Broome v. Martin

140 S.E.2d 500, 111 Ga. App. 51, 1965 Ga. App. LEXIS 878
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 25, 1965
Docket41072, 41073
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 140 S.E.2d 500 (Broome v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broome v. Martin, 140 S.E.2d 500, 111 Ga. App. 51, 1965 Ga. App. LEXIS 878 (Ga. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

*55 Eberhardt, Judge.

The grounds upon which a primary or election may be contested are specified in Code Ann. § 34-1703 as being any one or more of the following:

“(a) Malconduct, fraud or irregularity by any primary or election official or officials sufficient to change or place in doubt the result;

“ (b) When the defendant is ineligible for the nomination or office in dispute;

“(c) When illegal votes have been received or legal votes rejected at the polls sufficient to change or place in doubt the result;

“ (d) For any error in counting the votes or declaring the result of the primary or election, if such error would change the result;

“ (e) For any other cause which shows that another was the person legally nominated, elected or eligible to compete in a runoff primary or election.”

In § 34-1708 (c) it is provided: “If misconduct is complained of on the part of the poll officers of any election district, it shall not be held sufficient to set aside the contested result unless the rejection of the vote of such district would change such result.”

We should observe at the outset that no fraud or fraudulent conduct was charged in contestant’s petition against any primary official or poll worker, and none was shown by the evidence upon trial of the contest. It was simply charged that certain irregularities occurred in the conduct of the election that were sufficient to change the result. The trial judge having resolved the factual issues against contestant, we must affirm if there is any evidence in the record to support his findings. Balkcom v. Vickers, 220 Ga. 345, 348 (138 SE2d 868).

Contestant sought to have all of the ballots cast in Edgewood B district disregarded because the poll officials failed to open the ballot box and count the ballots immediately upon closing the polls and before taking them to the tabulation center, and failure likewise to count the stubs and determine whether the number of stubs corresponded with the number of ballots cast. The trial judge found from the evidence that these irregularities did occur, but further found that they were not calculated to and did not change the result. With this finding we agree. The *56 official in charge of Edgewood B district testified that immediately upon closing the polls the ballot box and the stub box were sealed and carried to the tabulation center. Upon arrival there it was learned that the ballots and stubs should have been counted, and by direction of the election superintendent they were carried into a room at the center, opened and counted. There was no evidence that a single ballot was changed or that any were added or taken away. While the purpose of the provision for opening and counting the ballots at the polls is to guard against any change in the ballots or in the number of ballots to be counted in determining the result, thus protecting the sanctity of the election process, which is a very important provision of the Code requirements, yet if it does not appear that failure of the poll officials to perform that duty in some manner changed the result, the election should not be set aside merely because of the irregularity. Indeed the court is not authorized, absent that showing, to set the election aside. Code Ann. § 34-1708 (c). Hastings v. Wilson, 181 Ga. 305, 307 (182 SE 375); State v. Carswell, 78 Ga. App. 84, 88 (2) (50 SE2d 621).

True enough, a disregarding of all the ballots cast in Edgewood B district would change the result, since Martin’s margin in that district was in excess of five votes, but we do not, as the trial judge did not, regard the irregularities as being of the character that could or did change the result or even to place it in doubt. Refusal to disregard the vote of the whole district was proper.

The claim that electors were required to exhibit their ballots to poll workers before placing them in the box must likewise fail. Not only is there failure of any evidence to show that this irregularity, if true, was sufficient to change the result, but the evidence is lacking in sustaining the claim. It was no more than conjecture on the part of one elector who, admitting that the worker did not see the face of his own ballot, surmised that it may have been the case with others. We do not imply that poll workers act with propriety if they do require electors to exhibit the ballot in a manner that would enable them to determine how or for whom the ballots were being cast. Certainly that is improper, and refusal of electors so to exhibit the ballot is entirely proper. The trial judge was authorized to find, as *57 is implicit in his findings and judgment, that this claim of irregularity was not sustained.

The counting of one ballot for Martin that was found on the day following the primary in the stub box rather than the ballot box was improper if it was placed in the stub box by the elector, for in that event the elector was responsible for the failure to complete the voting process in a manner contemplated by law. But if the ballot was deposited in the stub box by a poll worker through error or inadvertence the situation was otherwise. It is not infrequent that an elector hands his ballot to the poll worker at the box and the worker deposits it. There was no evidence as to who may have deposited this ballot for Martin in the stub box, or how it may have gotten there. It may have occurred at the time of the opening of the boxes and the counting of the ballots and stubs the night before, and if it did we certainly would not disfranchise the elector for that. In the absence of any evidence as to how it may have occurred, however, it is to be presumed that the elector did it and thus it should have been disregarded or thrown out. But the doing of that would effect no change in the result.

The claim that some 229 ballots were altered must fail. Since it appeared that all save 29 were duplicated for processing, as authorized by Code Ann. § 34-1504e (iii), and that the poll workers prepared these for processing by flicking from them the scored squares which electors had failed to punch completely from the ballot—using the fingernail-—it is apparent that nothing was done as to these that effected any change in the result. These were ballots rejected by the computer. They were submitted to the assistant managers or to the manager of the election for decision as to whether the elector had intended to punch the square completely out and thus to vote, and how they were to be counted, as is authorized by Code Ann. § 34-1323. Those who were authorized to do so made the decisions and the ministerial acts of the workers in complying by flicking the scored squares away so the ballots would be processable effected no change in the votes as cast by the electors. It would have been better if all ballots defective for any reason or to any extent and thus not processable in the computer had been duplicated *58 and the duplicates processed in the manner contemplated by Code Ann. § 34-1504. If the evidence had indicated any fraud in this matter a different conclusion might have been reached.

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Bluebook (online)
140 S.E.2d 500, 111 Ga. App. 51, 1965 Ga. App. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broome-v-martin-gactapp-1965.