Conaty v. Gardner

52 A. 416, 75 Conn. 48, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 10
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 6, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 52 A. 416 (Conaty v. Gardner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conaty v. Gardner, 52 A. 416, 75 Conn. 48, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 10 (Colo. 1902).

Opinion

Hall, J.

This is a petition brought to a judge of the Superior Court under § 58 of the Gen. Sts. (Rev. 1902, § 1823), in which the petitioner claims that at a special election held on the first Monday of October, 1901, in the city of Derby, in accordance with the provisions of an Act amending its charter, passed in 1891, he was elected one of the aldermen of the second ward of said city, but was not declared elected.

The facts alleged in support of the petitioner’s claim are, in brief, that by the provisions of the city charter two persons only were to be elected aldermen of said second ward ; that of the 268 ballots returned as legally cast for the three candidates for said office, 106 were returned as cast for William M. Davis, one of the candidates, 82 for the respondent Gardner, and 80 for the petitioner, and that said Davis and the respondent were declared elected; that of the ballots counted for the respondent, six—which were alleged to be of a certain size—were illegal, because they were smaller than the size provided by the law in force at the time of said election, and that if said six ballots had been rejected as they should have been the petitioner would have been elected. The petition requested the judge to hear the evidence and to examine the ballots deposited in the ballot-box.

The- respondent filed an answer admitting certain allegations of the petition and denying others, and alleging that the election was conducted in violation of law for the reason, among others, that the polling-place was, in certain particulars, not arranged in accordance with the provisions of the election laws.

*50 • The petitioner having offered evidence tending to prove that three or more of the alleged illegal ballots were counted for the respondent, that the ballots after having been counted were returned to the box, and showing the manner in which the ballot-box was locked, sealed, and kept, after the ballots had been returned to the box, the trial judge, against the respondent’s objection, ordered the ballot-box to be opened, and the ballots to be recounted, and upon such recount, made in court, found 268 ballots in the box, that being the number-stated in the counter’s certificate and declared by the moderator at the electionthat of that number, the candidate Davis had received 96 ballots of the size prescribed by the Act of 1899, and ten of the claimed illegal ballots of smaller size, hereinafter described ; that the respondent had received 79 of the prescribed size, and three of the smaller size, and the petitioner 80 of the prescribed size. The judge ruled that said 8 ballots of the smaller size were illegal and should not be counted, and adjudged the petitioner duly elected an aider-man of said second ward.

The respondent in his appeal to this court claims that the trial judge erred in ordering the ballot-box to be opened and the ballots to be recounted, upon the ground that the petitioner had failed to make-out a prima facie case, since it appeared by the evidence that no return of the votes was made according to law,” that the ballot-box “ was not sealed or taken care of according.to law,” that it was not shown before the box was opened how many votes each candidate had and that the result of the election might be changed if the box should be opened, and because it appeared in evidence that a double ballot containing the names of two different candidates for alderman had been placed back in the box so that it could not be distinguished from other ballots in the box.

It is found that the moderator of the election, as a witness for the petitioner, testified that after the count was completed, the counters handed the ballots to him in loose bundles, not tied together, and that he put them into the box, together with the envelopes, and the other tickets concerning the constitutional amendments, in one pile, without being separated *51 or tied in. packages ; that two double ballots- were found .for aldermen that were not counted because they, were for opposite candidates, and that “he. put these two tickets in the box, loose, that, they were folded up together but were not tied, and that there were no distinguishing marks on them of any. kind, and there was no way to distinguish them from the other .tickets in the box ”; that there were found three other sets of double ballots, for the same candidate, and that one of each set was counted and the other was not put into the box ; that after the ballots had been placed in the box, he closed and locked it, and sealed it by placing a piece of paper over the slot on the lid of the box, on which he wrote his name, and pasted another piece of paper over the keyhole; that he deposited the box in the town clerk’s office, in the absence of the town clerk, and did not leave any retúrns with the town clerk i that the counters made out and signed but one certificate which was put in the hox, and that he made a copy of it which he left with the city clerk the next day.

The city clerk, as a witness for the petitioner, testified that .between 8:30 and 9 o’clock of the morning following the election, he took the ballot-box from the town clerk’s office to the city clerk’s office, where it remained until about 10 o’clock of that day, when, as testified by said witness and by the town clerk, it was taken to the town clerk’s office, where, as testified ■by the town clerk, it remained until brought into court. It appeared that both the town clerk and city clerk and several other persons had keys to both the town clerk’s and city clerk’s offices.

The judge of the Superior Court did not err in causing the ballot-box to be opened and the ballots to be recounted upon the evidence which was presented. It was made the duty of the judge by § 58 of the Gen. Sts. (Rev. 1902, § 1823) to hear and determine the claimant’s petition, .if properly •brought before him, and having been thus “charged with •inquiring into an election ” he possessed the authority, in the performance, of such duty, to cause the ballot-box to be reopened and the ballots to be recounted. Gen, Sts.. § 24,7 (Rev. 1902, § 1660). .

*52 The statute does not provide what facts must be proved, or what evidence must be offered, before the judge to whom the petition is brought may direct a recount of the ballots to be made. Before ordering such recount he should be satisfied that the petitioner’s claim is made in good faith, and upon reasonable grounds; but what evidence should be considered sufficient for that purpose is a matter resting largely in the judgment and discretion of the trial judge, and it will ordinarily not be reviewed upon an appeal to this court.

The evidence offered as to the manner in which the ballots were replaced in the box, and the certificates signed, and the ballot-box closed and kept, did not render it improper for the judge to order the box opened, and to accept as evidence the result of the recount, he having become satisfied upon the evidence before him that the ballots had not been tampered with or disturbed. Mallett v. Plumb, 60 Conn. 352, 359. The finding is that “ the ballot-box was in the same condition as left by the moderator after the close of the election, and that its contents had not been disturbed, or its value as evidence impaired.”

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 416, 75 Conn. 48, 1902 Conn. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conaty-v-gardner-conn-1902.