Gass v. Evans

149 S.W. 628, 244 Mo. 329, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 322
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 26, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 628 (Gass v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gass v. Evans, 149 S.W. 628, 244 Mo. 329, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 322 (Mo. 1912).

Opinions

LAMM, J.

At the general election in November, 1910, Howard A. Gass was the Democratic and William P; Evans the Republican candidate for the State office of Superintendent of Public Schools. On the face of the returns, Mr. Evans was elected. On his receiving the certificate of election and the'commission to take office for four years, Mr. Gass filed his petition to contest his election in this court on December 17, 1910, after giving due notice. On that day Mr. Evans appeared and filed his answer. At sundry times from that day to this, motions (to be presently disposed of) were filed, directed to one or another phase of the case. At a certain time our writ issued to the board of .election commissioners of the city of St. Louis, commanding them to fix a day (within thirty) and proceed to open the ballots cast in' said city at said election, in the presence of con- [333]*333- testant, contestee and their counsel (after taking a prescribed oath) and count and compare the ballots with the lists of voters, examine them and certify the result here. That board obeyed that writ and their return of the recount increased Mr. Evans’s lead slightly. On January 11, 1911, Romulus E. Culver, Esq., of the St. Joseph bar, was appointed our commissioner to take testimony and report his finding in the instant case, as well as in companion cases pending contesting the same election between other parties (James B. Gantt v. John C. Brown, and Henry 0. Timmonds v. John Kennish) on other offices. He qualified, took upon himself and well performed the duties prescribed by our order. Thereafter, taking a vast volume of testimony, spread on 7160 pages in ten volumes of typewritten manuscript, he returned the same into this court, with his findings of fact and report, on the 15th day of May, 1912 — the cases being-treated by all hands as if consolidated. That report will be recurred to presently.

Thereupon contestant excepted to that report. Set down for a special hearing on June 17, 1912, the consolidated case on its merits and on motions was-submitted for final disposition — five judges sitting (Valliant, O. J., Lamm, Woodson, Graves and FerRISS, JJ.)

The facts warranting it, we take space and leave to say (and say it con amore) that we are beholden to distinguished counsel for the benefit of oral arguments and briefs unexceptionable in matter and taste. To hear and decide, not to praise, is the office of the judge. Peradventure, however, to commend counsel for putting away temptation to take on color and heat, when such temptation dogs the heels of cases of a political character, is to speak to a judicial purpose. The case bespoke, and received, a fine courage, to be tempered (as it was) with serenity and equipoise at the bar. So, it bespeaks it from a bench whose quick[334]*334ening precepts should he: Te shall not respect per- • sons in judgment; but ye shall hear the small as well as the great; ye shall not he afraid of the face of man. (Deut. i.17) And that noble saying of Yirgil in the Aeneid, I remember to have been once used by our brother Woodson: “Trojan and Tyrian shall be treated by me with no discrimination.” (Tros Ty ñus que, etc.)

Because briefs take a wide play, it will head towards brevity to treat propositions in our own order and way.

I. Of a bundle of motions.

(a) . Early in the litigation Mr. Seibel, county ■clerk of St. Louis county (commanded by our writ to recount the ballots in that county) filed a motion peremptorily challenging our jurisdiction; and on that ■and other grounds asking us to vacate or modify our order to him. Up to this moment that motion, slumbering, has been passed in silence by court and counsel. As to that we say: As Mr. Seibel is not a party nor does he appear by invitation or leave granted as “a friend of the 'court,” he is an out-and-out intermeddler and has no locus standi to intervene. Because of that fact, according to correct form, his motion is without legitimate function. So, in the evolution of the case, we have long since gone on beyond some of the points to which movent directs his motion. [Vide, Gantt v. Brown, 238 Mo. 560.] It is of little avail to do so vain and inutile a thing as to tread back in our tracks to dispose of moot questions. As to other points, they are raised by those entitled to raise them and deserve and have received attention.

The motion is stricken from the files to be consigned to the dustheap.

(b) . Early in the litigation counsel for contestee moved to have certain legal questions, raised by the pleadings, set down for oral argument. That mo-[335]*335lion was passed sub silentio. As to that motion we say: Such of those questions as survived the wear and tear of the flux of time and run of events in the case have now been argued on final submission. Hence that.motion has no office hut to go also to the dust-heap.

It is stricken from the files.

(c) . On February 25, 1911, contestee filed a motion to dismiss, grounded on the theory that this court was without original jurisdiction to- hear and determine any election contest. As to that we say: That identical contention, carried forward as live matter in pleadings and briefs, was submitted in this and in the two companion cases, and has been ruled adversely to contestee, on full consideration of its constitutional bearings, in an opinion by Graves, J., in ■one of those companion cases, Gantt v. Brown, handed down at this delivery. "We stand by our deliverance in that case. Stare decisis.

The motion is overruled.

(d) . On July 12, 1911, contestee filed a motion in nature ancillary to the other, to dismiss. It was grounded on the notion that the allegations of contestant’s petition are too general, are merely fishing in character and only aimed at making a discovery, and because the action has not been prosecuted with due diligence — all to the wrong and injury of contestee, who complains he is serving in office without pay and is subject to the drain of expenditures of a grave character in the employment of counsel, etc. As to that we say: The orders of this court from time to time, sometimes by stipulation of counsel and again ■on showing made, whereby our commissioner’s time was extended, were either of right or of grace. In either event, they practically overruled that motion to some of its intents and purposes. What was thus •done in fact, hut impliedly, as we went along, maj [336]*336as well be done in form at the end. As to the assault on the petition in the nature of a general demurrer (we say “demurrer” because that is the most favorable construction to put upon it) it is not now contended in briefs that it states no cause of action. Such silence should be taken as tantamount to abandonment. Hence the life has gone out of the point. We have no call to be astute to set up barriers in the road to the merits of the case.

With this clearing away of some propositions, ruled in companion eases, and the underbrush of subsidiary matter, main propositions remaining come into the clear.

II. Of two other propositions to he put out of the case.

(a). Here, as in companion cases, it is alleged-in the petition (and now argued in contestant’s brief) that each and every of the 143414 ballots cast at the election in the city of St. Louis in November, 1910, should be discarded in the count.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 628, 244 Mo. 329, 1912 Mo. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gass-v-evans-mo-1912.