Davis v. Jones
Davis v. Jones
Opinion of the Court
Contest of election for mayor of the town.of Guntersville, Marshall County, Alabama, held on the first Monday in January, 1899, under an act to establish a new charter for said town, approved February 12th, 1885. — Acts, 1884-85, p. 373.
Said act provides among other things,. “That any election held under this act may be contested as .is, or may be approved by the laws of the State for contesting the election of probate judge; and all the provisions of such laws in relation to contesting the election of a probate judge shall, so far as the same are or may be applicable, apply to contests of any election held under this act.”
Section 1696 of the Code provides: “If the contest be of an election to the office of judge of the probate court,
At the time the statement for a contest of said office was filed by the contestant in the circuit court of Marshall County, which appears to have been done on the 10th of January, 1899, he filed with the clerk®security for costs of said election which was approved by that officer. When the case came on to be heard in the circuit court, the defendant moved,- among other grounds therefor, to dismiss the proceeding for contest, for that the security for costs Avas insufficient, the sureties not being solvent. This objection Avas sustained and the contestant, upon his request, was allowed to give an additional bond. Thereupon, he filed in the court another bond for costs, in the sum of $500, Avhich, upon the objection of contestee, that it contained a limitation as to. penalty, Avas stricken from the file. The contestant thereupon moved the court to file still another security for costs of the contest Avhich he Avas alloAved to do, to which defendant objected because, the security could not be given at that stage of the proceedings, and because the name of W. A. Mitchell, mentioned in the body of the security, as one of the sureties, Avas not signed to the security. The latter ground.is Avithout merit. The security without the name of Mitchell, was ‘deemed -sufficient and Avas approved by the clerk. The fact that he did not sign the paper, though his name was mentioned in it as a surety, did not vitiate it as an obligation for costs. The other sureties, so far as appears, signed it without reference to him. Nor Avas there any merit in the other objections as to allowing the 'Contestant to file neAV obligations- with security for costs. The contestant having filed the undertakings for the costs which were deemed and held to be insufficient, it was proper for the court to allow him to execute a new, different and propersecurity.—Wilson v. Duncan, 114 Ala. 659, 670.
The defendant, on the 16th of January, 1899, filed his answer in which he denied the grounds of contest, which
The contestant demurred to said pleas on the grounds, in substance, that the fact that defendant had resigned the office of mayor, and his resignation had been accepted, and another person had been appointed to that office in his place, and that he could not deliver the office to contestant, Avas no ansAver or defense to the proceeding. The court sustained the demurrer to these pleas, and the defendant by his attorneys witlidreAv from the case and declined to plead further but made default, except for the purpose, as stated, of making objection to judgment being_rendered against him: It was thereupon ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court, that the contestee had not been elected to said office at said election. The contestant then moved the court that a judgment be entered declaring that he had been elected to said office, but the court overruled the motion, and proceeded, to hear evidence as to whether or not contestant had been elected to said office, and Avlien the court was proceeding to hear evidence on that question, the contestee reappeared in the court by his counsel and objected to evidence being offered as to the election, as there Avas already a judgment of ouster-against him, and. the court sustained this motion, and entered judgment declaring that contestant -had been duly elected to said office of mayor and had the right thereto.
When the contestee withdreAV his answer to the com
Affirmed.
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