Gunson v. Baldauf

297 P. 516, 88 Colo. 436, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 220
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 9, 1931
DocketNo. 12,767.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 297 P. 516 (Gunson v. Baldauf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gunson v. Baldauf, 297 P. 516, 88 Colo. 436, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 220 (Colo. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties hereto were rival candidates for the office of county commissioner of the first commissioner’s district of Douglas county at the election held November 4, 1930. The county board of canvassers reported that the plaintiff in error received 866 votes and the defendant in error received 868 votes for the office, and a certificate of election was issued to the latter. The plaintiff in error, seeking to contest said election under the special summary procedure; authorized by sections 7794 to 7804, C. L., 1921, filed a statement of contest and complaint in the office of the clerk of the county court of Douglas county.

The contestee thereupon filed an answer and counter-statement of contest. The answer contained what purports to' be a general demurrer as follows: ‘ The said contestee shows and submits that the so-called statement of contest does not allege facts sufficient in law to entitle the eontestor to the relief therein prayed for, and as grounds for this conclusion he alleges as followsThe “alleged grounds” are recited in 11 paragraphs and are in effect special demurrers to each paragraph of the *438 statement of contest, based upon uncertainty and ambiguity.

The contestor having replied to the counterstatement of contest, the cause was regularly set for trial on December 29, 1930, and on the succeeding day the court sustained ‘ ‘ said demurrer of said contestee to the statement of the contestor herein” to which ruling the contestor excepted, and elected to stand upon his statement of contest, and now brings the case here for review.

Two points are presented: 1. Is the statement of contest sufficient? 2. If good, must the charges therein contained be proven?

1. Election contests, for whatever office, necessarily are and must be summary. The method of procedure to be followed depends upon the office sought to be contested. Supreme court rules 85 to 90 cover the procedure for contesting the office of presidential elector, supreme, district and county judge. In such a case the sufficiency of a complaint may be questioned by demurrer or motion. Rule 88. Section 7574, C. L., 1921, provides for the summary determination of primary election contests, after “setting forth the grounds of complaint,” but is silent as to whether a complaint filed thereunder may be demurred to generally or specially. In construing this section, we held in the recent case of People ex rel. v. Mitchell, 88 Colo. 102, 292 Pac. 228, involving the office of county commissioner, that a demurrer to such a petition upon the grounds of insufficient facts and ambiguity was properly sustained where no sufficient facts were stated. It was unnecessary for us to, and we did not, determine whether a special demurrer based upon the sole ground of ambiguity was proper in a primary election contest.

This suit is brought under sections 7794 to 7804, C. L., 1921, creating an exclusive and summary procedure for the contest of the election of “any person, declared duly elected to any county office, except the office of county judge.”

*439 Section 7794 provides that such a contest may be filed by any elector of such county:

“First — When the contestee is not eligible to the office to which he has been declared elected.
“Second — When illegal votes have been received, or legal votes rejected, at the polls, sufficient to chang’e the result.
“Third — For any error, or mistake, in any of the boards of judges, or canvassers, in counting or declaring the result of the election, if the error, or mistake, would affect the result.
“Fourth — For malconduct, fraud, or corruption on the part of the board of registry, or judges of election, in any precinct, or ward, or any of the boards of canvassers, or on the part of any member of such boards.
“Fifth — For any other cause (though not above enumerated) , which shows that another was the legally elected person.”

The contest proceeding is before the county judge in the county in which the contest arises, and is initiated by the filing of a bond and a statement of contest, the contents of which must conform to section 7797, and include “the particular cause or causes of the contest.”

Section 7798, among other things, provides: “The contestee shall, within ten days after the service of such summons, make and file his answer to the same with the clerk of said court, in which he shall either admit or specifically deny each allegation contained in such statement intended to be controverted by contestee on the trial of such contest, and shall set up in such answer any counter-statement, embraced in any of the causes hereinbefore enumerated, as causes of contest in relation to county officers, which he relies upon as entitling him to the office to which he has been declared elected. When the reception of illegal or the rejection of legal votes is alleged as the cause of the contest, a list of the number of persons who so voted, or offered to vote, shall be set forth in the statement of contestor, and shall be likewise set forth in *440 the answer of contestee, if any such cause is alleged in his answer by way of counter statement. ’ ’

Section 7803 reads: “The court shall pronounce judgment whether the contestee or any other person was duly elected, and the person so declared elected will be entitled to the office, upon qualification. If the judgment be against the contestee, and he has received his certificate, the judgment annuls it. If the court finds that no person was duly elected, the judgment shall be that the election be set aside.”

The statement of contest contains, in brief, the following grounds: That the judges and clerks of election in precinct 1, town of Parker, erroneously added “certain imperfect and defective ballots” to the number of votes properly counted for contestee; that if said defective ballots had not been so counted, contestor would have been elected; that said judges and clerks were guilty of malconduct in so counting said defective ballots and in allowing persons not qualified as voters to vote in said precinct, and permitting unauthorized persons to enter the voting booths and assist voters in marking’ their ballots when no assistance was asked for,- and no oath of the voter was had or obtained to the effect that he needed or desired assistance, and no memorandum was made thereof on-the poll book, and the failure to act in numerous specific respects as required by law; that illegal votes were received in said precinct and counted for contestee and the names of 13 persons who cast such votes enumerated; that supporters of the contestee in the town of Parker used misrepresentations, intimidations and coercion in securing votes in favor of the contestee as a result of which contestor lost sufficient votes to change the result of the election; that errors and mistakes were made in tabulating the votes from the town of Parker by the county board of canvassers, said tabulation showing that 9 mail votes were cast when as a matter of fact only 7 were cast; malconduct on the part, of the board of registry, in election precinct No.

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 516, 88 Colo. 436, 1931 Colo. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunson-v-baldauf-colo-1931.