Durgin v. Curran

77 A. 689, 106 Me. 509, 1910 Me. LEXIS 38
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 A. 689 (Durgin v. Curran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durgin v. Curran, 77 A. 689, 106 Me. 509, 1910 Me. LEXIS 38 (Me. 1910).

Opinion

Spear, J.

This case is properly before the Justices on appeal under the provisions of R. S., ch. 6, sec. 72. The sitting Justice made the following decision from which the appeal before us was taken.

"This case, after due notice had been ordered and served, came on for hearing April 1, 1910. The defendant appeared personally and by his attorney, William H. Hines, Esq.

[511]*511The petitioner brings this proceeding under the provisions of sections 70 to 75 of chapter 6 of the Revised Statutes to determine his right to the office of Alderman from Ward Two, in the City of Lewiston, for the current year. He contends that at the municipal election held at Lewiston, on the first Monday in March, 1910, he was a lawful candidate for the office of Alderman, in Ward Two, and receiving a plurality of all the votes cast for that office at that election in said Ward; and that he was thereby elected to said office, and should have been so declared, but that the defendant, who was also a candidate for said office, was, contrary to the fact, declared elected to said office, that a certificate of election was issued to him, and that the defendant, having been duly qualified according to law, is now in the exercise and enjoyment of said office. On the other hand the defendant contends that he himself received a plurality of all the votes cast at that election for alderman, that he was accordingly elected, and that he is now in the lawful possession of said office. This is the only issue.

At the close of the Ward meeting the warden made the official declaration that the petitioner had received 227 votes, and that.the defendant had received 229 votes, and was accordingly elected. The ward returns filed with the City Clerk showed the same figures and the same result. The petitioner denies the correctness of this declaration and return. He introduced testimony to the effect that when the votes were counted at the close of the meeting, it was found that 208 "straight” ballots had been cast for the party group containing the- defendant’s name, and 219 "straight” ballots for the group containing the petitioner’s name, and that the defendant had received in "split” ballots 14 votes additional, and the petitioner in like manner had received eight additional votes, making in all 222 votes for the defendant and 227 for the petitioner, a total of 449 votes; That notwithstanding the result of the count, the warden declared the vote as above stated, 227 for the petitioner, and 229 for the defendant; that the error was occasioned by adding the defendant’s 14 votes on "split” ballots to 215 instead of 208; that that 215 was the total vote received by the candidate for Mayor whose name was in the defendant’s column, that the 215 made up [512]*512of 208 "straight” ballots and seven additional votes which that mayoralty candidate received on "split” ballots, so that. adding fourteen "split” votes to 215, which itself was made up of 208 "straight” and 7 "split” votes, gave the defendant the benefit of 21 "split” votes, whereas in fact he had only 14; in other words, that 7 "split” votes were reckoned for the defendant, twice.

This evidence was not in any way contradicted at the hearing, except inferentially by the ballots now in the ballot box, of which I shall speak later. The petitioner’s claim that there was an error in stating and returning the vote for alderman, finds some corroboration in the returns made of the votes for other officers on the same ballots, and of the defective ballots, the latter being returned as 14 in number.

The returns show that the vote for mayor was (add defective) 215 234 14 total, 463

for councilmen (3) average for each (add defective) 1349 449 14 total, 463

for school committee (add defective) 218 231 14 total, 463

for warden (add defective) 220 231 ■ 14 total, 465

for ward clerk (add defective) 220 231 14 total, 465

for alderman 229 227 14 total, 470

The aldermanic count as testified to for the ' petitioner was (add defective 222 227 14 total, 463

[513]*513Upon the face of these returns it would seem that there was an error either in the return of the aldermanic vote, or in all the others. But while these returns are suggestive on the point in controversy, I do not regard them as conclusive, because it may have happened that more voters voted for aldermanic candidates than for others, or that fewer voters erased the names of aldermanic candidates, than they did the names of others.

In defense, the defendant, against objection, introduced the evidence of the recount of ballots by the aldermen of the city who were in office at the time of the election in question, and of the action of the aldermen thereon. But aldermen have no authority to i’ecount ballots. They can act only on the ward returns. And inasmuch as these aldermen had no lawful authority to recount the ballots, their determination, based upon their count, had no validity or effect whatever. Their count is admissible in any event only to show the state of the ballots in the box at the time they counted them, so far as that is of any importance.

At the hearing the defendant introduced the ward 2 ballot box, and the ballots in it were counted in my presence. The total number was 469, approximating the number stated in the ward return for alderman, inclusive of defective votes. At the conclusion of the count the parties agreed that upon undisputed ballots the petitioner received

223 votes and the defendant

222 votes. The parties also agreed that two ballots were to be disregarded, the names of the candidates for alderman, one on each side, having been erased.

The remaining 22 ballots were reserved for my consideration, and were marked Plff’s Exhibits 3 to 24 inclusive. Subsequently the parties agreed that numbers 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 and 13 were defective, and not to be counted. Upon the remaining 14, I rule as follows:

No. 3. The undisputed evidence showed that the ward clerk at the time of the count on election day made a X in one of the squares over a party name. Of course nothing that the ward clerk did under such circumstances could invalidate the ballot. But the [514]*514ballot showed two X’s in the square over the other party name. Nothing appearing to the' contrary, it must be presumed that the voter put them there. The statute provides that the voter shall indicate his vote by making a X in one of the squares. He can make one X and no more. He can maké a X but no other mark. If he does more than the statute permits, as by making two X’s, his ballot is defective and cannot be counted. Any mark other than the single X which the statute prescribes becomes a distinguishing mark, and distinguishing marks necessarily invalidate ballots. See Curran v. Clayton, 86 Maine, 42. This ballot is claimed for the petitioner. It is defective. I do not count it.

No. 4. This ballot is claimed to be defective because the name of one of the candidates for mayor was written under the name of the other, the latter name not being erased. I think this condition does not effect the ballot as to the other officers voted for. 1 count No. 4 for the petitioner.

No. 7. This ballot contains an X in the square over the party-name, also an X after the name of each candidate in that party group. These are distinguishing marks. The ballot is defective. I do not count it.

No. 14.

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79 A. 525 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
77 A. 689, 106 Me. 509, 1910 Me. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durgin-v-curran-me-1910.