Edwards v. Hester

17 So. 2d 820, 205 La. 549, 1944 La. LEXIS 695
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 9, 1944
DocketNo. 37447.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 So. 2d 820 (Edwards v. Hester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Hester, 17 So. 2d 820, 205 La. 549, 1944 La. LEXIS 695 (La. 1944).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

In the Democratic primary election held on January 18, George Miller Edwards and J. B. Hester were candidates for the nomination for the office of sheriff of the Parish of Union, to be voted for in the general election to be held on April 18. According to the returns made to the Democratic Executive Committee and promulgated by the committee, Edwards received 2,403 votes, and Hester 2,431 votes, or a majority of 28 votes. On January 22 Edwards filed suit against Hester and the executive committee, contesting the nomination, under the provisions of Section 86 of Act 46 of 1940, and asking, in support of his contest, that eleven ballot boxes, which contained the ballots cast in eleven precincts, respectively, as designated in the petition, should be produced in open court by the clerk of court, who is the official custodian of the boxes, and that the ballots should be counted in open court, according to the proviso in Subsection (b) of Section 86 of Act 46 of 1940. The proviso is that, in addition to the procedure theretofore set forth for contesting a nomination, the contestant may, on alleging on information and belief that a proper recount of the ballots in any box or boxes would change the result of the election, require' the recount of the ballots in all or any specified boxes. The contestant, Edwards, made a cash deposit required by the statute to defray the ex-pense of the recount, and the judge ordered the clerk to produce the ballot boxes in open court. For the sake of brevity we refer to the official custodian of the ballot boxes in this case as the clerk of court, the fact however being that he is now in the armed forces and is represented by his chief deputy, acting clerk. The contestee, Hester, answering the suit, denied that a recount of the ballots in the eleven boxes would change the result which the election commissioners had found and the committee had promulgated. The ballot boxes were produced and the counting of the ballots in open court was commenced on Thursday January 27 and was proceeded with from day to day until Thursday February 3, on which day, when the ballots in only nine of the eleven boxes had been counted, and when therefore no result of the recount had been announced or ascertained, the contestee, Hester, filed an amended answer, in which he asked for a recount of the ballots in five boxes which had- been used, respectively, in five other precincts, designated in his supplemental answer. The five precincts referred to by Hester in his supplemental answer were precincts in which, according to the returns promulgated by the committee, the contestant, Edwards, had received a majority of the votes. Hester, in his supplemental answer averred that a recount of the ballots in the five boxes referred to in his supplemental answer would show that he had received a larger number of votes and that Edwards had received a smaller number of votes than the number reported by the committee in promulgating the returns. More -than five days from and after the *553 date of service of the petition on the contestee, Hester, had elapsed at the time when he offered to file his supplemental answer. The contestant therefore objected to the filing of the supplemental answer on the ground that it is provided in Act 46 of 1940, Section 86, Subsection(b), that the contestee in a case like this shall be bound to answer the suit not later than ten o’clock a.m. on the fifth day from and after the service of the copy of the contestant’s petition. The ground on which the contestant, Edwards, objected to the filing of the supplemental answer of Hester was stated thus: (1) That the right to file a supplemental answer was barred by the prescription of five days, (2) that the contestee was estopped by his tacitly conceding or assuming in his original answer that the returns promulgated by the executive committee were correct for all of the precincts not included in the eleven precincts referred to in the contestant’s petition, and (3) that the supplemental answer presented a new issue and therefore came too late after issue was joined by the filing of the original answer to the suit. The judge maintained the objections of the contestant, refused to allow or hear the supplemental answer of the contestee, and refused to order a recount of the ballots in the five boxes referred to in his supplemental answer. Hester then asked for a writ of subpoena duces tecum to compel the production of the five ballot boxes, and, on the refusal of the judge to issue the writ, Hester gave notice in open court of his intention to apply to the supreme court for writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus.

The petition for the writs was received in this court on Friday, February 4, and on that day the court issued a rule directed to the judge and to the contestant, Edwards, ordering that either the judge should forthwith have a recount of the ballots in the five boxes referred to in the contestee’s supplemental answer, subject to the objection and protest of the contestant, or that the judge and the contestant should show cause in this court on Tuesday, February 8, why the ballots in the five boxes should not be recounted as prayed for in the supplemental answer of the contestee.

The judge, in his answer to the rule issued by this court, avers that he declines to order the ballots recounted in the five boxes referred to in the contestee’s supplemental answer until this court answers certain questions of law presented by the rule to show cause. The judge in his answer adopts the answer made by the contestant, Edwards, and the arguments made by him in support of the judge’s ruling, refusing the contestee’s request for a recount of the ballots in the five boxes referred to in his supplemental answer.

The contestant, Edwards, has filed a motion to have this court dismiss these proceedings, on the ground that a certified copy of the contestee’s petition to this court was not served upon the contestant until Saturday morning, February 5. It was alleged by the contestee, Hester, in his petition to this court, that he had served a copy of his petition for the writs of certiorari etc., upon the judge and upon the contestant, as required by Section 7 of Rule XIII of the Rules of this court. The fact *555 that the certified copy was not served upon the contestant until the next morning after the petition for the supervisory writs was filed in this court would not warrant a dismissal of this proceeding. We assume that the attorneys for the contestee, Hester, had actually sent the notice to the contestant or to his attorney when the attorneys, under oath, averred in their petition to this court that they had served the notice. It is sufficient that the notice was actually delivered to the attorney for the contestant in time for him to present his side of the case in answer to the rule to show cause why the writs prayed for by the contestee should not be granted. In these election contests the law requires every step in the proceedings to be taken hastily. The delay in the delivery of the certified copy to the attorney for the contestant in this case did not prejudice his rights in any way. The motion to dismiss the proceedings therefore is overruled.

The judge and the contestant, in their answers to the rule to show cause why the ballots in the five boxes referred to in the supplemental answer of the contestee should not be counted, rely upon the decision rendered by this court in Bradley v. Neill, 174 La. 702, 141 So. 382, and the decision rendered by the Court of Appeal for the Parish of Orleans in Treadaway v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 So. 2d 820, 205 La. 549, 1944 La. LEXIS 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-hester-la-1944.