Chase Appeal

133 A.2d 824, 389 Pa. 538, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 395
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 1957
DocketAppeals, 238, 239, 240, 241
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 133 A.2d 824 (Chase Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase Appeal, 133 A.2d 824, 389 Pa. 538, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 395 (Pa. 1957).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Benjamin B. Jones,

At the general election held on November 6, 1956 Harris G. Breth, Democrat, and William 0. Chase, Republican, were the Democratic and Republican candidates, respectively, for Representative to the General Assembly from the 1st District of Clearfield County.

On these four appeals two issues are presented: (1) were petitions presented for the purpose of opening the ballot boxes in three election precincts timely filed under Section 1703 of the Election Code and (2) were three disputed ballots properly validated by the court below?

On the basis of the open election returns Breth had a plurality of eighty-one (81) votes. The computation and recanvass of votes reduced Breth’s plurality to forty-one (41) votes. During the course of the computation and recanvass and as the result of opening certain ballot boxes Breth’s plurality was further reduced to eight (8) votes and when the County Board of Election certified the returns on December 4, 1956 Breth had a plurality of eight (8) votes. 1

Section 1404 (a), art. XIV of the Pennsylvania Election Code 2 provides the time, manner and method of officially canvassing and computing the election returns together with the time and the method of certifi *541 cation thereof. Under this statutory provision it is the duty of the County Board of Election (hereinafter called Board) to commence the computation and canvass of votes “at noon on the third day following the . . . election” — in the instant case November 9, 1956— “and continue . . . until completed”. Upon completion of the computation and canvassing of the votes, the Board “shall tabulate the figures for the entire county and sign, announce and attest the same”. The Board is required to certify the official returns (1) at the expiration of five days after the completion of the vote computation, if no petition for a recount or recanvass has been filed, or (2) upon completion of the recount or re-canvass if a petition for a recount or recanvass has been filed within five days after completion of the vote computation. If, however, the Court of Common Pleas directs a revision of the returns, or, if, in case of a recount, errors in the returns have been found, then it becomes the Board’s duty to revise, correct, and certify the returns.

On November 9, 1956 the Board in accordance with its statutory duty began its computation and canvass of the votes in Clearfield County. On November 21, 1956, while the computation and canvass by the Board was in progress, electors of certain election precincts petitioned the Court of Common Pleas of Clearfield County to open the ballot boxes in those precincts. After the court granted these petitions, the Board opened the ballot boxes and recounted and recanvassed the. votes in those precincts. On November 29, 1956 electors of five other precincts 3 presented petitions to the Court to open the ballot boxes in those precincts. *542 The Court below granted the petitions, the ballot boxes were brought in, opened and a count thereof made by persons under direction of the Court. However, the Court refused to direct the Board to correct its official returns on the basis of what the votes in these opened boxes indicated because the petitions to open the boxes had not been presented within five days of the date of completion of the computation and canvass by the Board.

The procedure to open ballot boxes for the purpose of a recount and recanvass is outlined in Sections 1701 and 1703, art. XVII of the Code, 25 PS §3261, §3263. Section 1701(a) provides, inter alia, that the Court of Common Pleas, upon petition of three qualified electors of an election district setting forth that they believe that fraud or error was committed in the computation of votes or in the marking of ballots or, otherwise, shall open the ballot boxes of the district and “cause the entire vote thereof to be correctly counted . ...” 4 Section 1703(a) provides that the Court “shall correct, compute and certify to the county board the votes justly, regardless of any fraudulent or erroneous entries made by the election officers thereof, and the county board shall correct accordingly any entries previously made . . .”. However, under this section the power of the court to act is contingent upon the fact that the petition to open the ballot boxes “shall have been presented, under the provisions of sections 1701 and 1702 of this act, before the certification of all the returns of the county, ancl, in no event, later than five (5) days after the completion of the computation and canvassing of all the returns of the county by the county board.” (Emphasis supplied).

After the Court below had ordered the ballot boxes opened and after the votes therein had been recounted, *543 the appellee on December 4, 1958 questioned whether the petitions had been presented within the time limitation prescribed in the statute. Testimony taken before the court indicated that the Board’s official computation and canvass of votes had been completed on November 23, 1956 although certification thereof was not made formally until December 4, 1956. The Court below ruled that since the petitions were presented on November 29, 1956 — a date more than five days subsequent to the completion of the computation and canvass of votes as established by the evidence — it had no authority to direct the Board to correct its returns. 5

Appellant questions both the finding that the computation and canvass of votes had been completed on November 23rd and the timeliness of raising this question in the court below. Appellant points out that the recount of votes in the two precincts ordered by the Court on November 21st must have still been in progress on November 28th because on that date the Court had by a written order permitted the work of computation to be transferred from one location to another; also, since the Court on November 29th had granted the petitions to open these boxes the Court was therefore precluded from refusing to direct the Board to cor *544 rect its returns. However, appellant ignores the uncontradicted evidence which clearly shows that the computation had in fact been completed on November 23, 1956 and that the prohibition prescribed in the statute after the expiration of the five day period of limitation is directed not to the court’s action in opening the boxes but rather in directing a correction of the returns by the Board.

Appellant relies on Koch Election Contest Case, 353 Pa. 619, 46 A. 2d 263, Avherein it Avas stated: “The statutory five day limitation should have been invoked (if it was to be invoked at all) Avhen the petition Avas presented to open the ballot box”. The Koeh decision is entirely inapposite. In the Koch

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 A.2d 824, 389 Pa. 538, 1957 Pa. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-appeal-pa-1957.