Boland v. City of Lasalle

19 N.E.2d 177, 370 Ill. 387
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1938
DocketNo. 24842. Judgment reversed.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 19 N.E.2d 177 (Boland v. City of Lasalle) 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
Boland v. City of Lasalle, 19 N.E.2d 177, 370 Ill. 387 (Ill. 1938).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Orr

delivered the opinion of the court:

In October, 1937, the electors of the city of LaSalle voted on a single ballot upon three questions of public policy to determine whether the city should acquire and operate a municipal electric light and power plant. The first was to determine whether the city should establish, acquire or construct such public utility; the second, to ascertain whether it should operate a public utility of such character and, third, whether it should issue not to exceed $925,000 of mortgage certificates to pay the cost of constructing and establishing the utility. The election returns showed that the first two propositions carried by decisive margins but the third question received a majority of only six votes. The election was contested in the circuit court of LaSalle county, where it was held all three propositions had carried, the third by a majority of 5.08 votes. In this appeal the appellants (contestants) have abandoned all contest as to the first two propositions and only question the holding of the trial court on the third. The parties to this appeal stipulated in the circuit court, among other things, as follows: “That at the conclusion of the count of the ballots upon which respective counsel were able to amicably agree, and before the submission of the disputed ballots to the court for his decision thereon, the total number of ballots counted in the several wards for and against the several propositions by counsel for the parties hereto was as follows: * * * Prop. Ill, Total — Por: 2019; Against: 2016.” This gave a majority of three votes in favor of the third proposition. In this court, so far as contested ballots and allegedly illegal votes are concerned, appellants question the holding of the circuit court on only twenty ballots and confine their brief and argument to those twenty. Other points are briefed and argued, but they have nothing to do with the determination of the validity or invalidity of the twenty questioned ballots and votes. We will consider those ballots and votes in the order they have been presented in the briefs.

Ballot exhibits No. 2 of the first ward and No. 2 of the fifth ward were each cast against proposition three, but were excluded by the trial court because the judge’s initials on the back of each ballot had been penciled out. The initials “J. N.” for John Novak, one of the judges, on the ballot from the first ward are clearly distinguishable, by the use of transmitted light alone, and the circuit court erred in rejecting this ballot. The fifth ward ballot carried such heavy and black pencil smudges over the place where the judge’s initials usually appeared that it is impossible to discern any certain initials. At the lower side of the black cancellations, however, certain lighter pencil marks appear to have been made by a pencil not so blunt and heavy as that used for the cancellation. While it can not positively be said that these lighter marks were fractional parts of a judge’s initials, yet it seems reasonable to assume that whoever canceled so heavily that particular spot on the back of the ballot was attempting to cover up something which appeared there. Election judges are presumed to have done their duty in so far as the contrary is not shown. (Winn v. Blackman, 229 Ill. 198; Dooley v. VanHohenstein, 170 id. 630; Kreitz v. Behrensmeyer, 125 id. 141.) One of their duties is to initial all ballots. No voter should be disfranchised because some unauthorized person has deliberately marked upon his ballot, whether done innocently or not. Nor is every pencil scratch or marking on the ballot, in addition to that required to indicate the voter’s choice, necessarily a distinguishing mark, even where obviously made by the voter himself. Thus, an index hand drawn opposite the name of a candidate and pointing to such name, and small marks on the back of a ballot, have been held not to be distinguishing marks. (Winn v. Blackman, supra; Rexroth v. Schein, 206 Ill. 80; Parker v. Orr, 158 id. 609.) Whether a given marking is a distinguishing mark is largely a question of fact to be determined from an inspection of the original ballot. (Bullman v. Cooper, 362 Ill. 469; Kerr v. Flewelling, 235 id. 326; Winn v. Blackman, supra.) Our inspection of the original ballot, exhibit No. 2 of the fifth ward, leads us to conclude that some judge, in accordance with his duty, initialed the back of this ballot, and that the over-marking of such initials, whether by the voter or by some other person, and whether made through mistake or inadvertence, was not such an act as would furnish means of identifying the ballot, in order to evade the law as to its secrecy. This ballot, regular in all other respects, should also have been counted as a "No” vote.

Ballot exhibits No. 3 of the second ward, No. 7 of the first precinct of the seventh ward, and No. 2 of the second precinct of the seventh ward, were all excluded by the circuit court because the voters in each case made the cross over the printed word “No” on the third proposition, instead of in the blank space adjoining. The question is whether these three ballots were marked in accordance with the statutory requirements. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 46, par. 305.) That paragraph of the statute applicable requires that two spaces must be left on the right hand margin thereof, the space for the votes favoring the measure to be designated by “Yes” and for those opposing the measure to be designated by “No.” A form is given in the paragraph, wherein the left part of each space is given over to its appropriate character and is separated by a vertical line from the blank area that lies to the right of the character. The law does not favor the disfranchisement of voters but where, as here, the voter has marked over the word “No,” and has failed to mark a cross in the square opposite or against the proposition he desires to vote for, his vote cannot be counted. The trial court properly rejected these three ballots.

Ballot exhibit No. 2 of the fourth ward was voted “No” on the third proposition, and the circuit court improperly rejected it because it was marked with the initials of an election clerk and not those of an election judge. The statute requires that a ballot bear the initials of an election judge of the particular precinct involved, (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 46, par. 311,) but we held in Waters v. Heaton, 364 Ill. 150, and Neff v. George, 364 id. 306, that the section of the statute as to the initialing of ballots contains no words stating that votes shall not be counted if they are not initialed in strict conformity with the statute. In the absence of proof of fraud or other improper conduct which would affect the result of the election, the statutory provisions, and the section itself, are directory and not mandatory. The initialing of the ballot is something with which the voter has nothing to do, and the penalty of disfranchisement is too severe a burden to impose upon a rioter, where, in the absence of fraud, the ballot is improperly initialed. This vote should have been counted.

Ballot exhibits No. 6 and No. 7 of the fourth ward were votes against the third proposition. The trial court refused to count them because exhibit No. 6 contained an indecent expression and exhibit No. 7 had the expression “You Big Pool” written thereon. With women now serving on nearly all of our election boards, any-voter who writes obscene and indecent expressions on his ballot deserves to be disfranchised, as a matter of public morals and decency.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.E.2d 177, 370 Ill. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boland-v-city-of-lasalle-ill-1938.