
    P. E. Mann, Appellant, v. The City of LeMars.
    Records of Municipal Corporations: election of officers by council. The record of the proceedings of a council showed the election of a street commissioner by a majority of one vote, resulting from a ruling of the mayor, sustained by the council, that a certain councilman could not change his vote. At its next meeting, before 1 approving the minutes, the council ordered them to be corrected 3 so as to show that he was permitted to change his vote, and “that there was no election.’ Reid, under Code, section 668,. providing that the council “shall determine the rules of their own proceedings and keep a journal thereof,” and section 659, requiring the clerk to make an accurate record of all their proceedings, that the correction made was authorized, and the record therefore failed to show any election.
    Tows Council: Parliamentary usage and proceedings. Under Code,. 1 section 668, providing that the council “shall determine the rules 2 of their own proceedings,” etc., the failure of the council to conform to parliamentary usage will not invalidate their proceedings, when the requisite number have agreed to the particular measure.
    
      Appeal from Plymouth District Court. — HoN. F. E. Gay-nor, Judge.
    Thursday, October 12, 1899.
    ActioN to recover salary as street commissioner. An ordinance required the city council, as soon as practicable after its organization each year, to appoint a street commissioner, and provided that, before entering upon the discharge of the duties of his office he execute a bond in; the penal sum of one thousand dollars, conditioned for properly discharging his duties for the term of one year, to begin April 1st. March 16, 1896, the salary wa.s fixed at fifty dollars per month, and twenty ballots were east without choice, the last a tie. The  journal shows that: “Those voting for Mann were Brunskill, Thomarson, and Loudenslager, and those voting for Bauerly were Councilmen. Schafer, Linden, and Weir; and at said ballot Councilman Weir desired to change his vote, and was ruled out of order by the mayor, and an appeal was taken from the decision of the mayor to council, and upon the roll being called the mayor was sustained; and upon the tie being between P. E. Mann, and Geo. J. Bauerly the mayor voted for P. E. Mann, and he was declared duly elected to the office of street commissioner for the ensuing year/’ The next day the clerk issued a certificate of election to the plaintiff, who filed a sufficient bond with the mayor April 6, 1896. The council met again April 'Tth, in regular session, and the following record was made : “Minutes of last meeting were read. Councilman Weir •objected to the minutes in regard to the election of street commissioner. The advice of the city attorney was asked in reference to said minutes. Weir moved that the minutes be corrected to read that he was allowed to withdraw his vote .and cast it for Mueller; that at said ballot there was no' election. So ordered by the mayor.” Thereupon they proceeded to ballot for commissioner, and after eighteen ballots were cast without choice the election was postponed indefinitely. After rejecting the bond of Mann on the ground that he was not elected, council adjourned. July 22d Councilman Weir moved that a street commissioner be elected, at a salary of fifty dollars per month. The mayor ruled the motion out •of order, on the ground that Mann had already been elected. On appeal to the council the mayor was not sustained, and the council then elected George Bauerly, four voting for him, and two refraining’ from voting, as they believed Mann had been duly elected. Bauerly qualified and performed the duties of ’the office. The plaintiff was entirely eligible, demanded possession of the office, and at all times kept him.self in readiness to perform its duties. By putting forth all reasonable efforts to procure other work, he earned during the year $248, and asks judgment for the balance of $352 .against the city. To the petition making these allegations the defendant demurred on the ground that it did not appear that plaintiff was ever elected, nor that, if elected, he was entitled to the salary. The demurrer was sustained, and, as the plaintiff elected to stand on the ruling, the petition was dismissed, and he appeals.'
    
    Affirmed.
    
      Zinlc & Boseberry for appellant.
    
      JE. T. Bedell and Sammis & Scott for appellee.
   Ladd, J".

Tbe petition is based entirely on the action of tbe city council, as evidenced by tbe record made of its-proceedings. • That of March 16, 1896, certainly indicated tbe election of tbe plaintiff as street commissioner. It may be tbat the .mayor did not conform to parliamentary usage, in bolding tbat Weir could not change-bis vote, but be was sustained by tbe council. Tbe method of voting, and, indeed, of conducting all its proceedings, rests very largely within tbe discretion of tbe majority; the-wholesome restriction always being tbat of a reasonable guaranty for fairly taking tbe sense of tbe entire body. With but tbe mayor -and six councilmen, all sitting about a single table, within sight and bearing, a strict observance of parliamentary usage, especially adapted for larger bodies, is not essential. Tbe important inquiry always is whether tbe number required by law have agreed to the particular measure. If this has been done in a way not inconsistent with statutory provisions, it is quite immaterial whether or not parliamentary procedure has been followed. McGraw v. Whitson, 69 Iowa, 348; State v. Archibald, 5 N. D. 359 (66 N. W. Rep. 242). Tbe ruling of the mayor, sustained by tbe council, simply held -that a vote could not be changed before tbe result bad been announced. Such a rule has tbe approval of many deliberative assemblies, and, as applied to the election of municipal officers, seems to be open to very little; if any, objection. The very person for whom Weir bad voted was-declared chosen, so that be bad no ground of complaint, unless he was insincere, and it will not do to receive such an excuse-from a public officer. He should always act with an eye-single to tbe discharge of his official duties. But, if this were needed, tbe statute settles the controversy by providing tbat the council “shall determine the rules of their own proceedings and keep a journal thereof, which shall be open to the inspection and examination of any citizen.” Code, section 668.

II. — Piad the record remained as written March 16th,, we have no' doubt it would have warranted the conclusion that Mann was elected. But at the next- regular meeting it was corrected so as -to read that Weir “was allowed to withdraw his vote and cast it for Mueller; that at said ballot there was no election.” At that time-the record had not been approved. The statute requires the-clerk to “make an accurate record of all the proceedings had, rules and ordinances adopted by the council, and the same shall at all times be open to the-, public.” Code, section: 659. This record is undoubtedly the journal the council must keep, and the sections, construed together, mean no more than that the clerk shall keep an accurate record of proceedings, under the supervision of the council. The council, on hearing the record read by the clerk, ordered it corrected, and only as then modified was it ever approved by that body. We are quite clear that the statutes referred to-contemplate the control of its own record of proceedings by the city council, and that until this had been approved, at the-next succeeding regular meeting, it was open iq such modifications as might be necessary to- truthfully exemplify what had been done. See City of Logansport v. Crockett, 64 Ind. 319; 1 Dillon Municipal Corporation, section 294 et seq.j 15-Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 1077;’The bona» fides or truthfulness of the correction is not questioned, and, in the absence of any-showing to the contrary, the verity rather than the falsity of the record will be presumed. As it stands it fails to-establish the election of the plaintiff, and the judgment is AEEIRMED.  