Hardin v. Cress

68 S.W. 1090, 113 Ky. 734, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 13, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 S.W. 1090 (Hardin v. Cress) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hardin v. Cress, 68 S.W. 1090, 113 Ky. 734, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 101 (Ky. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Opinion op the court by

JUDGE WHITE

Affirming.

These are contests of election over the county officers in Wayne county, arising out of the election held in November, 1901. The appellant Sam C. Hardin was a candidate for the office' of county judge, and, the certificate of election having been awarded to appellee, W. R. Cress, his opponent, an action was filed to contest the election because of alleged irregularities and illegalities in Mill Spring precinct in Wayne county. The charge in the petition is that Mill Spring precinct, according to the certified returns of the election officers of that precinct, cast 232 votes for appellee, Cress, and sixty-eight votes for appellant; and, as the vote of the entire county gave Cress a majority of seventy, it is charged that appellant was entitled to the certificate of election and to the office. It is alleged that fhe votes of Mill Spring precinct should not be counted at all, because the election officers at that precinct, after the votes had been duly counted and certified, failed to preserve the ballots voted by the voter, but in fact destroyed the ballots, and made no returns thereof except the certificate of the officers as to the number of votes cast and counted for each candidate. There is no charge that there were any illegal ballots counted or cast, nor that any legal ballots were not counted, nor is there an allegation that the certificate of the election was an incorrect statement of the ballots voted. . In fact, there is no allegation of fraud,,mistake, or illegality in any particular save that the ballots voted were destroyed after they had been counted and certified, and the result announced publicly. The petitions in all the cases set out the same ground of con[739]*739test, the exact figures not being the same, but all depending on whether the vote of Mill Spring precinct shall be counted. If that precinct is included, appellees are all elected,'and, if excluded, appellants are all elected. The answer of appellees pleaded the regularity of the election, and pleaded that at Mill Spring'precinct the officers of election were divided politically, a judge and sheriff' being Republicans, and a judge and clerk being Democrats, with each party haring an inspector; that, after the polls had, closed, the ballots were all counted, there being no contested ballots, and the certificates written and signed by all the officers, and the result of the count announced; arid that by a mistake or in ignorance of the law the election officers burned the ballots that had been counted, and so it was impossible to make proper returns as the law requires. Appellees say that all this occurred by reason of a mistake of the election officers as to the law, and that it was not intended to, and did not in fact, deprive appellants of a single vote to which they were entitled, nor did it give to appellees a single vote to which they were not entitled, nor was any person injured in any way by the destruction of the ballots. The proof of the facts, as testified by each and all the election officers and by the party inspectors, shows that at Mill Spring precinct, appellees received the full number of unquestioned votes, and appellants only the number of votes as shown by the certificate of the election officers; that there were no questioned or uncounted ballots; and that the voted and counted ballots were, burned and destroyed under the mistaken belief that the law so requiréd. They discovered that the law required the ballots to be kept, strung, and returned, but when this was done it was too late; the ballots had been destroyed. Fpon these facts the trial court .dismissed the [740]*740cases, it halving been agreed that all might be heard together and heard on the depositions taken in one case. To reverse those judgments of dismissal these appeals are pros1 ecuted. J

The pleadings and proof taken herein nowhere charge or show that by the destruction of the ballots any person was deprived of a single vote to which he was. entitled, or that ary vote was counted for any person to which he was not entitled. There is no error or fraud charged or proven in the result of Mill Spring precinct by which the result was changed in a single instance in favor of the one or other candidate. Indeed, so far as the petitions aver, and when taken most strongly against the pleading, the votes certifiéd by the election officers are exactly the votes cast b,j- the qualified voters in the precincts for the various candidates. The question, then, is presented, are these voters who have legally voted "and were legally qualified to vote to be deprived of their votes because of the action of the election officers in destroying the evidence of how these votes were cast after they, had been correctly counted and' certified? To answer this question intelligently, it must be remembered that these ballots, after being strung, are sealed up, and returned with the certificate, and are not to be opened by the officers who canvass the election returns for the county, but are to be opened and used as evidence in case there is a contest over that precinct or its result. The certificate of the election officers is to be used to ascertain how the votes of any precinct were cast, and in case of an attack on the certificate in a contest the ballots majr be used as evidence to test the verity of the certificate, but for no other purpose. Here there is no attack on the certificate from Mill Spring precinct. It is admitted, by the pleadings not making an at[741]*741'tack tliereon, that it is true. The proof of all the election officers and inspectors shows it is true. So that the ballots destroyed could not in this case be used as evidence at all, if here, because the returns from that precinct are not questioned so far as the truth of the certificate is concerned. The contention is that the provisions for preserving the ballots is mandatory, and their destruction would of itself destroy the election held in that precinct, and as to that election disfranchise all the voters therein. If such be the law, the same result must follow whether the destruction be by mistake of the law or by accident or evil-design. Mr. McCrary, in his work on Elections (page 522, section 724) says: “The weight of authority is clearly in favor- of holding the voter, on the one hand, to a strict performance of those things which the law requires of him, and on the other of relieving him from the consequence of a failure on the part of the - election officers to perform their duties according to the letter of the statute where such failure has not prevented a fair election. The justice of this rule is apparent, and it may be said to be the underlying principle to be applied in determining this question. The requirements of the law upon the elector are in the interest of pure elections, and should be complied with at least in substance; but to disfranchise the voter because of the mistakes or omissions of election officers would be to put him entirely at the mercy of political manipulators. The performance by the election officers of the duties imposed upon them can be reasonably well secured by providing a penalty for failure to do so.’* This principle, said to be the weight of authority, meets our approval, and these cases are apt illustrations of the reasonableness of the rule. If the destruction of these ballots under a mistake of the law by the election officers [742]

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W. 1090, 113 Ky. 734, 1902 Ky. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardin-v-cress-kyctapp-1902.