Board of Canvassers of Election v. Noll

96 A. 452, 127 Md. 296, 1915 Md. LEXIS 33
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 16, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 A. 452 (Board of Canvassers of Election v. Noll) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Canvassers of Election v. Noll, 96 A. 452, 127 Md. 296, 1915 Md. LEXIS 33 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Hart B. Noll and John F. O’Malley were candidates for the office of Clerk of the Circuit Court for Howard County at the election held November 2, 1915. The Board of Canvassers rejected the returns of the First Precinct of the Second Election District of that county, which it is alleged showed a plurality of forty-five votes for Noll, and counted 275 votes for O’Malley, instead of 272 votes, in the Sixth Election District, which resulted in a plurality of forty- *298 seven votes for O’Malley over Noll, instead of a plurality of one for Noll over O’Malley, which it is claimed the returns showed on their face.

Noll filed a petition for a mandamus in the Circuit Court for Howard County, “To the end therefore that the said de»fendants may be ordered to reconvene and correct the errors made by them as above set forth,” and asking for a rule against the members of the Board of Canvassers, to show cause why a mandamus should not be issued “to compel the said defendants to correct the errors complained of.” An order was passed and the defendants answered. A demurrer was filed to the answer, and after a hearing the lower Court passed an order by which the demurrer was sustained; and it provided that:

“Upon the facts stated in the petition and admitted in the answer of the defendants, and the admission of counsel, it is further ordered that the writ of mandamus issue forthwith, commanding the defendants to convene as a Board of Canvassers and to issue a subpoena to the Judges and Clerks of Election of the Sixth Election District of Howard County, at the election held on the second of November, 1915, requiring them to attend before said Board of Canvassers and make such corrections in the returns from said Election District as the facts of the case require, such changes not to alter any decision ‘before duly made by them,’ and commanding the Board of Canvassers of Howard County, after such corrections in the returns from said Sixth Election District have been made as aforesaid, to canvass the votes for the Clerk of the Circuit Court for Howard County, in the First Precinct of the Second Election District of said County, as shown by the returns and tally sheets thereof delivered to said Board of Canvassers, and to add up said votes, together with the votes for the Clerk of the Circuit Court for Howard County in all other districts of said County, as shown by the returns and tally sheets of the election held on the second of November, 1915, in said county, *299 and to make abstracts and statements of tbe same, and to transmit sncb last named statements, so to be made by tbe defendants as aforesaid, attested by tbe signature of tbeir Chairman and Secretary, to tbe Clerk of tbe Circuit Court of said County.”

Both sides appealed from the order so passed, and at their instance we advanced the case for hearing. The appeal of the petitioner Noll is based on the theory that the order of Court was not in accordance with the prayer of the petition and the admissions in the case — that the Court ought to have granted the prayer to require the defendants to correct the alleged error made by them in counting 275 votes, instead of only 272 votes for O’Malley in the Sixth Election District. The defendants contend that the demurrer ought to have been overruled and the petition dismissed, and that the order for a mandamus is not in accordance with the prayer of the petition. It is likewise contended that the determination of the canvassers in reference to the 275 votes was not subject to review by the Court and that O’Malley, having received 275 votes in the Sixth Election District, had a plurality of two votes over Noll, even if the alleged plurality of 45 votes, claimed in the petition to have been received by Noll in the First Precinct of the Second District, be allowed him, and hence a mandamus would be nugatory. ■ Some other points are made, but we will first consider the two principal questions in the case, as their determination may relieve us of the necessity of discussing some which may be regarded as of more technical character. A contest over an election to this office must, of course, be made, if at all, before the House of Delegates, as provided by section 12, Article 4 of the Constitution, but that does not affect the power of the Court to require the Board of Canvassers to correct errors, if any, as provided for in section 86 of Article 33 of the Code.

The two main questions may be thus briefly stated: 1. Did the Board of Canvassers properly and legally reject the returns from the First Precinct of the Second Election Dis *300 trict ? 2. Did they have the right to count 275, instead of . 272 votes for O’Malley in the Sixth District ?

1. The canvassers say in their answer that they rejected the returns from that precinct, because when the “ballot box was delivered to and produced before these defendants, it was found that the seals required by law to be put upon the same were broken and destroyed, that the strips of paper containing the signatures of and authentication by the judges and required by la,w to be placed, pasted and sealed over the slits, keyholes, edge of the lid and other parts of the ballot box had been tom, broken and virtually destroyed, so that it was fully manifested that said ballot box had been seriously tampered with and its authentication, and identity as the ballot box of said precinct in large measure destroyed.”

Although the canvassers did reject and refuse to count the returns from that precinct, which the petition alleges had given Noll a plurality of 45 votes, and thereby did malee it appear by the statements made by them under sections 82 and 83 of Article 33, that O’Malley had a plurality of 47 votes in the county (including the three votes to be considered below), it was not and could not be seriously urged in this Court that the canvassers had the right to reject those returns. Section 82 provides that, “The Board of Canvassers shall, upon being duly organized, open all the original statements or returns and tally sheets delivered or transmitted to them, and shall canvass and add up the votes and make abstracts or statements thereof in the following manner, as the case may require, namely,” etc. This Court said in Price v. Ashburn, 122 Md. 514, that “It has been repeatedly held, that the duties of canvassing officers are purely ministerial and under the facts of this ease, the canvassers could only canvass and declare the result as shown by the returns.”

Regardless of all other matters, the plain and conclusive answer to any contention that they could reject the returns of a district or precinct for such reason as is given in the answer is that the ballot boxes are not before them as canvassers. They are in no sense a part of the returns before *301 them.

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518 A.2d 1057 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 452, 127 Md. 296, 1915 Md. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-canvassers-of-election-v-noll-md-1915.