Earl v. Lewis

77 P. 235, 28 Utah 116
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1904
DocketNo. 1535
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 77 P. 235 (Earl v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earl v. Lewis, 77 P. 235, 28 Utah 116 (Utah 1904).

Opinion

BASKIN, C. J.

This is an election contest, .'instituted in pursuance of chapter 9, tit. 18, Eevised Statutes 1898.

It appears from the evidence, and also from the findings of fact, that on the nineteenth day of October,, 1903, [118]*118the said H. H. Earl was duly nominated by tbe Republican party as a candidate for tbe office of president, and bis co-contestants were duly nominated, by said party, as candidates for tbe offices of trustees, of tbe town of Scofield, to be voted for at tbe ensuing general town election for president and trustees of said town, to be beld November 3, 1903. That each of tbe contestants was qualified to fill tbe office for which be was so respectively nominated. That after tbe nominations were made, and late in tbe same day, a certificate of said nomination, in due and legal form, was, on behalf of said party, taken to tbe office of tbe town clerk of Scofield, for tbe purpose, as required by sections 824 and 828 of tbe Revised Statutes of 1898, of filing tbe same with said clerk,' but as tbe office of tbe clerk was locked and no one in charge thereof, admission to said office was not obtained, whereupon tbe person who bad tbe certificate in charge inclosed tbe same in a sealed envelope, with postage prepaid, and deposited it in the United States postoffice at Scofield, directed to the town clerk, and it was received by him on tbe next day, October 20. That neither tbe objection provided for in section 832, or any objection whatever, to tbe legality of tbe certificate, was made to or filed with tbe town clerk. “That tbe election was duly called, and three judges of election were appointed, and sworn according to law, to conduct said election on tbe day and at tbe place designated. That voting booths were erected, and stationery, official ballots, and ballotboxes were furnished by said town board, but it furnished no registration list of voters. That an effort was made to secure a registration list, or a copy of tbe registration list, but without success. That while this was in progress legal voters appeared, to tbe number of ten or more, and demanded tbe right to vote. That said judges who bad been appointed by tbe said town board declined to receive tbe votes of tbe electors who were there, assigning as a reason that they bad no registration list. A list w;as produced called a ‘registration list,’ which tbe court [119]*119finds to be a registration list of the precinct of Scofield. That the precinct of Scofield is larger than the town of Scofield. That the list produced was the precinct list, not the town list; that it contained all the electors of the town, as well as others not electors of the town. That, npon the judges of the election refusing to receive votes of the electors who were then present and demanding the right to vote, the electors so present between the hours of 9 and 10 o’clock in the forenoon of that day proceeded to elect three other qualified judges to conduct the said election, who were of the same political parties as those judges who had refused to act, and they were sworn in due form of law and proceeded to hold an election, procuring a ballotbox, and using the registration list, heretofore mentioned as a guide to determine who were the legal voters of the town. That they continued to hold an election until the time for closing, when they counted the ballots received, amounting to ninety-three, and duly made return to the clerk of said town board, and filed the same with the said clerk. That the first judges appointed, who had refused to receive ballots, continued to occupy their places, but declined to receive votes until some time in the afternoon of the day of election, between 3 and 4 o ’clock, when they made up their minds as to their mode of procedure, but that no votes were received by them until some time between 6 and 7 o ’clock in the evening, and then only five votes besides their own were received by them from persons to whom they administered-an oath. It does not appear what the form of the oath was, nor in. what manner it was administered ; but they were sworn to something, and then deposited their ballots. The polls were closed, and both sets of judges made and filed returns with said clerk. On the following Monday, November 9,1903, the incumbent president and trustees of Scofield, as a canvassing board, canvassed the returns of both sets of judges, and found that the first judges appointed had received eight ballots, all of which were for said canvassers, and that the other judges had received seventy-six ballots for [120]*120H. H. Earl; seventy-one each for F. H. Mereweather and Lewis Jacobson, seventy for A. Greenhalgh, and sixty-three for Louis Allant, they being the candidates nominated by said party. That thereupon the said canvassing board declared themselves elected to the various offices, and ignored the other ballots, and directed certificates of election to be issued to themselves. That all the persons who voted at said election were legal voters, and were registered and voted at the last preceding town election of the town of Scofield. That the registration agent refused to act, and failed to revise and to publish or correct the last preceding registration list. That at least seventy to seventy-six legal electors desired to vote, but were not registered, and that six of them had applied for registration, but the registry agent refused to act.”-

Sections 824, 828, Revised Statutes 1898, require certificates of the character of the one involved in this case to be filed with the clerk of the town not more than thirty nor less than fifteen days before the election. Section 832 provides that: “All certificates of nominations which are in apparent conformity with the provisions of this chapter [which is chapter 1, tit. 18] shall be deemed to be valid unless objection thereto shall be duly made in writing within three days after the filing of the same. In case such objection is made, notice thereof shall forthwith be mailed to all the candidates who may be affected thereby, addressed to them at their respective postoffice addresses, if any, or places of residence as given in the certificate of nomination. The officer with whom the original certificate was filed shall pass upon the validity of-such objection, and his decision shall be final; provided, that such officer shall decide such objection within at least forty-eight hours after the same is filed, and any objection sustained may be remedied or defect 'cured upon the original certificate, or by an amendment thereto, or by filing a new certificate within three days after such objection is sustained.” Appellants’ counsel contend [121]*121that provisions of the statute relating to the time of filing the certificate are mandatory, and, as it was not filed within the time prescribed, it was an absolute nullity, and that the town clerk had no right to place the names of said nominees on the official ballot, and that the votes cast for them should not have been counted. Section 793 reads as follows: “The provisions of this title [18] shall be liberally construed, so as to carry out the intent of this title, and of political parties, nominees, and others in proceeding under this title.”

The question here involved arose in Blackmer v. Hildreth, 181 Mass. 29, 63 N. E. 14. In that case section 145 c. 548, p. 588, of the Massachusetts statutes of 1898, required nomination papers to be filed as early as the seventh day preceding the election, but the papers involved therein were filed two days late. Section 146 of said statutes provided that such papers filed in apparent conformity with law should be held valid, unless seasonably objected to.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P. 235, 28 Utah 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earl-v-lewis-utah-1904.