Foster v. Scarff
Foster v. Scarff
Opinion of the Court
On the second Tuesday of October, 1860, Anthony Casad was properly elected probate judge of, Logan county, for the full term of three years, and was duly qualified and commissioned. Having held the office until the eleventh of October, 1861, less than thirty days prior to the time of the next annual election for that year, he then died, leaving a vacancy in the office, which, on the next day, was filled by the governor, by the appointment of Samuel B. Taylor to the office, until a successor should be elected and qualified.
On the second Tuesday of October, 1862, the said Taylor was regularly elected to said office. But, the governor, instead of commissioning him for the unexpired term of Casad, as he ought to have done, commissioned him for the full term of three years. See Ohio ex rel. the Attorney General v. Taylor, in quo warranto, decided at this term. Ante, p. 137. This was done, doubtless, under a mistaken apprehension of the provisions of the constitution on the subject, and the same mistake seems to have been, and to have continued,general in the minds of the electors and officials of that county.
Accordingly, in the fall of 1863, when the general election of that year was approaching, at which an election of probate judge for the full term of three years, to succeed the full term to which Casad had been elected, and then temporarily filled by Taylor, was by law required to be holden, the sheriff of the county published, in conformity to law, his proclamation to the electors of the county, for the election, at the ensuing second Tuesday of October, of a governor, lieutenant governor, judge of the supreme court, auditor of state, treasurer of state, member of the board of public works, senator, member of th^ house of representatives, county treasurer, clerk of the court of common pleas, county recorder, county surveyor, infirmary directors, and county commissioner, but he omitted to make any mention therein of the election of a probate judge.
Antagonistic nominations of candidates for all the offices named in the sheriff’s proclamation, were openly made and
The whole number of votes in the county cast at that election, was four thousand three hundred and thirty-nine. Nine hundred and thirteen votes, less than one fourth of the whole number, were cast for the plaintiff in error, for the office of probate judge; and no other votes were cast for that office.
In four out of seventeen townships in all, no votes were cast for probate judge; and in one other township, only two votes. Foster was, by the county canvassers declared to be duly elected; an-d the defendant in error, William D. Scarff, an elector of the county, having proceeded in the court of common pleas to contest the validity of the election of Foster, according to the statute, that court, upon the state of fact substantially as above given, adjudged the election of Foster to be invalid; and, the facts and evidence having been brought upon the record by bill of exceptions, this petition in error is prosecuted for the reversal of that judgment.
The question is, whether the court below erred in holding che election of Foster to be invalid.
The term, election, implies a choice by an «electoral body, at the time and substantially in the manner and with the safeguards provided by law, of a qualified person to an office. A vacancy may exist, or may be about to occur, in an office, which vacancy a given electoral body may have the unquestionable right to fill by election; and tnat electoral body may manifest its choice in a manner which leaves no doubt of the
Here then was an election held without notice to the body of the electors of Logan county, without notice such as the laws prescribe, and without notice in fact from any other source whatsoever. And, for this reason, and irrespective of any circumstances of concealment and stratagem, on the part of the few electors who did vote, which appear in the
In deciding this case, however, we do not intend to go beyond the case before us, as presented by its own peculiar facts. We do not intend to hold, nor are we of opinion, that the notice by proclamation, as prescribed by law, is per se, and in all supposable cases, necessary to the validity of an election. If such were the law; it would be in the power of a ministerial officer, by his misfeasance, always to prevent a legal election. We have no doubt that where an election is held in other respects as prescribed by law, and notice in fact of the election is brought home to the great body of the electors, though derived through means other than the proclamation which the law prescribes, such election would be valid. But where, as in this case, there was no notice, either by official proclamation, or in fact, and it is obvious that the great body of the electors were misled, for want of the official proclamation, its absence becomes such an irregularity as to prevent an actual choice by the electors, prevents an actual election, in the primary sense of that word, and renders invalid any semblance of an election, which may have been attempted by a few, and which must operate, if it be allowed to operate at all, as a surprise and fraud upon the rights of the many.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.