Davis v. Grunig

76 P. 1102, 143 Cal. 336, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 822
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3574.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 76 P. 1102 (Davis v. Grunig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Grunig, 76 P. 1102, 143 Cal. 336, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 822 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment in an an election contest. The appellant and respondent were candidates, respectively, for the office of constable of the first township in Fresno County at the election held in November last. In this township there were five election precincts, to wit: Bryant, Firebaugh, Mendota, Panoche, and Jameson. Through some mistake or oversight the board of election officers of Jameson Precinct failed to forward to the board of supervisors the tally-list and list attached thereto kept by them in pursuance of the requirements of the Political Code. Instead of being sent to the supervisors with the list attached thereto, it was taken home by one of the members of the board. All the other returns, including the ballots, were forwarded to the county clerk, as required by section 1261 of the Political Code. The board of supervisors, sitting as a board of canvassers, in the absence of said list and list attached thereto, refused to canvass the returns from Jameson Precinct; and excluding the votes of said precinct, the appellant had a majority of the votes cast in the township, but including the votes of said precinct, contestant, respondent herein, had a majority.

In due time the respondent commenced proceedings in the court below contesting the said election, and at the hearing the court counted the ballots cast in all the precincts in the township, including Jameson Precinct. The finding of the court in reference thereto is as follows: “That said election at said voting precinct of Jameson was held and conducted and carried on and all records thereof made and kept and all canvass of the votes cast thereat duly made, and all records and *338 results thereof duly made and authenticated and certified and transmitted and delivered in the manner and within the time and by and to the persons and in conformity with the forms in all respects as required by law except that by reason of the malconduct on the part of the said board of judges or some member or members thereof neither one of the tally-lists of the votes cast for the various candidates at the election was delivered to the county clerk inclosed in a cover and sealed up with a copy of said register, certificates of registration and copy of the list of voters. And one of the tally-lists so made and kept by said board at said election and the list attached thereto was afterwards delivered to and left with and is still in the possession of the county clerk, but was not delivered within the time or in the manner required by law; and the inspector of said election still retains one of said lists of voters, and one tally-list and the list thereto attached. ’ ’

The court further found: “That said election at all of said voting precincts in said first township, county of Fresno, state of California, was held and conducted and carried on and all the records thereof made and kept and all canvass of the votes cast thereat duly made and certified and authenticated and transmitted and delivered in the manner and within the time and by and to the persons and in conformity with the forms in all respects' as required by law, except as hereinbefore stated; .and said election at all of said voting precincts was in all respects regular and without fraud.’’ These findings of the court seem to be abundantly supported by the evidence introduced at the trial, and in fact do not seem' to be questioned on the part of the appellant.

The contention on the part of the appellant is, that the same reason which applied to the action of the board of supervisors in not canvassing the vote of Jameson Precinct should apply to and control this proceeding in court,—“that is to say, if the board of election of Jameson Precinct did conduct the election so irregularly, and did so imperfectly and irregularly return the same, or if the material and mandatory provisions of the election law were not complied with, then the supervisors as a canvassing board were not authorized to consider returns, and for the same reason and upon the same pri of law, under such circumstances, the court should rejee refuse to consider the returns from the same precinct. ’ ’ *339 pellant’s counsel, to sustain his position, refers to the following California cases: People v. Seale, 52 Cal. 72; Coglan v. Beard, 67 Cal. 303; Russell v. McDowell, 83 Cal. 70; Tebbe v. Smith, 108 Cal. 101. 1 None of these eases, however, support the contention of the appellant that because the supervisors did not count the ballots in the absence of the list and lists attached thereto, that therefore the court was powerless to count the ballots. The action of the board of supervisors is ministerial merely, whereas the court proceeds judicially and possesses the power to compel the production of all competent evidence material and relevant to the issues in the contest or ease before it.

The case of People v. Seale, 52 Cal. 72, was in reference to an election imposing a school-district tax, and the court held that it was regulated entirely by the Political Code. Under the code such an election must be called by posting notices in three of the most public places in the district for twenty days, specifying the time and place of holding the election, which election must be held in all respects as required, and as nearly as practicable in conformity with the General Election Law. But in this case the notice was to the-effect that the polls would be open only between the hours of one and six o’clock p. m., and the election was accordingly held only between these hours, and for this radical departure from the provisions of the law governing elections the court held the election to be void.

In Coglan v. Beard, 67 Cal. 303, so far from supporting the contention of the appellant, it is said that in an election contest the ballots are the primary and best evidence of the number of votes received by any candidate, provided they have not in any way been tampered with; and the burden of proof is upon the contestant to show that fact.

In Russell v. McDowell, 83 Cal. 70, it is said that in all those provisions of the election laws relating to the time and place of holding elections, the qualifications of voters and such others as are made essential prerequisites to the validity of the election are mandatory; that all others are directory merely, and an honest or mistaken disregard of them not resulting in manifest fraud will not justify the rejection of the entire vote of a precinct.

In Tebbe v. Smith, 108 Cal. 101, the precinct election was *340 rejected on entirely different grounds from that here. William Otey testified: “On November 6th last I was at the polls of Lake election precinct on the Fairchild ranch. ... I got there between 8 and 9 o’clock in the morning. Served on the election board in my father’s place. When I got there Fair-child, Henry Seale, and the hands working on the ranch were there. I do not remember any one else. The polls were opened, I should judge, some time near 10 o’clock. We took an adjournment when we went to dinner. Took the ballot-box with us.

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Bluebook (online)
76 P. 1102, 143 Cal. 336, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-grunig-cal-1904.