Fielding v. South Carolina Election Commission

408 S.E.2d 232, 305 S.C. 313, 1991 S.C. LEXIS 162
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 23, 1991
Docket23443
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 408 S.E.2d 232 (Fielding v. South Carolina Election Commission) 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
Fielding v. South Carolina Election Commission, 408 S.E.2d 232, 305 S.C. 313, 1991 S.C. LEXIS 162 (S.C. 1991).

Opinion

Chandler, Justice:

From an order of the South Carolina Board of State Canvassers (State Board) overturning a probate judge election in Charleston County, we granted certiorari. We reverse.

FACTS

In the election for the office of Charleston County probate judge Petitioner Bernard Fielding (Fielding), the Democratic party candidate, received 29,492 votes; his opponent, Respondent Chris Merrill (Merrill), the Republican party candidate, received 29,038 votes. From a protest by Merrill, the Charleston County Board of Canvassers (County Board) conducted a full evidentiary hearing, after which it upheld the election.

Thereupon, Merrill filed a protest with the State Board, alleging voting irregularities in the McClellanville 2 and Wad-malaw Island precincts. After a hearing, the Board ordered a new election.

The essential evidence of irregularity and impropriety relied upon by the State Board is summarized as follows:

(a) McClellanville 2
The testimony of a poll watcher that he witnessed people selling their votes for $2.50 and exchanging this money for brown bags containing “Wild Irish Rose Wine” dispensed by members of the Democratic party.
However, when asked how many people he saw selling their votes, the witness merely responded, “as long as you wanted to stand there and watch.” He further stated that this practice continued “all day,” although he later admitted that he was at the precinct for only twenty to twenty-five minutes. Despite his accusations of such eregious conduct, he did nothing to curb it; finally, he made no challenges to the allegedly tainted votes, although he acknowledged he had the authority and ability to do so. It is noted, and significant, that there were no corroborating witnesses to these alleged violations. Indeed, another poll watcher at McClellanville 2 adamantly disputed these charges, testifying that he did not know or see anything relating to vote-buying.
*316 (b) Wadmalaw Island
(i) The testimony of a poll watcher that “probably ninety percent of all the black people received assistance,” whereas “maybe twenty to twenty-five percent” really required assistance. 1 When this witness was queried as to how she knew a voter did not need assistance, she replied, “[w]ell, when you have a big strapping 20-year-old boy in a sweatsuit who says he needs help ... I question that.” This witness conceded she should have challenged the votes she believed to be illegal, but failed to do so, and when asked for a specific number of votes affected, she replied, “I can only guess,” and “I’m not clairvoyant.” (Emphasis supplied.)
(ii) The testimony of a poll manager estimating that approximately seventy-five percent of the voters received assistance, although only twenty percent actually needed it. However, this witness could not explain how she determined a voter’s need for assistance or the actual number of votes so affected, stating, “I can’t tell you they were all irregular, I can’t, because I don’t know that.”
(iii) The testimony of another poll manager that “a very large percentage” of voters received illegal assistance. The rationale for her conclusion was “a great many of them were young people that I can’t see any reason why they needed assistance.” Notwithstanding her belief the assistance was illegal, the poll manager failed to challenge a single vote and signed the “Poll Manager’s Oath” at the end of the election, certifying that she conducted the election in a lawful manner.

Throughout the entire election no documentation of the above allegations was obtained or preserved for appellate review and, likewise, no challenges were made to any votes at either the McClellanville 2 or Wadmalaw Island precincts.

ISSUES

1. Was the evidence relied upon by the State Board sufficient to overturn the election?
*317 2. When must challenges to voting irregularities be made?

DISCUSSION

I. Sufficiency of Evidence

The scope of appellate review of the State Board’s order “is limited to corrections of errors of law; findings of fact will not be overturned unless wholly unsupported by the evidence.” Knight v. State Board of Canvassers, 297 S.C. 55, 57,374 S.E. (2d) 685 (1988); Simms v. Hamm, 275 S.C. 369, 271 S.E. (2d) 316 (1980); Berry v. Spigner, 226 S.C. 183, 84 S.E. (2d) 381 (1954). Every reasonable presumption in favor of sustaining a contested election will be employed and irregularities or illegalities which do not appear to have affected the result of the election will not be allowed to overturn it. Id. In Berry, supra, this Court found that general allegations of illegal activity will not support the burden of establishing that the irregularity flawed the election.

Averting to the record here, it is patently clear that the evidence relied upon by the State Board falls far short of that required for the invalidation of an election. Viewing it in the light most favorable to candidate Merrill, the evidence rises, at best, to the level of conjecture, speculation, and surmise: no poll manager or poll watcher who testified could identify a definitive number of alleged illegal votes cast; the testimony concerning vote-buying was totally without substantiation as to either the giver or receiver of the monies; the testimony concerning illegal assistance was based upon the subjective opinion of the poll watcher; and, finally, no documentation whatsoever of any of the alleged irregularities was presented, only the uncorroborated opinions of individuals.

II. Challenges

S.C. Code Ann. § 7-13-810 (Supp. 1990) which establishes the procedure for challenging votes, provides that any elector, watcher, or manager may challenge the vote of any person suspected of not being a qualified voter. Although this must be done before the person is handed the ballot or enters the voting machine, the statute further provides that votes may be challenged based on evidence discovered after the vote is cast. See Hill v. South Carolina Election Comm’n, — S.C. —, 403 S.E. (2d) 309 (1991).

*318 Moreover, the Poll Manager’s Handbook for Conduct of General Elections 2 sets out the procedure by which poll managers lodge a vote challenge based upon illegal assistance.

Merrill complains that egregious vote-buying occurred at McClellanville 2 precinct; however, not a single challenge was made to any vote allegedly bought or sold.

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Bluebook (online)
408 S.E.2d 232, 305 S.C. 313, 1991 S.C. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fielding-v-south-carolina-election-commission-sc-1991.