Board of Supervisors of Elections v. Loden

98 A. 709, 129 Md. 279, 1916 Md. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 A. 709 (Board of Supervisors of Elections v. Loden) 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 Supervisors of Elections v. Loden, 98 A. 709, 129 Md. 279, 1916 Md. LEXIS 145 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

*280 Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is the defendant’s appeal from an order of the Baltimore City Court dated the 30th day of August, 1916, in a mandamus proceeding.

The defendant belo-w, and the appellant here1, is the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City, and this Board is composed of three members, to wit, Marion McKee and Robert H. Carr,- Democrats^ representing the1 Democratic Party, and Edmund J. Wachter, Republican, representing the Republican Party.

The plaintiff below and the appellee here is Daniel J. Loden, chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee for Baltimore City, and the petition is filed on his behalf both as chairman and in his> individual capacity.

The proceedings were instituted for the purpose of testing and reviewing the legality of the selection and appointment of certain judges and clerks of election for the 10th and 19th Wards of the City of Baltimore, under sections 7 and 8 of Article 33, of the Code of Public General Laws.

By section 7 of this article, it is provided that in each year the Board of Supervisors of Elections in the City of Baltimore shall select before the first day of July four judges of election and before the fifteenth day of September two clerks for each election precinct in the City, taking two of such judges and one of such clerks from each of the two leading political parties of the State.

By section 8 of the same article it is also provided, that each supervisor shall have a veto upon the proposed selection or nomination of any judge or clerk, and if in any case, in. consequence of such veto, the Board of Supervisors can not agree upon an appointment, then the supervisor or supervisors belonging to the political party entitled to be represented by the judge or clerk in question shall name three men who are eligible and from these the other supervisor or supervisors shall select such judge or clerk.

*281 By llic third paragraph of the petition it is averred, in substance, as a basis for the relief sought, that during the month of June, 1916, the names of divers persons were submitted and nominated to the defendant, for appointment as judges and clerks of election of Baltimore City to serve in all the several election precincts thereof at the coming congressional and presidential elections to be held in the City in the month of November, 1916, and also- to serve as required by law in the conduct of the registration of the voters of the City in all the election precincts thereof in 1916 and prior to the election in November, in that year; that on the morning of the 30th of June. 1916, the defendant met at its board room in tbe City, for tbe purpose of acting upon, selecting and appointing the judges and clerks of election in and for all the election precincts.; that among the names submitted and nominated to tbe defendant for appointment as judges and clerks of election for tbe 10th Ward and the 19th Ward, were certain persons, their names and residences being fully set forth and enumerated in the petition.

It further avers, that when the defendant entered upon the consideration of the selection of judges and clerks for the several precincts of the 10th and 19th Wards and more particularly upon the consideration of the names mentioned, proposed and nominated for selection and appointment thereto, Robert II. Carr, Esq., one of the Democratic and majority members of the Board of Supervisors, in the exercise of the power duly vested in him by law, vetoed the selection and appointment of the persons nominated and whose names are set forth and enumerated; that thereupon Mr. McKee, the other Democratic and majority member of the board, claiming that he could then lawfully name and submit to tbe other or minority supervisor, to wit, Mr. Wachter, for selection by him, the names of the persons proposed and nominated for judges and clerks and previously vetoed by Mr. Carr, proceeded so to do and submitted all of the names that had been vetoed; that Mr. Carr did not concur, hut protested *282 against the naming and submission of the names, by McKee to Wachter of the names of the persons whom he had previously vetoed; that nevertheless McKee did name and submit to Wachter for selection as judges and clerks in the 10th and 19th Wards, the names which had been vetoed and objected to by Carr, and that Wachter proceeded to select as such judges and clerks, for the 10th and 19th Wards, in and for the precincts thereof all the names vetoed and objected to by Carr, which names had been submitted to him by McKee, despite the vetoes and objections by Carr.

The petition, then, avers, that these alleged and pretended selections of judges and clerks were in violation of the Laws-of Maryland and are illegal and void.

The prayer of the petition is, that the Court may declare the selection of the persons named in the third paragraph of this petition as having been selected wrongfully and illegally, by the defendants for appointment as judges and clerks of election in the several precincts of the 10th and 19th Wards, to be illegal and void and may vacate and annul the same and may issue its writ of mandamus directed to the defendants, the Board of Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City, and each of the members of said board, to prevent and restrain the defendants from proceeding to appoint, swear in, qualify or admit the persons so attempted to be selected and appointed by them and from directing or causing them, to perform or undertake to perform the functions or duties of Judges and Clerks of Election in the two wards, respectively, and further by the writ of mandamus to direct, order and require the Supervisors of Elections to proceed to select and appoint the Democratic Judges and Clerks of Elections in and for the several precincts, hereinabove mentioned, of said 10th and 19th Wards, respectively, in the manner and in all respects according to the provisions and requirements of the Election Law of Maryland and particularly to direct, order and require the defendants, the Supervisors of Elections of Baltimore City, and each of them, fully to do, perform, carry out in all respects and particulars all *283 the acts and things, proper and necessary for them and each of them, to do under and in accordance with the Election Law of Maryland, lawfully and properly to appoint the Democratic Judges and Clerks of Election in and for the several precincts of said 10th and 19th Wards, respectively, and ordering such other and further relief as may he proper in the premises.

The defendant answered the petition, and in its answer sets out in reply, the contentions, relied upon, as a defense, to the petition, hut it nowhere denies or controverts the material facts averred hy the petition, hut substantially admits them to he true.

By the third paragraph of the answer it is admitted, that what actually occurred at the meeting of the hoard, was that Mr. Carr, did veto the proposed selection of names set out in the third paragraph of the1 petition, that Mr. McKee also vetoed the names on the printed list offered hy Mr. Carr.

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Bluebook (online)
98 A. 709, 129 Md. 279, 1916 Md. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-of-elections-v-loden-md-1916.