Reversing.
In the November, 1925, election, the appellee, William Dixon, appeared on the ballot as the Republican nominee for the office of county judge of Leslie county and the appellant, Jason Combs, appeared on the same ballot as an Independent candidate for that office. The county board of election commissioners thereafter duly canvassed the returns as required by law, and found that the appellant and appellee had received on the face of the returns 471 and 1,756 votes, respectively. The appellee *Page 568
receiving the larger number of votes, he was awarded the certificate of election; whereupon the appellant filed this contest proceeding against him. After alleging that he had been duly nominated by a petition signed by more than 100 electors qualified to vote for candidates for the office in question, which petition he had filed with the county clerk more than 45 days prior to the general election in November, appellant then stated, in his petition, that at that election his name was duly and legally printed upon the official ballot. He then set out as the fundamental ground of his contest the fact that the name of the appellee had not been lawfully printed on the ballot in that appellee had not filed, on or before 45 days before the general election in November, with the county clerk the certificate of nomination he had received in the preceding August primary. By answer and counter-contest the appellee traversed all the allegations of appellant's petition and then affirmatively averred that he had filed his certificate of nomination with the county clerk more than 45 days before the general election. He next alleged that his name had also been certified to the county clerk as the Republican nominee for the office of county judge in accordance with the provisions of sections 1464 and 1550-5 of the statutes, providing for nominations by a political party where a vacancy has occurred among its candidates for office. For counter-contest, appellee claimed that a number of voters had written his name on the ballots used in the November election, and then voted for him, which votes had not been correctly counted and certified by the election officers. He asked that the ballot boxes be opened, a recount had of the ballots and these votes counted for him. However, the record fails to show that the ballot boxes were ever opened or the ballots therein counted. By an amended petition, appellant set up an alleged additional ground of contest. A demurrer was sustained to this amended petition. Appropriate pleadings made up the issues. After proof had been introduced by both sides, the lower court held that both appellant and appellee were lawfully on the ballot in the general election, and that appellee, having received the larger number of votes, had been legally elected to the office of county judge. He thereupon dismissed appellant's contest. From that judgment appellant brings this appeal. So far as the grounds of contest relied on by the appellant are concerned, this case is absolutely on all fours with the case of Lewis v. Mosely, this day decided, *Page 569
But neither was appellant lawfully on that ballot. Section 1453 of the statutes requires that, for the office to which appellant aspired, a nominating petition must be signed by not less than 100 electors qualified to vote for such candidate. This same section also provides: "The signatures of such petition need not be appended to one paper, but no petitioner shall be counted except his residence and post office address be designated." Appellant's nominating petition purported to be signed by 115 such electors. Of this number no residence or post office address was designated for the names of John Muncy, C. Merritt Pace, Geo. Morgan-Viney, James C. Hoskins or Mallie Brewer. In the case of Skidmore v. Hurst,
"The petition filed by Hurst with the clerk had to it only 78 names where the residence and postoffice address of the petitioner were designated. The other 24 names were written one after the other without any designation of the post office address. The statute is peremptory, and under it the petition presented by Hurst was insufficient, as it was not signed by 100 petitioners who could be counted."
In the later case of Blackburn v. Welch,
In this Blackburn case, a municipal office of the city of Stanton, the county seat of Powell county, was involved. The town was a sixth class city and so necessarily small in extent. The heading of the nominating petition recited that its subscribers were citizens of that town. Only 20 were needed. Under such circumstances, it was not an unwarranted presumption to say that the county clerk, whose office was located in that town, would be presumed to know whether or not the signers of the petition were residents of that city. Moreover, the demurrer to the answer admitted that very fact. But in the case before us, the office involved is a county office. Leslie county is a large one. The heading of the nominating petition did not recite that the subscribers were citizens or residents of Leslie county, but only that they were "legal voters" therein, a palpable conclusion on their part. There is no averment that the county clerk had any information concerning the residence or post office address of any of the signers other than that furnished him by the nominating petition itself. The answer specifically put in issue the qualifications of the signers of appellant's petition and appellant took no proof to show that those signers, whose names had no post office or residence address appended to them, were residents of Leslie county or qualified to vote for appellant, or that the county clerk who received the nominating petition knew any of these facts.
Although the Skidmore case held that the statute is peremptory, the Blackburn case held that, if the nominating petition taken in connection with the information it is satisfactorily shown the county clerk has about the residence and post office address of the signers, substantially meets the requirements of the statute, it will not be held bad. In the case before us, however, it is not shown that the county clerk had any information about the signers whatever. The nominating petition nowhere supplies that lack. The case is therefore governed by the general rule of the Skidmore case, and is not saved by the exception of the Blackburn case.
It therefore results that the five names above set out must be deducted from the 115 names appearing on appellant's nominating petition. Of the remaining 110 names, *Page 571 the proof shows without contradiction that those of Bill Sizemore, Ella Begley, Lizzie Hoskins, Green Napier, Mollie Earl, Luther Sizemore, Vina Sizemore, Bradley Sizemore, Jim Sizemore, Little Bill Sizemore and Ester Morgan, were not signed by those parties nor by any one else for them by their authority or direction or consent. These 11 names must, therefore, be deducted from the 110 left after the deduction of the five which had no post office or residence address designated for them. This leaves only 99 names on the petition. So far as the name of John Sizemore is concerned, the proof shows that there are two John Sizemores living in the same precinct and who were distinguished from each other by the respective nicknames of "Coldfoot" and "Blacksnake." It was only shown that one of these had not signed the petition and we cannot say that the name appearing on the petition was not that of the other and that he had not signed it. The proof as to the names of Cad Collins and Rachel Couch not signing is neither satisfactory nor competent. However, we have seen that appellant had but 99 lawful names to his petition. In view of this, we do not undertake to decide whether or not the designation of the post office address and residence of these petitioners satisfied the statute, inasmuch as a deciding of that question is not necessary for the decision of this case. As appellant did not file the required nominating petition to get on the ballot he is in the same position as the appellee, and not being lawfully on the ballot, received no votes.
Appellee says that, if it be true, then appellant is without power to contest appellee's election, no matter whether appellee was lawfully on the ballot or not, and he cites in support of this position the case of Toney v. Harris,
From these cases it results, therefore, that, although the appellant could not be declared elected to the office of county judge, as he asked in his petition, since he could not show or establish his right to that office, yet he did have the right to contest the election of the appellee. As neither appellant nor appellee received any lawful votes for the office to which they aspired, it follows that there was no election; that neither appellant nor appellee is entitled to a certificate of election or the office involved; and that a vacancy exists which must be filled according to law. The judgment of the lower court is therefore reversed, *Page 573 with instructions to enter a judgment declaring that neither appellant nor appellee was elected to the office of county judge and that a vacancy exists in that office, to be filled according to law.