Fuerst v. Semmler

149 N.W. 115, 28 N.D. 411, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 123
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 149 N.W. 115 (Fuerst v. Semmler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuerst v. Semmler, 149 N.W. 115, 28 N.D. 411, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 123 (N.D. 1914).

Opinion

Fisk, J.

This is tbe statutory contest involving tbe nomination of a candidate of tbe Republican party for tbe office of county auditor of Mercer county. Tbe contestant and respondent and tbe contestee and appellant were tbe only candidates at tbe primaries for sucb nomination, their names appearing upon tbe Republican primary ballot. Tbe canvassing board found and certified tbat tbe appellant received 428, votes and tbe respondent 425 votes for sucb nomination; and a certificate was accordingly issued to appellant, certifying tbat be bad been duly chosen as tbe candidate of tbe Republican party for sucb office. Thereupon respondent instituted tbis contest, claiming be was duly nominated as sucb candidate, and be made application for a recount of tbe ballots cast at sucb primary election. A recount was accordingly bad in tbe district court, and at tbe conclusion of tbe trial tbat court made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to tbe contestant and respondent, tbe court finding tbat contestant received 423 and appellant 421 legal votes. Judgment was entered pursuant to siicb finding and conclusions, from which judgment tbis appeal is prosecuted.

Tbe correctness of tbe findings of fact thus made by tbe trial court is not questioned, but appellant challenges tbe correctness of tbe court’s conclusions based upon the 6th and 12th findings of fact. Tbe correct[413]*413ness of these conclusions of law is the only matter for our consideration.

The 6th finding of fact is as follows: “That the board of county commissioners of said Mercer county is composed of three members; that at a regular meeting of said board of county commissioners, commencing on the 4th day of May, 1914, the said board of county commissioners designated polling places in the several voting precincts of •said county, and appointed inspectors of election for the several voting precincts of said county; that in voting precinct No. 3 of said county, Hans Johnson was appointed inspector of elections for the primary -election, and that in voting precinct No. 15 of said county B. N. Harmsen was appointed inspector of elections for said primary election; that schoolhouse on section eleven (11), in township one hundred forty-four (144), range eighty-six (86) was designated as the voting place in said precinct No. 3, and that “ITazen” was appointed as the voting place in said precinct No. 15; that on the 20th day of May, 1914, the board of county commissioners of said county were in session pursuant to adjournment, and on motion, the board went out viewing roads and bridge sites, and on the 22d day of May, 1914, two members of the board of county commissioners, the chairman of said board being' absent, returned to the county seat of said county, elected one of the members as chairman pro tern and proceeded to hold ■a purported meeting -of said board of county commissioners, and at said purported meeting purported to vacate or discontinue voting preeinct No. 15 and attach the same to voting precinct No. 3, and selected the place of voting in said precinct No. 3 as the village of Hazen, and designated Hans Johnson, the same person who had theretofore been designated as inspector of precinct No. 3, to be inspector of precinct No. 3 as enlarged and -increased by the action of said county commissioners at said purported meeting; that the proceedings of the said two county commissioners purporting to act as the board of county commissioners were, by the auditor, written in the book in which the minutes of the proceedings of the board of county commissioners of said county are kept, and the proceedings by said two county commissioners were published in the official newspapers of the said county of Mercer over the signature of the defendant, as county auditor of said county, as the official proceedings of the board of county commissioners [414]*414of said county; that the proceedings of the said two county commissioners as written in the minute book aforesaid were not signed by the county auditor or the chairman of the board of county commissioners; that the chairman of the said board of county commissioners inadvertently omitted to sign the record of said proceedings. That the defendant, as county auditor of said county, sent no ballot box to R, N. Hannsen and sent no ballots or other election supplies to said R. N. ITarmsen, but sent a ballot box to said TIans Johnson, and sent to said Hans Johnson two stamps of the kind to be used by inspectors of election precincts, one of which purported to be for election precinct No. 3 and the other for election precinct No. 15, and sent to the said Hans Johnson ballots and other election supplies purporting to be for two' election precincts, viz.: Nos. 3 and 15; that no election was held in what had heretofore been known and designated as election precinct No. 15; that the electors of what had heretofore been known as election precinct No. 15, as well as the electors of precinct No. 3, voted at the village of Hazen in precinct No. 3; that the said Hans Johnson acted as inspector of elections at the polling place in the village of Hazen in said precinct No. 3; that upon the ballots delivered to the electors residing in what had heretofore been known as precinct No. 3, upon the back thereof, was placed a stamp containing the words, “Official Ballot Mercer County, North Dakota, Brecinct No. 3,” signed by said inspector with his name or initials; that to the electors residing in the territory heretofore known and designated as precinct No. 15, said inspectors delivered ballots, upon the back of which was stamped the words, “Official Ballot Mercer County, North Dakota, Precinct No. 15,” and on which said inspector signed his name or initials; that the ballots cast by persons residing in the territory heretofore known as precinct No. 15 and the ballots cast by the electors residing in territory heretofore known as precinct No. 3 were, hy said inspector, deposited in one and the same ballot box; that in returning the said ballots to the county judge of said county of Mercer, said inspector of elections placed in separate packages the ballots cast by the electors residing in territory heretofore known as precinct No. 15, and the ballots cast by the electors residing in territory heretofore known as precinct No. 3; that all of the persons who cast ballots at said primary election in the said village of Hazen in said county were electors either [415]*415in the territory heretofore known as said precinct No. 15, or in the territory heretofore known as precinct No. 3; that no claim is made by the defendant that any of the said ballots so cast were fraudulent, or that any person not residing in the territory heretofore known as precinct No. 15 or in the territory heretofore known as precinct No. 3, cast a ballot at said voting place in said village of Iiazen; that the canvassing board of said county found and certified that in the territory embraced within said precinct heretofore known as precinct No. 15 and said .precinct heretofore known as precinct No. 3, the plaintiff received fifty-one votes and the defendant received thirty votes; that the territory heretofore known as precinct 15, fourteen votes were counted for plaintiff and four votes for defendant, and in the territory heretofore known as precinct 3, thirty-seven votes were counted for plaintiff and twenty-six votes were counted for defendant.”

The conclusion of law based on such finding is in the following language: “Upon the sixth finding of fact the court concludes as a matter of law that in the territory embraced in precincts known as precincts Nos.

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.W. 115, 28 N.D. 411, 1914 N.D. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuerst-v-semmler-nd-1914.