Falk v. Reis
Before: Haven
Synopsis
San Francisco — Board op Election Commissioners — Appointment op Agent and Assistants — Jurisdiction.—The act of March 18, 1878 (Stats. 1877-78, p. 299), only authorizes the board of election commissioners of the city and county of San Francisco to appoint clerks or other persons to assist the registrar in ascertaining the correctness of the precinct registers and in correcting the same, and the board cannot appoint an agent or other assistants to advise it in the selection and appointment of precinct boards of registration and officers of election, nor for the purpose of scrutinizing the roll and detecting fraud in the registration, for its own information, and not as assistants to the registrar.
De Haven, J. Application for a writ of mandate, commanding the defendant, as treasurer of the city and county of San Francisco, to pay to plaintiff certain audited demands held by him against said city and county. It appears from the petition that on September 6, 1886, the board of election commissioners for said city and county resolved “ that an agent be and he is hereby employed and commissioned by the board of election commissioners of the city and county of San Francisco, with such clerical assistants as may be necessary, not to exceed fifteen clerks, to be appointed by this board, to take all necessary, active, and efficient measures to scrutinize the rolls, and to prevent frauds in the present registration for the coming general election, and for the purpose of enabling this board to discharge its duties in connection with the appointment of precinct boards [515]of registration satisfactorily. Said agent shall detail a sufficient number of clerks to assist the commission in the discharge of its duty in selecting said precinct boards, and that in this behalf the registrar is requested to furnish him and his assistants such information and facilities as will enable them properly to discharge their duties.”
On September 15, 1886, the said board, by resolution, employed the plaintiff, and his assignor, Smith, and fourteen others, “ for the purpose of scrutinizing the roll and detecting fraud in the present registration, and also to assist and advise the present board of election commissioners in the selection and appointment of precinct boards of registration and officers in the general election.”
The defendant has demurred to the petition, and in passing upon this it is necessary to determine whether the board of election commissioners of the city and county of San Francisco were authorized by the act of March 18, 1878 (Stats. 1877-78, p. 299), to appoint or employ petitioner and his assignor, Smith, to discharge the duties named in the resolutions already referred to. It is sufficient for the question in hand to say that by section 6 of this act the said board is required to pass upon such cases of alleged illegal registration upon precinct registers as may be brought before it by the registrar of voters, and by section 29 the said board must pass upon the action of the registrar in either canceling names upon or adding other names to the precinct registers received by him from the board of precinct registration. And under this section it may also appoint clerics or other assistants to the registrar to enable him to ascertain the correctness of such precinct registers. (Schmitt v. Dunn, 55 Cal. 651.) The said board is also empowered, by section 12 of the act under consideration, to “select all election officers provided for by law for said city and county; .... and if the list furnished
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