Behrensmeyer v. Kreitz

26 N.E. 704, 135 Ill. 591
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 26 N.E. 704 (Behrensmeyer v. Kreitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Behrensmeyer v. Kreitz, 26 N.E. 704, 135 Ill. 591 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This cause was before .us at a former term, and is reported as Kreitz v. Behrensmeyer, 125 Ill. 141. A statement of the pleadings and of the general facts of the case, and a discussion of many of the more important questions involved in the controversy, will there be found. At that time the judgment was reversed, and the cause was remanded for further proceedings consistent with the opinion then filed. Upon the filing of the remanding order in the county court of Adams county, the venue was changed to the county court of Brown county, where the second trial was had and the present decree rendered.

At the general election held on November 2, 1886, there were three candidates for the office of county treasurer of Adams county,—Charles E. A. Behrensmeyer, the now appellant, was the republican candidate, John B. Kreitz, appellee, the democratic candidate, and B. L. Diekerman the prohibition candidate. The result, as declared by the canvassing board, was, that Behrensmeyer had received 4604 votes, Kreitz 4618 votes, and B. L. Diekerman 272, making a plurality of 14 votes for Kreitz over Behrensmeyer. The election of Kreitz was contested by Behrensmeyer, and the final decree upon the first trial, which was had in the Adams county court, adjudged that Behrensmeyer had received 4597 votes, Kreitz 4587 votes, and Diekerman 274 votes, and that Behrensmeyer was elected' treasurer of said Adams county by a plurality of ten votes over Kreitz. Upon the second trial, in the Brown county court, the decree was that Kreitz had received 4573 legal votes, Behrensmeyer 4565 legal votes, and Dickerman 277 legal votes, and that Kreitz, having a plurality of eight votes over Behrensmeyer, was entitled to the office, and the present appeal is from this latter decree.

It went without contest at the last trial that Kreitz had re•■ceived 4520 legal votes, Behrensmeyer 4511 legal votes, and. Dickerman 277 legal votes. It was also admitted that 178 ballots were polled which were blank in respect to the office in •question. The contest was in regard.to 212 remaining, votes. It is now conceded by both parties that 21 additional ballots were illegal, to-wit, the votes of Ferdinand Kowatz, William Ehe, Fred Dickman, F. W. Moritz, Harry Neudoerffer, J". C. Graves, Herman Pilgrim, A. Kampe, L. Speckhart, William Boge, Gottlieb Boge, Henry Growe, August Hoecker, Gustav Appenbrink, August Vanderboom, Charles Warmke, one double ballot (163) cast in the precinct of Columbus, one double ballot (160) east in the precinct of Payson, and double ballots 221, 283 and 294 cast in the fourteenth election district of Quincy. It is also now conceded by both parties that ballot '239 of the third district of Quincy was for Bichard Seaton, ballot 54 of the sixth district of Quincy was for Bichard Seaton, ballot 251 of the ninth district of Quincy was for Vincent Krance, and ballot 212 of the fifteenth district of Quincy was for W. Hazelwood, for county treasurer, and that the ballot of ■Charles Klaubus was a blank in respect to that office. We may therefore deduct 26 ballots from the 212 contested votes, thereby leaving 186 votes for consideration. It is also admitted, as a result of the proofs on the hearing, that ballots 169 •of Burton precinct, 177 of Bichfield precinct, and 208 of the third district of Quincy, were valid votes for Kreitz, and that ballot 198 of said third district was a valid vote for Behrensmeyer. It is likewise admitted that the unnumbered ballot east in the precinct of Lima for appellant was a valid vote for him.

It is virtually conceded that the evidence sufficiently shows-that Charles Miller, James Monteith, Henry Simons, Fred Dickman, Jr., Henry Wensing, Philip Ott, Barney Kloepper, Herman Jansen, Thomas Siebers, Henry Burghorst, Theo. Kemner and William Schatzley, each, cast an illegal vote for Kreitz for treasurer. It is objected, however, by appellee, that there was no allegation in the petition of contestant under Which evidence of such illegality was admissible, and that it ' was error in the trial court to admit the same. The petition contains the following averments; only, in regard to illegal votes for appellee: That William Childers voted at Melrose, and was an illegal voter; thatF. C. Inman voted illegally at the third district of Quincy, for Kreitz for treasurer, and that he was not twenty-one years of age when he so voted; that at Liberty three persons voted illegally for Kreitz for treasurer, and that at some of the precincts and districts of said Adams county other illegal votes than those above named were cast by persons not legal voters, for Kreitz, for said office of treasurer, and counted by the election judges for him. If appellee regarded this latter allegation as so indefinite as that it was no allegation whatever, he should have interposed a demurrer and should have abided by it. He, however, elected to file an answer to the petition, and therein, among other things, de-, nied that William Childers was an illegal voter; denied that F. C. Inman, voting at the third district of Quincy, was an illegal voter, under twenty-one years of age, and asserted he was twenty-one years of age; denied that at Liberty three illegal-votes were cast and counted by the judges for Kreitz for trea-surer, and averred that no illegal votes were cast at Liberty precinct for Kreitz, and denied that at any precinct of said county any illegal votes were cast for Kreitz for treasurer, and denied that the judges at said respective election precincts counted any votes for Kreitz not legal votes.

We can not concur in the suggestion that under the allegation of other illegal votes in some of the precincts and districts of Adams county, appellant should be limited to proof of two illegal votes other than the five alleged to have been east in Melrose and Liberty and the third district of Quincy, and should be restricted, in regard to proof of these two illegal votes, to precincts other than the three that are particularly specified; The averment was, without doubt, too general and indefinite, but as appellee was content to take issue upon it, the words used must receive their usual and reasonable interpretation. By the expression, “some of the precincts and districts,” is plainly meant an indefinite number of precincts and districts, but, at the same time, a number less than all the precincts and districts in the county. The words, “other illegal votes,” plainly signify illegal votes different from those which had been specified in the petition, and additional to them, and we find nothing in the words that would exclude the idea such additional illegal votes might have been cast in the election districts that are particularly named. We think there was no error in admitting the testimony in question, and that the twelve illegal votes above mentioned should not be counted for appellee.

John Harrison voted for appellant in the second district of Quincy, and his vote was excluded by the trial court on the ground it was illegal. The sole ground upon which this action of the court is questioned, is, that the only testimony to show he was alien born and had never been naturalized was his own deposition, and the claim that such deposition should, on appellant’s motion, have been suppressed. The record shows that appellant entered motions to suppress four separate series of depositions that had been taken by appellee, and that these several motions were overruled by the court. The deposition of John Harrison, here under consideration, was included in one of these series.

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26 N.E. 704, 135 Ill. 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/behrensmeyer-v-kreitz-ill-1891.