Hammond v. Love

49 A.2d 75, 187 Md. 138, 1946 Md. LEXIS 261
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedOctober 9, 1946
Docket[No. 55 Adv., October Term, 1946.]
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 49 A.2d 75 (Hammond v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammond v. Love, 49 A.2d 75, 187 Md. 138, 1946 Md. LEXIS 261 (Md. 1946).

Opinion

The following order was filed

per curiam-.

The Court holds that the requirement of the election law for the initialing of ballots is mandatory and that the counting of uninitialed ballots by the Supervisors of Elections was arbitrary and in violation of law. For these reasons, to be amplified in an opinion to be hereafter filed, the order appealed from is reversed and the writ of mandamus is directed to be issued as prayed.

Markell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

At the 1946 Democratic primary election in Baltimore County the appellant Hammond and appellee Gathmann *141 were candidates for nomination for Treasurer of Baltimore County; the appellant Burton and the appellee Miller were candidates for the office of Judge of the Orphans’ Court. On the face of the returns these appellees were nominated. If the ballots in the fifth and seventh precincts of the fourteenth district had not been counted the appellants would have been nominated. None of the Democratic ballots in those precincts were endorsed with the name or initials of any of the judges of election as provided in Section 68 of Article 33, as revised by Chapter 934 of the Acts of 1945. Because the ballots in those precincts were counted, Gathmann and Miller were declared nominated.

The appellants petitioned the Supervisors of Elections (appellees) for an appeal and review and a recanvass and recount, under Section 54 (as revised). At the recount the Supervisors heard witnesses, including the election officials in the two precincts, permitted cross-examination by counsel for interested parties, and affirmed the action of the election officials in counting the ballots (503 in number) in the two precincts and in declaring Gathmann and Miller nominated. In other precincts where some of the ballots were signed or initialed and some were not, they rejected the unsigned and uninitialed ballots. In making their decision the Supervisors filed a written opinion stating their reasons.

The appellants each filed a petition for mandamus to require the Supervisors, “in lieu of any correction of the returns of the Board of Canvassers of Baltimore County” which the Supervisors had “heretofore made as a result of the review, recount and recanvass,” to “correct said returns and any certificate of the Board of Canvassers,” “no ballot or vote cast” in the two precincts “to be counted,” and to issue new certificates of nomination accordingly. The Supervisors, and also Gathmann and Miller (who on their own application were made parties defendant), answered the petitions for mandamus, in effect admitted the facts alleged, but asserted the legality of the action of the Supervisors in counting *142 the ballots in the two precincts and denied that this action was “illegal, arbitrary and capricious.” The appellants demurred to the answers. The two cases were consolidated and heard on demurrer. The demurrers were overruled and the petitions for mandamus dismissed. From this action the appellants appealed to this Court. Cf. Price v. Ashburn, 122 Md. 514, 89 A. 410.

The Supervisors found that “the omission to sign or initial the ballots [in the two precincts] appeared to be an honest mistake on the part of the officials either because of ignorance or neglect.” The officials “explained the omission” as “an unintentional oversight or mistake.” The Supervisors felt that, under the circumstances, “the ballots were sufficiently identified as official ballots,” e. g., each, when given to the voter and when returned by the voter, had the stub on it bearing the name and number of the voter; they did not feel that “any legal voter was deprived of his vote or any illegal vote was permitted to be cast.” The Supervisors and the lower court did not find, nor do we find, any evidence of fraud on the part of election officials to disfranchise the voters by omitting to sign or initial the ballots. Nor is there evidence of fraud in any other respect on the part of officials or voters.

Section 68 (as revised by the Act of 1945) provides that at every election “the judge holding the ballots, having first written in ink the voter’s name and number upon the coupon attached to one of them, shall deliver said ballot to the voter after having likewise written in ink his own name or initials' upon the back thereof, * * *. No ballot without the indorsement of the name or initials of the judge thereon, as hereinbefore provided, shall be deposited in said ballot-box, but if deposited shall be counted for the purpose of ascertaining the number thereof, and the judges shall in ink mark on the back thereof the word ‘counted’ and indorse their names.” (Italics supplied.) Substantially the same provisions were contained in the Election Law of 1896 (Chap. 202, Sec. 61) ; similar provisions (not applicable to judges *143 but to clerks) were contained in the original Australian Ballot Law of 1890 (Chap. 538, Secs. 154, 158). The Act of 1890 (Sec. 158) provided that such ballots should not be “deposited in the ballot-box, or counted” but should be marked defective and handled in the same manner as rejected ballots.

Section 72 (as revised by the Act of 1945) provides that after closing of the polls and before the ballot-box is opened all the coupons taken from the ballots cast shall be destroyed. The Act of 1896 (Sec. 65) contained a similar provision. Section 73 (as revised) provides that the judges “shall reject any ballots which are deceitfully folded together and any ballots which do not have indorsed thereon the name or initial of the judge who held the ballots.” (Italics supplied.) The Act of 1896 (Sec. 66) so provided.

Section 76 (as revised) provides that the “rejected” (and “defective”) ballots, as defined in Section 73 (and Section 70), shall be enclosed in a package to themselves and endorsed “ ‘rejected and defective’.” The Act of 1896 (Sec. 69) contained a similar provision.

The appellees contend (1) that the decision of the Supervisors in counting the uninitialed ballots was an exercise of “discretion” which is not reviewable on mandamus, and (2) that (if reviewable) the decision was correct. The lower court, in a well-considered opinion, based its decision on the first contention but also remarked that it considered the decision of the Supervisors correct. It must be admitted that these contentions are not without color of support in decisions of this Court. We are, however, of the opinion that these contentions are contrary to the express provisions of the applicable statute and to the controlling decisions of this Court.

Until recently, decisions in Maryland and elsewhere left doubt whether an error of law by a quasi-judicial body is an exercise of discretion which is not reviewable on mandamus or an abuse of discretion which is so reviewable. Recent Maryland decisions should make it clear that such errors, i. e., violations of law and of legal *144 rights, are not frozen in technicalities of mandamus. Cahill v. Mayor, etc., of Baltimore, 173 Md. 450, 455, 196 A. 305, quoted in Hecht v. Crook, 184 Md. 271, 279, 40 A. 2d 673.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A.2d 75, 187 Md. 138, 1946 Md. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammond-v-love-md-1946.