Ex parte Mackey

15 S.C. 322, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketCASE No. 1046
StatusPublished

This text of 15 S.C. 322 (Ex parte Mackey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Mackey, 15 S.C. 322, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 80 (S.C. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

McGowaN, A. J.

At the general state election, November ■ '2d, 1880, the petitioners were candidates for office, viz., E. W. M. Mackey for congress in the second congressional district in the state, of which Charleston county is a part, and the others for the county offices of Charleston county, that is to say, John H. Ostendorff for the office of clerk of the Court of Common Pleas and General Sessions, Lewis Dunneman for that of sheriff, Warren R. Marshall for that cf judge of probate, William H. Thompson for coroner, and Garrett Byrns, Renty K. Washington •and A. E. Philippy for the offices of county commissioners of ■Charleston county. These parties on November 10th, 1880, jointly filed in the Court of Common Pleas the two petitions ■stated in the caption for writs of mandamus against the defendants as commissioners of election for the county of Charleston ; the first to require the commissioners to canvass and count the votes cast at what was known as the “ Ten Mile Hill ” precinct of St. James, Goose Creek, and the other to canvass and count the votes cast at the “ Brick Church precinct, St. Andrews.

The allegations of the petitioners’and the defence of the commissioners are the same in both cases, and we will therefore consider them together. The petitioners, among other things, state that your petitioners, on information and belief, say that said commissioners of election, Edward L.' Roche, Thomas W. Car-wile and H. J. McCormack, disregarding their plain legal duty therein, have refused, though requested so to do, to canvass and count the votes east and canvassed at said precinct, and duly returned to them, and have excluded and intend unlawfully to exclude from the aggregate vote cf said county the said votes cast, canvassed and returned at said precinct. That irreparable injury is done your petitioners by said election commissioners by their said refusal to canvass and make proper statement of the [326]*326votes cast at said precinct, and jour petitioners are remediless in the premises unless granted to them through the writ ■ of mandamus. And jour petitioners therefore praj that a writ of mandamus do issue, directed to said Edward L. Roche, Thomas W. Carwile and H. J. McCormack, commissioners of election for Charleston countj, ordering and directing them, said commissioners of election, to proceed to count the votes cast at said precinct, and to include them in the count of votes for said countj, east at said general election, and to make such statement thereof in connection with the other votes cast in the said countj as the nature of the election requires.”

The defendants made return that in pursuance of law thej have dulj organized themselves into a board of countj canvassers, and as such board are now engaged in the performance of their legal functions, and as such board thej have made a statement of the election held at the said precinct, such as the nature of the election requires. That upon consideration of the returns from the said precinct, and upon consideration of the sworn statements of the managers of the said precinct and others, that the said election at the said precinct was held bj the said managers under duress and intimidation, and that violence and threats of violence and intimidation and overawing and terrorizing of voters at said polls and precinct, prevailed to such an extent as to prevent a full, free and fair exercise of the right to vote thereat, and these respondents sitting as a board of countj canvassers, upon due consideration of the same, have determined that the said election at the said precinct was illegal and unlawful and void, and that thej cannot lawfullj include said votes cast at said precinct in the legallj cast votes of the said countj, and thej have not so included them. But these respondents, in pursuance of law, have made a full and complete statement of the said circumstances as required bj law, and intend to send and are about to-send the statement, together with the statements of the managers at said precinct as aforesaid, and all papers relating to the said election at said precinct, and all protests thereof, to the governor and secretarj of state and others, as required bj law. And thej further submit that the writ of mandamus, as prajed, is not issuable to them -in the premises,” &c.

[327]*327The petitioners replied, denying that violence and threats of violence and intimidation existed at said precincts to such extent as to prevent a full, free and fair exercise of the right to vote thereat,” &c.

The application for the writ was made to Judge Wallace, sitting for Charleston, who refused it. The board of county canvassers, as indicated in their return, transmitted to the board of state canvassers the ballot boxes and papers connected with the election at the several precincts where the votes had not been counted by them, accompanied by the protests of the petitioners, and a special statement of the facts in relation to the several precincts, and the affidavits and papers filed, together with their reasons for not counting the same. It seems that the petitioners appeared before the state canvassers and urged their protests, which board took action on the matter as shown by the following result:

“Resolved, That this board overrules the action of the county board of canvassers as to the Haut Gap ’ box, and accepts and acts upon the secondary evidence as to its contents as adduced before this board ; and that it accepts and will act upon the messenger’s statements as to the Black Oak ’ box; and that there has been nothing adduced before this board to cause it to change the action of the board of county canvassers as to the following boxes, to wit: Calamus Pond, Ten -.Mile Hill, Strawberry precinct, Biggin Church, Brick Church, St. Andrews, and Enter-prize, Wadmalaw.”

After this action of the state board of canvassers as to counting the votes the petitioners prosecuted this appeal as to so much of Judge Wallace’s order as refused the motion for mandamus in relation to the boxes at “ the Ten Mile Hill ” and “Briclc Church,n upon the following exceptions :

“ First. That it was error to refuse said writ of mandamus ,- that the same should have been granted as prayed.
Second. That the sixteenth section of Chapter "VIII. of the General Statutes defines the duty of the commissioners of election of said county when acting as a board, of county canvassers.
“ Third. It was error to hold that if said commissioners, acting as a board of county canvassers, decided not to count said box, the court could not compel them to proceed and count it.
[328]*328u Fourth. It was error not to have compelled said commissioners of election in this return to the rule to show cause to specifically state the facts constituting the duress and intimidation

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 S.C. 322, 1881 S.C. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-mackey-sc-1881.