Funkhouser v. Brotherton

22 S.E.2d 284, 124 W. Va. 713, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 126
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1942
Docket9412
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 S.E.2d 284 (Funkhouser v. Brotherton) 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
Funkhouser v. Brotherton, 22 S.E.2d 284, 124 W. Va. 713, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 126 (W. Va. 1942).

Opinions

*714 Rose, Judge:

This is a proceeding in mandamus by Raymond J. Funk-houser, a candidate on the Republican ticket for the nomination for United States Senator, in the primary election held August 4, 1942, against W. T. Brotherton, Carl C. Calvert and Mont Cavender, commissioners of the County Court of Kanawha County, and as such, ex officio the board of canvassers of said county, and W. Chapman Revercomb and John L. Gillespie, who also were candidates for the same nomination. The relator seeks a peremptory writ of mandamus requiring the canvassing board to reconvene as such and then make a new tabulation of the votes of Kanawha County for the Republican candidate for the United States Senate, excluding and omitting therefrom, all the votes returned from Precinct No. 105.

The relator represents that at the time of the preparation of his petition, the election returns throughout the state showed him to have 47,309 votes for said nomination and the respondent Revercomb to have 47,373 votes; that in precinct No. 105, twenty ballots have been returned and counted for the relator and 136 for the respondent Revercomb, and that, therefore, the exclusion of all of said ballots will result in a plurality of fifty-two votes for the relator in the° total vote of the state.

The relator bases his demand for the rejection of these votes on the grounds (1) that from the documentary returns from the precinct, it appears that although only a single board of five was appointed for that precinct, eleven persons purported to act in some capacity, but it is impossible to determine what persons were the election officials at said precinct, or in what capacity any pretended official purported to act; and, particularly, (2) that the Republican ballots here involved show that the names of six different persons are written on ballots where the name of the poll clerks should have been written, whereby it becomes, and is, impossible to determine whether two legally appointed and qualified poll clerks, or in fact any poll clerk, signed any of the said ballots.

*715 Neither the members of the canvassing board nor John L. Gillespie made any response to the rule issued herein; but the respondent Revercomb filed a return and answer in which he undertakes to explain and to justify the method of holding the election in the precinct in question. A considerable volume of evidence was taken on behalf of the relator and the respondent. From the documentary-evidence, it appears that the county court duly appointed the following election officials for precinct No. 105: Homer H. Lowe, Democratic clerk, and William Henry Branham and George Sadaro, Democratic commissioners; and Zun-del Hark, Republican clerk and Mulligan Chappell, Republican commissioner. The depositions taken show without question that Hark did not appear at the polls, and that Mulligan Chappell, the person appointed by the county court to be Republican commissioner, was, by the remaining officials, chosen clerk in lieu of Hark; and that the same officials then selected Robert Humphreys, a Republican voter then present to be Republican commissioner in the place of Chappell. The evidence further shows that more than 400 voters were registered in this precinct, a number for which the law requires both a receiving and a counting board of five members each; and that the election officials chosen as before stated, then proceeded to appoint and organize a counting board from among the voters present, naming Willie Mae Ford, Clarence Allen, John Campbell, William Roberts, Joseph Sadaro and Andrew Holz, being six members instead of five. It is further agreed by all witnesses that the official oath of this group of officials was administered by William H. Branham, a Democratic commissioner appointed by the county court, who, in turn, was sworn by George Sadaro, another commissioner so appointed. These oaths were read from the poll book, but no witness was able to say whether the oath actually administered was that of a commissioner or of a poll clerk.

From this point, it appears that confusion followed in the duties performed by these officials. Neither the documentary evidence nor the oral testimony makes wholly *716 clear what each did; but it does appear clearly that some of the officials purported to act in various capacities, some of them even rotating between the receiving board and the counting board. Apparently, each official did whatever he thought needed to be done.

We do not consider it necessary to determine whether .the counting board so established was legally constituted, inasmuch as the mere counting of the ballots is not here involved. Also, we need not determine what each pretended official attempted to do, since they all did purport to qualify and act in some official capacity, but it is necessary to pass upon the legality of the signatures on the ballots voted, since the proper signing of the ballots by the poll clerks is necessary to their validity. State v. Board of Canvassers, 102 W. Va. 703, 136 S. E. 772; State v. Heatherly, 96 W. Va. 685, 123 S. E. 795.

Homer H. Lowe was legally appointed Democratic clerk for this precinct. We think also that the evidence, both documentary and parol, shows clearly that he qualified as such, and, for at least part of the time, actually performed the duties of such clerk. He signed the certificates of election as clerk. The formal clerk’s oath included in the Democratic poll book bears his name inserted at its beginning in the blank immediately following the pronoun “I,” and which appears to be in the same handwriting by which his name is signed to the certificates. It is true that this oath does not bear his signature at its close, but this is also true of the oath of all these officials and purported officials. Each of these oaths is signed by William H. Branham, commissioner, as the officer administering the same. These records, therefore, show with reasonable certainty the qualification of Lowe as clerk. It further appears from the oral evidence that, while he did.not at all times, nor even at the beginning of the election, act as clerk, he was in and about the polls throughout the day and, of course, did sign the returns in his official capacity. We conclude, therefore, that he was the legally appointed, qualified and acting Democratic clerk of this precinct.

The testimony further shows without question that, at *717 the opening of the polls at this precinct, Zundel Hark, who had been appointed by the county court as Republican clerk, failed to appear, and that thereupon, the remaining officials there present appointed Mulligan Chap-pell to act as clerk in lieu of Hark, and chose Robert Humphreys, a Republican voter then present, to be commissioner in the stead of Chappell. The clerk’s oath in the Republican poll book contains the name of Mulligan Chappell in what appears to be the same handwriting by which he signs the certificates of election, but.inserted in the same manner as that of Homer H. Lowe. This oath is not signed by Chappell at its close, but his name, oddly, appears in the blank for the signature of the attesting officer.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.E.2d 284, 124 W. Va. 713, 1942 W. Va. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/funkhouser-v-brotherton-wva-1942.