Hall v. Stuart

94 S.E.2d 284, 198 Va. 315, 1956 Va. LEXIS 209
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 4, 1956
DocketRecord 4594
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 94 S.E.2d 284 (Hall v. Stuart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Stuart, 94 S.E.2d 284, 198 Va. 315, 1956 Va. LEXIS 209 (Va. 1956).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question presented on this appeal is whether there was error in the order appealed from entered December 28, 1955, by which a writ of mandamus was granted to the appellees requiring the judges and clerks of Dorton Precinct at the election which had been held in Russell county on November 8, 1955, to appear at the courthouse of the county on December 30, 1955, and complete the performance of their duties “in manner and form as provided by law.”

The appellees who filed the petition for mandamus were candidates for office at that election, Harry C. Stuart being a candidate for State Senate, W. C. Elliott a candidate for the House of Delegates, and the others candidates for the various county offices. On the face of the returns from all the precincts of the county it appeared that Guy Whited had been elected treasurer of the county over his opponent, J. S. Hargis, by one vote. All of the petitioners except Hargis had majorities which would not be affected by the matters alleged in the petition with respect to Dorton Precinct and were, pursuant to an order entered also on December 28, 1955, in the companion case of Whited v. Fugate et al., Commissioners of Election, post p. 328, granted certificates of election for the offices to which thev had been so elected.

On November 19, 1955, the eleventh day after the holding of the election on November 8, the appellees filed their said petition which resulted in the order of December 28, 1955. They alleged in sub *317 stance that a short time after the polls were closed at Dorton Precinct the judges and clerks undertook to proceed with the casting of the mail ballots which had been delivered to them by the electoral board; that almost immediately a controversy arose as to the validity of certain mail ballots, which continued until about two o’clock next morning, at which time it was suggested by the protesting judge that he and his associates be allowed to note their challenges and return the disputed ballots without decision as to their validity, to be passed on by the election commissioners when they counted the vote; whereupon it was agreed that the disputed ballots be packaged separately and returned to the clerk and their validity decided by the election commissioners; that after this agreement the election officials proceeded to canvass the remaining ballots, which task they did not conclude until the middle of the morning of November 9; that said agreement was made by the election judges through misconception and in disregard of their duty and hence their duties had not been performed, their work remained unfinished and the disputed ballots and all other papers and ballots remained in their legal custody although they in fact had been delivered unsealed to the clerk.

The petition prayed that a writ of mandamus issue to compel the election officials of Dorton Precinct to complete the performance of their duties and that the clerk be required to deliver to them all ballots and other papers in connection with said election at said precinct.

The appellants, Wood Hall, one of the judges, and Carlyle Byington, one of the clerks, of the Dorton Precinct, demurred to the petition, which demurrer was subsequently overruled and they filed their answer. They alleged in their answer that the election officials at Dorton Precinct had completed their duties and had canvassed the votes and made return of the results of the election at that precinct to the clerk of the county, who was ex-officio clerk of the commissioners of election. Code § 24-200. They denied that any such agreement as that alleged in the petition was ever made or suggested, and averred that challenges were made to many of the mail ballots, a large number thereof overruled, and challenges to thirty odd were sustained, they being the disputed votes referred to in the petition. They filed photostatic copies of the poll books of Dorton Precinct, which were kept in duplicate, with this certificate appended thereto:

“It is hereby certified that the number of electors at this election amounts to 514 and we further certify that 36 ballots were not counted because void,” which certificate was signed by the three *318 judges and two clerks of election at the Dorton Precinct. The evidence was that 4 of these 36 ballots were defaced and the remaining 32 are the ones immediately involved in this litigation.

Following this is another certificate, as required by § 24-257 of the Code, giving the name of each candidate, the office for which he was a candidate, and the number of votes cast for him; showing that Hargis received 273 votes for county treasurer and Whited 227 votes for that office, and two clerks This certificate was also signed by the three judges

There was also filed as an exhibit a tabulation of the entire vote of the county, which the commissioners at their meeting following the election caused to be made by the clerk and which showed a majority of one vote for Whited over Hargis for the office of county treasurer.

The answer also alleged that at the conclusion of the voting the judges opened the box containing the mail ballots, each of which was considered, challenges were heard and disposed of, and out of more than one hundred forty mail ballots all but the thirty odd were allowed to be placed in the regular ballot box and the names of the voters placed on the poll books, after which nothing remained to be done except for the commissioners of election to ascertain from the face of the completed returns the persons who received the highest number of votes for the offices; that the commissioners of election in fact met and performed their duties, tabulated the returns and their clerk made out an abstract of the result as shown by the exhibits, and nothing remained for the commissioners to do except to sign and certify the results, after which there was no legal authority for delivering the returns back to the precinct officials, and hence the petition for mandamus should be dismissed.

The answer proceeded to aver that if the ballots and other papers connected with the election at Dorton Precinct should be delivered back to the election officials, then there should be a full inquiry into the validity of all the mail ballots at that precinct because of alleged violations of the absent voters law.

Afterwards voluminous evidence was taken ore terms, much of which would have been relevant only in a contest of the election. On the main point it was involved in serious conflict and from it the court concluded “that there was some kind of an understanding or an agreement that these 32 votes would be set aside and were not on that night definitely disposed of by the judges.”

The three judges of election at Dorton Precinct, appointed pur *319 suant to § 24-30 of the Code, were John S. Dorton and N. S. Bostic, representing the Democratic party; and Wood Hall, representing the Republican party. James Osborne and Carlyle Byington were the clerks appointed pursuant to Code § 24-194. J. S. Hargis was the Democratic candidate for the office of county treasurer and Guy Whited was the Republican candidate for that office.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E.2d 284, 198 Va. 315, 1956 Va. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-stuart-va-1956.