Frazier v. Board of Canvassers

92 S.E. 99, 79 W. Va. 425, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 101
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 99 (Frazier v. Board of Canvassers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frazier v. Board of Canvassers, 92 S.E. 99, 79 W. Va. 425, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 101 (W. Va. 1917).

Opinion

Ritz, Judge:

James S. Frazier and W. E. Somerville were opposing candidates for the office of sheriff of Putnam county at the election held in said county in the month of November, 1916. After the returns of said election had been canvassed a demand was made upon the board of canvassers for a recount of the votes east at said election for the office of sheriff. This recount was had and the board of canvassers ascertained and declared that W. E. Somerville was elected to the said office. During the progress of the recount Frazier made objection to the action of the board of canvassers in counting certain ballots for Somerville, and in refusing to count certain ballots for himself, and Somerville likewise objected to the action of the board of canvassers in counting certain ballots for Frazier, and in refusing to count certain ballots for him. Frazier now asks for a writ of mandamus to compel the board of canvassers of Putnam county to count these ballots for him which said board refused to count, and to reject certain ballots which were counted for Somerville. Somerville makes return to the writ and claims that the writ should not be awarded because the ballots which Frazier claims should be counted for him,'and which were rejected, were properly rejected; and that the ballots which were counted for Somer-ville, and which Frazier claims should not have been counted, were properly counted; and in addition thereto gives as a [427]*427further reason why the writ should not issue that there were certain ballots counted for Frazier by the board of ballot commissioners which should not have been counted, and likewise. certain ballots which the board of ballot commissioners refused to count for him which they should have counted. These disputed ballots number twenty-three.

This court in former decisions has fully laid down the rules to be applied by boards of canvassers in interpreting ballots and counting them, and it is only necessary to reiterate those rules and make application of them to the particular ballots in question. This court has held in the case of Shore v. Board of Canvassers, 64 W. Va. 705, that the intention of the voter must be the guiding star of the board of canvassers in ascertaining for whom a ballot shall be counted. It is there held, and this is but declaratory of the statute law, that if from the ballot it can be determined with reasonable' certainty for whom the voter intended to vote, then his ticket or ballot should be counted in accordance with that expressed intention, regardless of the marks used by the voter to express such intention. There are certain methods prescribed by statute which a voter may use for declaring his intention, but these methods are not exclusive. -In interpreting these ballots, however, it must be borne in mind that 'while the intention of the voter must be made effective, if it can be determined by reference to the ballot, still if that intention is so dubiously expressed as to leave it uncertain and doubtful then the ballot must be rejected in the particulars in which such doubt or uncertainty exists.

Certain of the ballots complained of are marked by the voters casting the same only by a cross in the square in front of the names of certain candidates. The voter in these cases has not selected a ticket in any of the ways - prescribed by law, to-wit, by placing a cross in the circle under one of the party emblems, or by defacing the tickets other than the one desired to be voted by him, but has contented himself by simply picking out certain candidates upon one or more of the tickets upon the ballot, and by a cross in front of these names indicating how he desires to vote. In some instances a cross is made in the square before the name of the first elector [428]*428on the ticket, as well as in the squares in front of the names of other candidates, and it is contended that in those cases in which the voter has placed a cross in the square in front of the name of the first elector upon the ticket that this sufficiently expresses his intention to vote the straight ticket of that party, and that such ticket should he counted for all • of the candidates upon the ticket 'containing the name of such elector. In the determination of this question it must be borne in mind that the statute provides as one of the ways by which a voter can express his intent the placing of crosses in the squares in front of the names of the candidates contained on the ticket, and that when he so expresses his intent his vote will be counted for all the candidates in the squares before whose name he has placed a cross.

In the case of Shore v. .Board of Canvassers, supra, in commenting upon tickets of this character, this court said:

“In some instances, no selection of an entire ticket was made. The voter marked the names of the candidates he desired to vote for wherever he happened to find them on the ballot sheet, and, for some of the offices to be filled, he marked no candidate’s name. These ballots were properly counted only for candidates whose names were marked.”

The statute also provides that if a voter desires to vote a mixed ticket, that is for candidates of different parties, he may make a cross mark in the blank space before the name of each candidate for whom he desires to vote on whatever ticket the name may be, and no other designation will be necessary for the counting of his vote for such candidate. To count these ballots for any other than the candidate indicated by the voter would extend the voter’s intention beyond the point at which the statute sets the limit for the counting of such ballots. We are, therefore, of opinion that all of the ballots marked in this manner are improperly counted for any candidate except those in the squares before whose names the voter placed a cross.

There are among said contested ballots two upon which the voter expressed his primary intent by selecting a ticket, in one instance by drawing lines through the other three tickets on the ballot, and in the other by drawing lines [429]*429through the other three tickets, and also by putting a cross in the circle under the party emblem. He then further expressed his intention not to vote for one of the candidates upon the ticket he had thus selected by striking out the name of such candidate, and further expressed an intent to vote for the opposing candidate by putting a cross in the square in front of the name of such opposing candidate/ It is contended that in as much as the ticket upon which the candidate’s name appears, in the square in front 'of which the voter put the cross, was marked out by a line drawn all the way through it, that these tickets should not be counted for such candidate. We are of opinion, however, that the marks drawn .through the three tickets on the ballot were and are for the purpose of indicating the intention of the voter to vote primarily the ticket not so defaced, and have no other significance, and this declaration to vote for a particular candidate whose name appears upon one of the tickets thus crossed out, by placing a cross in the square in front of the name of such candidate, will.override the declaration made by the voter not to vote the entire ticket by drawing the lines through it, and that these ballots should be so counted.

There is one ballot from which the voter erased the name of Somerville as a candidate for sheriff and wrote over the name thus erased the name of “J. E. Frazier”. The name of Somerville’s opponent is “Jas. S. Frazier”.

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Related

State Ex Rel. McKown v. Board of Canvassers
168 S.E. 793 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1933)
Rollyson v. County Court of Summers County
167 S.E. 83 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1932)
Ellis v. Hager
104 S.E. 607 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1920)
Kimbley v. Luckey
1919 OK 108 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 99, 79 W. Va. 425, 1917 W. Va. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-board-of-canvassers-wva-1917.