Greenwood Township Election Case

25 A.2d 330, 344 Pa. 350, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 381
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 29, 1942
DocketAppeals, 101 and 108
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 25 A.2d 330 (Greenwood Township Election Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greenwood Township Election Case, 25 A.2d 330, 344 Pa. 350, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 381 (Pa. 1942).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Patterson,

These appeals are from orders entered by the court below in recount proceedings instituted by petitions filed as authorized by Article XVII, section 1701, of the Election Code of 1937, P. L. 1333.

At the election held November 4, 1941, C. William Kreisher was the Republican candidate and Hervey B. *352 Smith was the Democratic candidate for the office of judge of the court of common pleas for the twenty-sixth judicial district, comprising Columbia and Montour counties. The official returns, completed on November 17, 1941, disclosed that Kreisher had received a total of 11,013 votes and Smith a total of 10,993 votes, or a majority of 20 votes for Kreisher. Petitions were thereupon filed on behalf of Smith, the defeated candidate, on November 21, 1941, to open the ballot boxes and recanvass the votes in sixteen election districts of Columbia county, including Bloomsburg, Fifth Ward, and Greenwood Township, East. According to the official returns, the vote in Bloomsburg, Fifth Ward, was 197 votes for Kreisher and 313 for Smith, and in Greenwood Township, East, there were 117 votes for Kreisher as compared with 149 for Smith. By orders of court, entered the same day the petitions were filed, the ballot boxes were impounded and opened, and a recanvass of the votes was commenced on November 28, 1941.

Upon the opening of the ballot box for Greenwood Township, East, the last of the sixteen districts to be counted, C. William Kreisher suggested to the court that the condition of the box and the markings on some of the ballots indicated fraudulent tampering, and asked for the privilege of calling handwriting experts before tabulating the count. A preliminary tabulation of the ballots contained in the box disclosed 100 votes for Kreisher and 184 votes for Smith, or a net loss to Kreisher of thirty-two votes. After hearing, at Avhich the court heard testimony by handAvriting experts, called by each side, it was found that seventeen straight Republican ballots had been fraudulently altered, betAveen the time of tabulation by the election officers and the recount, by placing of a cross mark opposite the name of Smith in the judgeship square, and that a split ballot, which had been voted for Kreisher, had been similarly altered by the insertion of a cross mark after Smith’s name also, rendering it a doubly marked ballot. The court, accordingly, directed *353 that these ballots be counted for Kreisher, and certified the recount, on December 11, 1941, to be Kreisher 118 votes and Smith 147 votes, resulting in a loss of two votes for Smith, as compared with the official returns for the district, and a gain of one vote for Kreisher. With this certification, the total number of votes for each of the candidates, in all districts, was the same, causing an election tie.

On December 16, 1941, the court entered orders, of its own motion, revoking the certificates filed by it in the fifteen districts other than Greenwood Township, East, including Bloomsburg, Fifth Ward, in order that the ballot boxes might be examined for fraudulent tampering similar to that found in Greenwood Township, East. At the first recount of the votes in Bloomsburg, Fifth Ward, it was determined that Kreisher had received 184 votes as against 308 for Smith, and the court so certified on December 4, 1941. Certain ballots had been ruled invalid by the court and discarded, including ten ballots which had a cross mark in the judgeship square opposite Smith’s name but bore erasures in the office block opposite Kreisher’s name. Upon re-examination of the votes for that district by the court, aided by its own handwriting expert, it was found that the erasures opposite Kreisher’s name, on the ten ballots previously discarded, had been fraudulently made and the cross marks inserted after the name of Smith by some person other than the voter, after the election officials had made their count, as in the case of the fraudulent alterations in Greenwood Township, East, and prior to the recount proceedings. The court directed that the ten ballots be included in the votes counted for Kreisher, and certified the returns for the district, finally, on January 2, 1942, as being 196 votes for Kreisher and 310 votes for Smith. In another of the fifteen districts, apparently Boaringcreek Township, the court, on its second recount, reversed its ruling on a ballot which had originally been rejected, for reasons which do not appear in the record *354 before us, and directed that such ballot be counted for Kreisher. With the results of these two districts thus changed, Kreisher won the election by a majority of eleven votes.

.On these appeals, taken by Hervey B. Smith, the defeated candidate, from the orders entered by the court in the proceedings relating to the Greenwood Township, East, and Bloomsburg, Fifth Ward, Districts, only the orders themselves are assigned as error. Hence, the findings of the court as to fraudulent erasures and alterations, which findings are based not alone upon the testimony of the handwriting experts, but as well upon evidence indicating a probability of improper access to the boxes in question after the election officials had completed their computations, the physical condition of the boxes when produced, the testimony of the election officials, and the court’s own inspection of the ballots, must be taken as admittedly correct. See Haverford Township Election, 282 Pa. 504, 510; Hazleton City Election, 301 Pa. 14, 16. Conceding this, and admitting the fraud, appellant contends that the court lacked the authority, in recount proceedings, to count the fraudulently altered ballots found in the Greenwood Township, East, District, for either party, but should have rejected them entirely, as for invalidity, and that the ballots with erasures, contained in the box for the Bloomsburg, Fifth Ward, District, should likewise have been disregarded, irrespective of whether the erasures were fraudulent or not, in view of the provision in Article XII, section 1223, of the Election Code, that “Any erasure or mutilation in the vote in any office block shall render void the vote for any candidate in said block.” Appellant also contends that the court exceeded its jurisdiction and powers in revoking its prior order in the Bloomsburg, Fifth Ward, District, and in ordering a second recount of the ballots for that district, after a recount thereof had once been made and the recount certified. As to the final order entered by the court, in the proceedings relating to Roar *355 ingcreek Township, after the second recount, no appeal has been taken.

Appellant’s contention that the eighteen ballots in Greenwood Township, East, found by the court to have been fraudulently altered in favor of Smith, should have been discarded entirely, in the recount proceedings, and that it was error to direct that such ballots be counted for the appellee, is wholly untenable. The present case is not one involving a discrepancy between the ballots and the official returns due to fraud or error on the part of the election officials in their tabulations and returns, but rather a case of discrepancy resulting from fraudulent tampering with the ballot boxes and their contents, since the official canvass of the votes, and this becomes a matter of controlling importance, considering the nature and object of recount proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
25 A.2d 330, 344 Pa. 350, 1942 Pa. LEXIS 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenwood-township-election-case-pa-1942.