Court Opinion

ID: 6652204
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:55:14.358323+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:44.116810
License: Public Domain

Harrison, C: J.
In this, an action for mandamus, the relator ashed the issuance of the wait against the respondent, as county clerk of Valley county, and by it his direction to deliver to relator a certificate of election to the office of clerk of the district court of said county. A trial of the issues joined resulted in a judgment in favor of the relator, and the canse is presented to this court for respondent by petition in error.
In 1879 the legislature enacted: “In each county having a population of eight thousand (8,000) inhabitants *692or more, there shall be elected in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-nine (1879), and every four years thereafter, a clerk of the district court in and for such county, and in each county having a population of less than eight thousand (8,000) inhabitants, the county clerk shall be ex-officio clerk of the district court and perform the duties devolving upon the officer by law.” (See Compiled Statutes 1897, ch. 20, sec. 7.) This was an authority for the election of clerks of the district court in counties of 8,000 inhabitants or more in .1879, and thereafter in the counties of requisite number of inhabitants, at times of election occurring at intervals of four years. (State v. Whittemore, 11 Neb. 175; State v. Stauffer, 11 Neb. 173.) In the case last cited it was said: “The act approved March 1, 1879, authorizing an election of clerks of the district court in the year 1879, and every four years thereafter, in counties containing not less than eight thousand inhabitants, does not authorize an election of such clerks in other counties during the intervening years upon attaining that population.” In 1897 a bill was introduced in the senate, and passed that body, and is embodied in the Session Laws of the year named as chapter 28, and also appears in the Compiled Statutes of 1897 as sections 8a and 85, chapter 26, page 556. In the note on said page it is said in relation to the bill: “It is said not to have passed the house.” The trial court determined in this case that it did not. ■ It appears that the county clerk of Valley county, when about to prepare and issue notices, etc., for the election in the fall of 1897, asked the advice of the county attorney in regard to whether he should include in the notices, etc., the office of clerk of the district court, and was advised that it would be proper and better to do so. He followed the advice, and the relator was nominated for the office of the clerk of the district court, and received the highest number of the votes cast for the several nominees for that office. After the canvass, etc., of the election returns, the relator demanded of the respondent that he be issued a certifi*693cate of election, which the respondent refused; and to compel compliance with his request the relator instituted and prosecuted this action. As we have before stated, the trial court decided that the act of 1897 did not become a law, and with that adjudication the plaintiff in error has no quarrel. Furthermore, it is conceded for the relator that that decision was right; and it is further stated in the brief for relator that he makes no claim herein based on the existence of the act of 1897 as a law. His assertion is that in 1895 the county of Valley had 8,000 inhabitants or more, and there should then have been elected a clerk of the district court; that there was a vacancy in that office in 1897, and an election to fill the same was proper. Of the findings of the trial court were the following:
“Was there a fixed ratio or number in the state of Nebraska by which the whole number of votes cast at any general election in a county may be multiplied to determine the population of said county at this time?
“Answer. Not for all cases (by statute), but by comparison we can arrive at a fair conclusion. •
“If so, what is the ratio or number?
“Answer. The number which I would use in this case, if deciding it upon that alone, is 5 when based upon a comparatively full vote, and 5¿ when based upon a comparatively light vote.
“Does such ratio or number apply to the whole number of votes cast at said election, or to the whole number of voters residing in said county at the said time?
“Answer. To the whole number of votes cast.”
“Findings of law:
“Is there a legal or fixed ratio by which the whole number of votes cast at an election in a county may be multiplied to determine the population of said county at that time?
“Answer. I think the ratio I have given above is legal, but I do not think it is fixed.
“If so, what is said ratio?
*694“Answer. The ratio that I would use is 5 for a comparatively full vote and 5-} for ‘off years/ with, a comparatively light vote.
“Does said ratio apply to the whole number of votes cast .at said election, or to the whole number of voters in said county at that time?
“Answer. The whole number of votes cast.
“The court further finds facts as follows:
“That Valley county is now neither a newly settled county or community, nor an old, settled one.
“That if this case was to be decided alone upon the ratio between the votes and population, the ratio that the whole vote bears to the whole population of the state, at any election, is the proper ratio to use for Valley county in this case;'
“That there has been an increasing population in Valley county for over twenty years last past, except 1890, when it was nearly stationary, and in the fall of 1894 and the spring of 1895 when there was some moving away from the county on account of drouth.
“That a great many of those that went away have been ever since steadily returning; and that the population of Valley county is now the largest that it has ever been, and that said county of Valley is now, and has been ever since and prior to the election in the fall of 1895, a county containing 8,000 inhabitants, and was at that time, and lias since that date been, entitled to elect a clerk of the district court, as one of the officers within and for said county.”
One question that is noticed in the argument for plaintiff in error, and Avhich we deem it Avell to settle, is in relation to whether the litigation before us involves the trial of the title to an office. If it does, then it cannot be adjudicated in an action of mandamus. (Anderson v. Colson, 1 Neb. 172; State v. Plambeck, 36 Neb. 401; McMillin v. Richards, 45 Neb. 786.) The question herein was not the relator’s title to an office, but his right to the evidence of his election to an office; and, if the office *695bad no existence at tbe time, as an office to be filled by an election, no right to a certificate of election to fill it could arise. Without an office to fill, no recognizable claim could be asserted to receive the certificate evidencing the relator’s election or right to fill it. Whether the office of clerk of district court could be filled by election was determinable by mandamus, and a trial of such question could not be termed a trial of the title to an office, (State v. Whittemore, 11 Neb. 175; State v. Stauffer, 11 Neb. 173; Van Horn v. State, 46 Neb. 62; State v. Aldermen of Pierce City, 3 S. W. Rep. [Mo.] 849.)
The only further point for discussion — and it is stated for relator, by counsel, in the brief filed, to be the only matter of contention in this case — is the sufficiency of the evidence, viewed in connection with the matters of which courts take judicial notice, to sustain the findings and judgment of the trial court. In the case of State v. Long, 17 Neb. 502, wherein the same section of the statute was under examination as is here involved, it was said: “The annual census not being made by statute the basis upon which the population of a city or county at an election succeeding the taking of-the same is to be estimated, there would seem to be no authority for this court to inject into the election law the words ‘as returned by the census taken in 1883.’ The language of the election law is general, ‘that in each county-having 8,000 inhabitants or more there shall be elected,’ etc. This, in the absence of any restriction, would seem to apply to the time the electron was called, and not to the time the census was taken. It is well known that in some of the new counties of the state thousands may be added to their population by immigration in a single year, and this largely during the summer season. It is but reasonable to suppose that this fact was taken into consideration by the legislature in passing the act; hence its general, language. The cities and villages of the state, as well as counties, are classified according to population. Thus, cities containing more than twenty-five thousand inhab*696itants aré cities of the first class (Compiled Statutes, ch. 13), and cities of the second class baying more than ten thousand inhabitants (Session Laws 1883, ch. 16). Section 2 of this act provides that ‘whenever any city shall hereafter have attained a population of ten thousand inhabitants, and such fact shall have been duly ascertained and certified by.the mayor of such city to the governor, the governor shall, by proclamation, declare such city to be a city of the second class,’ etc. 11 is very clear that the mayor of such city is not required to rely upon the census taken under the statute, but may ascertain that fact in any other legitimate mode. So tOAvns containing more than fifteen hundred inhabitants and less than ten thousand are to be cities of the second class, while towns containing not less than two hundred nor more than fifteen hundred may be incorporated as villages. (Session "Laws 1881, ch. 22.) In none of these cases is the census referred to as the criterion for determining the population, while in most of them it is apparent that it is not. The inquiry may be made, by what means is the population of a county or city to be ascertained if not exclusively by the census? The answer is, it is to be determined, like any other question of fact, by the best evidence that can be obtained. The votes polled at the election of 1883, when multiplied by the well-known ratio of population to the number of voters in a county, is evidence tending to prove the number of inhabitants.” It is true that the foregoing-extract was merely arguendo and was oUter, for, as stated in the decision, the method of inquiry or proof of the number of inhabitants was not of the questions in the case; but it contains some very pertinent observations bearing upon the question in controversy here. In 1887 an act was passed by the legislature by which the office of register of deeds was created. The legislature of 1889 amended the first section of that act, and a's amended it read as follows: “At the general election in the year 1889, and every four years thereafter, a register of deeds *697stall be elected in and for each, county haying a population of eighteen thousand and three (18,003) inhabitants or more, to be ascertained by the census of 1885 and each state and national census thereafter, who shall give bond, with sufficient sureties thereon, to be approved by the county hoard, in the penal sum of ten thousand ($10,000) dollars, conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties, and such register of deeds shall have all the power, and perform all the duties relative to all papers, writings and instruments pertaining to real estate heretofore enjoined by law upon county clerks, and shall receive the compensation allowed by law therefor,” etc. (Compiled Statutes 1889, ch. 18, sec. 77a.) By the state v census of 1885 Richardson county was shown to have a sufficient number of inhabitants to entitle it to a register of deeds, but by the national census of 1890 the population fell below the requisite number, and in. the decision in the case of State v. Lewis, 38 Neb. 191, it was held that the county was not entitled in 1893, or subsequent to 1890, to a register of deeds, and would not be until it was established by a state or national census that the county contained the number of inhabitants specified in the act. In that case the census governed, because it had been made by statute the element or factor by which the population of the political subdivision should be determined, and that decision cannot assist us in the present action.
It may be said of the evidence introduced that it did not, in and of itself, establish the population of Valley county at the time of the election of 1895 at any certain number, and did not therefore, in and of itself, furnish a measure by which the population — the main question at issue in the case — could be determined. It may also be said' that the testimony of the various witnesses was composed, and necessarily to a large extent, of opinions, general in their character; but there was, as to matters of fact, no appreciable conflict; and it was established that during the years of 1894 and 1895, by reason of *698climatic conditions which rendered agricultural pursuits almost entirely of no financial or material avail, and incidentally operated detrimentally' upon all other avocations and lines of business, the population of the county was decreased quite a considerable number, some of the persons who removed during that time doing so temporarily, and others permanently; but the population was less during those years than immediately prior thereto or since. It also developed that there was quite an increase in the population during 1896. It was admitted of record, although objected to as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, that “There were cast at the general election in Valley county in the year 1890, 1,515 votes; that there were cast in the year 1891 at the general election in said county, 1,434 votes, and that the total vote cast for any county or state officer was 1,386; that there were cast in the year 1893 at the general election held within and for said county, 1,542 votes; that there were cast in the year 1894 at the general election held within and for said county, 1,463 votes; that there were cast at the general election held within and for"said county in the year 1895, 1,492 votes; that there were cast at the general election held within and for said county in the year 1896, 1,669 votes; that there were cast at the general election held within and for said county at the general election for the year 1897, 1,541 votes,— all of which votes for the several years were duly canvassed by the proper canvassing officers of said county; that there were cast and counted in said county for the year 1892 for county and state officers 1,522 votes, and that that was the highest number of votes cast for any candidates at that election; and that the total vote oast for said year of 1892 is not shown by the records of said county, and that the same is not now agreed upon as to the total number of votes. It is further agreed that the total number of votes as given heretofore is the total number of votes cast in said county for each of the said years, except that for the year 1892; that there were cast *699amd counted in said county -for state and county officers at tlie general election held therein in the year 1888, 1,589 votes, the same being the highest number of votes cast and counted for any office at said election.” It will doubtless be remembered that in the excerpt we have made from the opinion of Maxwiílt.,, J., in the case of State v. Long, supra, it was observed that the votes polled at an election, when multiplied by “the well-known ratio” of population to the number of votes, is evidence which tends to prove the number of inhabitants. What the “well-known ratio” is, ivas not specifically stated. I had. always believed it was, by popular voice, fixed at 5, and yet think that the majority entertain a belief that such is the ratio; but a limited experience in investigation in the realm of popular opinion on the ratio to which we have just referred has led me to conclude that there is not tun entire agreement or a uniformity of knowledge on the subject. The opinion of the individual in regard to the ratio and its amount, I conclude, is governed by what in fact, or supposably, it ivas stated to be in the state or political subdivision in which the individual resided when knowledge was acquired or supposed to have been obtained on the subject. I have- been informed that it is 4, and also that it is 6; and am forced to believe, as before stated, that there is some lack of agreement and uniformity of belief and -popular knowledge or information in regard to the ratio, if, indeed, a general one exists. If it was a fact of general notoriety or knowledge, the courts would take judicial notice of it; but the question was not raised in the case, and we need not decide it.
Of the matters of which it is insisted the courts should take judicial notice, is- the United States census, the school census taken under' the - authority of a statute of the state and by the officers empowered for such purpose, the state and county elections, and the results of each and all of them. We think this insistence is correct. Courts will take judicial notice of the things enumerated, and the results. From the results of one or the *700other census to which we have referred — that of the United States used being the one of 1890 — 'and also the results of elections, certain ratios or percentages were obtained by mathematical processes, and, by application to certain figures or conditions existent of the relative affair's in Yalley county in the year 1895, argued to show that the population was or was not the requisite 8,000. Whether it tended to show that it was or was not, depended to some considerable extent on who did the arithmetical work' — counsel for relator, or counsel for respondent. Both, in briefs filed, have set forth extended calculations of the nature to which we have referred, and have based arguments thereon. We will notice some of these. In one the census of school chil-. dren is used in connection with the whole population of the county as shown by the United States census of 1890. In such census Yalley county was accredited with 7,092 inhabitants, and in the brief for relator it is stated: “According to the census reports of 1890, Yalley county bad a population of 7,092. The same report gave the number of children of school age in Yalley county as 2,189. It would therefore appear that in the year 1890 the school population of Yalley county constituted 31 per cent of its entire population.” It is then, on the assumption that the per cent would be the same in 1894, further said that the number of school children in the county on December 31 of the year last mentioned was 2,924, and, if 31 per cent of the whole population, the county then had 9,400 inhabitants. An examination of the report of the national census of 1890 discloses that in Yalley county there were 2,716 persons of school age, and the per cent of the population was a fraction more than 38; and if it was the same in 1895, there were not 8,000 inhabitants in the county. By the school census taken during June and July, 1890, the number of school children was shown to be 2,667. By the use of this number we obtain the per cent of 37.6, and the population less than 8,000. Further than this, the number of school children *701used by counsel in tlie calculation set forth in the brief was of June and July, 1894, and by law there was another enumeration of person's of school age taken in June and July, 1895, which was shown in the report of the state superintendent of schools of January 1, 1896, from which it appears that there were then of such persons in Valley county 2,491, and on the assumption, as said before, that the per cent was the same as in 1890, the population was less than 8,000. In another method of calculation which is used by the parties in their briefs the population of the state as shown by the census of 1890, which was 1,058,910, is taken, and this in connection with the vote of the state is' used, and the ratio obtained. The vote of the state in 1890 was 214,090 and the ratio was less than 5. It is assumed that the population of the state increased from 1890 to 1895, or did not decrease, -and that the same, was true of Valley county; and the figures 1,058,910 are taken to represent the total number of inhabitants in 1895, and the vote of the latter year is employed, and a ratio obtained of 5.7. But, on the other hand, we are asked to notice that if the number of inhabitants in Valley county in 1890, as shown by the national census (7,092), is used, and the vote of the county taken to obtain the ratio — -and this, if the method Is employed at all, would seem proper, as it is the population of the county which we desire to obtain — then in 1890 there were 1,515 votes, and the ratio less than 5. In 1891 the vote was 1,434, and the' ratio a trifle less than 5. In 1892, vote, 1,592; ratio" less than 5. In 1893, vote, 1,542; ratio less than 5. In 1894, vote, 1,463; ratio below 5. In 1895, vote, 1,496; ratio less than 5; and the average ratio for these years less than 5.
There are other methods contained in the briefs, but in all of them are assumptions or unallowable inferences which make them somewhat unsatisfactory as a basis for settlement of the matters in litigation. Then many of them lead at best to rather unreliable approximations. Courts may not assume j;he existence of something and *702then take judicial notice of it as a fact. A thorough examination and consideration of all the evidential matters herein, inclusive of such as it is contended judicial notice should and will be' taken, forces us to the conclusion that there is not of such evidence and allowable inferences therefrom, sufficient to sustain the findings of the trial court in relation to the population of Valley county in 1895, and the resultant judgment must be reversed and the case remanded.
Reversed and remanded.