the court stated that the mark was the shape of an inverted Y. The shorter line, however, actually crossed the longer one, and, the ballot being otherwise unobjectionable, we think it was legal and should have been counted.
Other rulings adverse to Wheeler are complained of, but the conclusions we have already reached settles it that Wheeler had a clear majority over Caldwell for the office in contest, and a further consideration of Wheeler's claims of error is unnecessary.
The case of McPherson v. The State ex rel., 56 Kan. 139, 42 Pac. 374, is a sufficient answer to the contention that this court is without jurisdiction to review the rulings in this proceeding.
It follows from what has been said that the judgment of the district court will be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment in favor of plaintiff in error.