Bell v. Guenard

195 So. 504, 194 La. 956, 1940 La. LEXIS 1034
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 13, 1940
DocketNo. 35753.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 195 So. 504 (Bell v. Guenard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Guenard, 195 So. 504, 194 La. 956, 1940 La. LEXIS 1034 (La. 1940).

Opinion

ODOM, Justice.

Plaintiff and defendant were opposing candidates for the office of Clerk of Court of East Carroll Parish at the Second Primary Election held on February 20, 1940. Based on the returns made to it by the commissioners and clerks of election, the Parish Democratic Executive Committee declared that defendant was the nominee.

Plaintiff brought this suit contesting the election. At the end of the trial in the district court, there was judgment decreeing that plaintiff and defendant had received the same number of votes, and that neither was nominated. The court ordered that the Executive Committee convene at the courthouse on a day designated for the purpose of correcting the returns and promulgating'the same as altered'and corrected by the court. Both parties appealed.

Section 27, Act 97 of 1922, the primary election law, requires this court to decide *960 cases of this kind within twenty-four hours after submission. We have found it physically impossible to write an opinion in support of our conclusions within that limited time. We have decided the case, however, within that time, and for oral reasons assigned hand down the following decree, written reasons therefor to be filed later;

For the reasons assigned, the judgment appealed from, decreeing that neither plaintiff nor defendant was nominated for the office of Clerk of Court of East Carroll Parish at the Second Primary Election held on February 20, 1940, each having received the same number of votes, and commanding the Democratic Executive Committee for the Parish of East Carroll to convene at the courthouse immediately for the purpose of correcting the returns and promulgating the same as altered and corrected in compliance with the decree of the court, and to take such other official action as may be necessary in the premises and in compliance with the law, be, and the same is hereby, affirmed.

Opinion.

The Democratic Executive Committee for the Parish of East Carroll, after canvassing the returns of the Second Primary Election made to it by the commissioners and clerks, selected to hold the election, promulgated the results as shown by the returns, and in a formal resolution declared that the defendant Guenard had been nominated by majority of one vote, and issued to him a certificate of nomination.

The plaintiff Bell brought the present suit contesting the election. He alleged that he received a majority of all the votes cast at said election and was therefore the nominee. His first ground of complaint is that at Precinct 1 of Ward 2 the commissioners of election erroneously rejected and marked as spoiled six ballots which were cast for him. But he failed to set out in detail sufficient facts to show that the action of the commissioners in rejecting the ballots as spoiled was wrongful and illegal. His allegations that these six ballots were erroneously rejected as spoiled are mere conclusions, and his counsel conceded that the petition sets out no cause of action in so far as this point is concerned, under the ruling of this, court in Lafargue v. Galloway, 184 La. 707, 167 So. 197; State ex rel. Todd v. Mills, 191 La. 1, 184 So. 350; and Landry v. Ozenne, La.Sup., 195 So. 14, decided March 12, 1940.

His second ground of complaint is that at Precinct 2 of Ward 5 he received 17 votes but was credited with only 16 votes at that box. This claim is based upon the allegation that the votes, as tabulated and marked as they were called out, showed 17 but that the commissioners had erroneously extended the total vote as 16, and that the Executive Committee in canvassing and promulgating the returns had given him credit for only 16 votes.

His third point is that at Precinct 1 of Ward 5 “one ballot which was in all respects properly voted for your petitioner * * * was either marked or declared spoiled by the Commissioners of Election at such precinct and not counted for your petitioner for the sole and only reason that the said ballot had a mark in the square or box opposite the name of each of the two candidates *962 running for nomination as Representative of the Parish of East Carroll in the Louisiana Legislature at said primary election on February 20, 1940, and only one should have been voted for. That such action on the part of the Commissioners was erroneous and illegal and if not corrected deprives your petitioner of one vote which should have been, and which should be, counted for him as having been properly cast”.

Plaintiff alleged that an examination of the ballots contained in the boxes would show that he had received 17 votes at Precinct 2 of Ward 5, and that an inspection of the ballot cast for him at Precinct 1 of Ward 5, which the commissioners had rejected as spoiled, would disclose that it was in fact a legal ballot and should have been counted for him.

Plaintiff alleged that the ballot boxes used at the precincts above named were then in the custody of the clerk of court; that said boxes and the ballots therein had been properly and carefully safeguarded, had not been tampered with by outsiders, were in the same condition as they were when they left the hands of the commissioners . and clerks by whom the boxes had been carefully locked and sealed, and that said boxes should be brought into court, opened, and that the ballots therein be recounted and inspected.

Plaintiff did not allege that the clerks and commissioners or the Executive Committee had been guilty of any fraud, but charged that the errors and irregularities complained of amounted to legal fraud, which, if not corrected, would deprive him of his nomination to which he was justly entitled.

He prayed that the clerk of court be ordered to produce in open court the three ballot boxes in question, and that, after they were produced, the court order the same opened, and that the ballots therein be recounted, that the tabulations be recompiled, and that after said recount and recompilation the plaintiff be adjudged the nominee for said office.

Defendant excepted to plaintiff’s petition on the ground that it set out no cause of action. Reserving his rights under the exception, he filed answer, denying that there were errors and mistakes made by either the commissioners of election or by the Executive Committee. He specifically alleged that he had received a majority of all the votes cast at the election and was properly declared to be the nominee by the Executive Committee.

Defendant alleged in his answer that, at Precinct 1 of Ward 7, 22 ballots which had been cast for parish officers had been deposited by the voters in the ballot box provided for the reception of ballots for state .officers; that these ballots, when found in the state box by the commissioners, were counted by the commissioners for the parochial candidates just as if they had been found in the parish box; that these ballots, having been deposited in the wrong box, should not have been counted by the commissioners for any one, for the reason that they had been illegally cast under the primary election' law, and that 13 of these votes, which were countéd for plaintiff, should be deducted from his total of 909 votes, as found by the Committee, reducing his total number of votes to 896, and that *964

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 504, 194 La. 956, 1940 La. LEXIS 1034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-guenard-la-1940.