Blair County Judicial Election

1 Pa. D. & C. 311, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 105
CourtPennsylvania Department of Justice
DecidedDecember 28, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Pa. D. & C. 311 (Blair County Judicial Election) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Department of Justice primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blair County Judicial Election, 1 Pa. D. & C. 311, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 105 (Pa. 1921).

Opinion

Alter, Att’y-Gen.,

This is a petition to the Attorney-General, asking that proceedings may be had as provided by act of assembly to [312]*312determine whether Hon. Thomas J. Baldrige or Robert A. Henderson, Esq., was elected President Judge of the Court of Common Pleas of Blair County at the election held on Nov. 8, 1921.

The averments of the petition show no fraud and no error which would effect any change in the result of the election. The petition is singularly free from any allegation that any illegal vote was cast or any legal vote rejected, or that the certified result does not truly reflect the choice of the voters of the county who participated in the election.

It is not pretended by counsel in their brief submitted on the part of contestant that the case involves any fraud whatever. Referring to Cramer’s Election Case, 248 Pa. 208, the brief contains the following language: “It is true that the petition was framed upon the law of that case. If the law be not stated correctly in that decision, we have no grounds for contest.”

Aside from the fact that in Cramer’s Election Case a large number of votes had been bought and paid for, though probably not for the office in contest, and which could not have the remotest bearing upon the present case, that contest related solely to the arrangement of the space occupied by the election boards, booths and ballot-boxes and the provision of guard-rails in the polling-places.

Thus we have a request for a contest which is to turn upon technicalities alone. There is no averment that any recount of votes would change the result of the election, but the reversal of the result is sought through the discarding of the entire vote of twenty-eight precincts, through certain omissions or informalities, mainly the failure of the county commissioners to provide guard-rails and so arrange the voting-places that none but authorized persons could come within six feet of the ballot-box.

Counsel for the respondent have offered an affidavit, wherein it is averred that a careful canvass of the county shows that numerous other districts were subject to the same criticism which the petitioners make against the twenty-eight districts enumerated in the petition, and that the result of throwing out the votes of the said additional districts, as well as those of the said twenty-eight districts, would be a considerable net gain for Judge Baldrige. This affidavit was received subject to an objection by counsel for the contestant, and, on reflection, I have decided to sustain the objection. I base no finding on the affidavit.

Another affidavit offered by counsel for the respondent, and received subject to the objection of counsel for the contestant, avers that thirty-seven of the seventy-two petitioners, including ten of the fourteen who verified the petition, reside in the districts in which the petition avers that no valid election was held. The law requires that the petitioners shall have voted at the election sought to be contested, and the affidavit is offered not only to show petitioners seeking to set aside, as illegal, something in which they have participated, but also upon the theory that if, as contended, the arrangement and equipment of the voting-places did not permit the easting of any legal votes, then the petitioners residing in said districts, by their own showing, could not have voted at said election. The objection to this affidavit is also sustained. It is evident that the requirement that the petitioners shall have voted does not mean that a valid election must have been held in the districts wherein their votes were cast. Otherwise, the similar requirement relating to contests which may involve but a single district could not be complied with if it appeared that the election was wholly invalid.

There was much discussion at the argument as to the extent of the power of the Attorney-General in cases of this character, reference being made to [313]*313the cases of Cheetham v. McCormick, 178 Pa. 186; Com. ex rel. Smith v. McCormick, 22 Pa. C. C. Reps. 322; s. c., 8 Dist. R. 117; White’s Contested Election, 4 Dist. R. 363, and other cases.

I do not think the duty of the Attorney-General extends quite as far, in testing the facts, in a petition for an election contest as in a petition for action to be taken by him against a corporation under the Act of 1887, involved in the case of Cheetham v. McCormick. The Act of 1887 provides that upon receiving the petition therein provided, “it shall be the duty of the said Attorney-General at once to institute proper proceedings,” and the Act of 1874, under which this petition is filed, provides that upon the petition being presented to him, he “shall immediately notify the Governor.” In each case such discretion as may be vested in the Attorney-General must be implied from the nature of his office and of the situation, not solely from the language of the statute. Cheetham v. McCormick sustains that principle, and holds that the Attorney-General is not to proceed to institute litigation upon the part of the Commonwealth merely upon receiving a petition, though it be in proper form, but that “an inquiry into the facts may satisfy him that the complainants have been misled, or that they really have no information on the subject, but are acting from malicious motives,” and “he may see very clearly that to proceed under the act would be unwise, would invite certain defeat and fasten a bill of costs unnecessarily on the Commonwealth.” Under such conditions, the court said: “It is the duty of the Attorney-General, under his official oath, to say to the complainants, ‘you have no case;’ and it is his right to decline to ask for the complainants relief he is satisfied they have no right to.”

Probably this reasoning of the court is not fully applicable to an election contest, by reason of the difference in the relation of the Attorney-General to the proposed litigation and the different character of the procedure sought to be instituted. It is equally clear, however, in both cases, that it is not a mere ministerial duty that is to be performed, and in Com. ex rel. Smith v. McCormick, Attorney-General, 22 Pa. C. C. Reps. 322, 8 Dist. R. 117, which was a petition for an election contest, Judge Simonton, after discussing the case of Cheetham v. McCormick, said: “We are unable to see what purpose would be served by requiring the petition to be presented to the Attorney-General if his sole duty were to transmit it to the Governor, and we think the principle of the case above cited ought to apply here.”

It seems very plain that the petition should be required to be fully self-sustaining and that the proceedings should bear the clear impress of good faith in every particular. Otherwise, there would be temptation to start a contest where the real reason was a close result and the hope that something might turn up in the course of the investigation.

The law is not concerned here as to whether there was an “undue” or “illegal” election in certain election districts, but whether there was such an election in Blair County.

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Related

Cheetham v. McCormick
35 A. 631 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1896)
Knight v. Coudersport Borough
92 A. 299 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1914)
Cramer's Election Case
93 A. 937 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1915)
Commonwealth, ex rel. Gast v. Kelly
100 A. 272 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)
West Mahanoy Township's Contested Election
101 A. 946 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Pa. D. & C. 311, 1921 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blair-county-judicial-election-padeptjust-1921.