Harer's Petition

49 Pa. D. & C. 344, 1943 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 333
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lycoming County
DecidedOctober 13, 1943
Docketno. 77
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 Pa. D. & C. 344 (Harer's Petition) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Lycoming County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harer's Petition, 49 Pa. D. & C. 344, 1943 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 333 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1943).

Opinion

Larrabee, P. J.,

sitting as the acting county board of elections,

A petition was presented to D. M. Larrabee, P. J., as the acting county board of elections of Lycoming County, by Warren Clyde Harer to hear testimony and have votes cumulated which he avers were intended to be cast for him as a candidate for the nomination for the office of register and recorder on the Democratic ticket as shown by the returns made by the recount board of the primary election held on September 14, 1943.

The returns by the recount board show that said Warren Clyde Harer received the nomination for the office of register and recorder on the Republican ticket and the votes he now seeks to have cumulated and credited to him were so-called “write-ins” by voters on the Democratic ticket. It appears that no petition was filed by anyone as a candidate for the nomination for the office of register and recorder on the Democratic ticket.

Section 301(6) of the Pennsylvania Election Code of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333, provides that in each county of the Commonwealth the county board of elections shall consist of the county commissioners of such county, ex officio.

However, section 1403(6) of the Election Code provides that if any member of the county board of elections shall be a candidate for any nomination or election to public office, he shall not act as a member of the board for the computation or canvassing of returns, but the other members shall act, and in case in [346]*346any county there are not at least a majority of the members of the board so qualified, two or more judges of the courts of common pleas shall be designated by said court to act as a return board, provided none of them is a candidate for any nomination or election to public office, and if there shall be only one judge of such court in such county, or if less than two judges are qualified so to act, any judge who is qualified may act alone.

At this primary election all three members comprising the present board of county commissioners were candidates to succeed themselves.

At said primary election Spencer W. Hill, additional law judge of Lycoming County, was a candidate for the nomination of judge on the Republican ticket. ^

Therefore, under the provisions of the Pennsylvania Election Code, D. M. Larrabee, president judge, is the only judge qualified to sit as the return board and he is thereby constituted as acting recount board and acting county board of elections for the purpose of canvassing and computing the election returns of the votes that were cast at said primary election from the district election boards in Lycoming County and to certify the results thereof to the Secretary of the Commonwealth as may be provided by law, and to such other authorities as may be provided by law.

Acting under the authority thus vested in him by the provisions of the Election Code,, President Judge D. M. Larrabee appointed a number of assistants to aid him and proceeded to canvass and compute the returns from said primary election, and on September 25, Í943, this work was completed and the tabulated returns were duly certified by him and filed.

On September 28, 1943, Warren Clyde Harer presented his petition to President Judge D. M. Larrabee, acting as the county board of elections, in which he sets forth that the returns made by the recount board of said primary election showed that 155 votes were [347]*347cast for Warren Clyde Harer; 57 votes were cast for Clyde Harer, and 2 votes were cast for Warren Harer, as a candidate for the office of register and recorder on the Democratic ticket.

The petitioner further avers that Warren Clyde Harer, Clyde Harer, and Warren Harer are one and the same person and he prays the county board of elections to take testimony and determine whether the votes under these three names should be cumulated and credited to Warren Clyde Harer and that he be certified by the board of elections as the candidate having received the highest number of votes for the nomination for the office of register and recorder on the Democratic ticket.

• Section 304(a) of the Election Code provides:

“Each county board of elections may make regulations, not inconsistent with this act or the laws of this Commonwealth, to govern its public sessions, and may issue subpoenas, summon witnesses, compel production of books, papers, records and other evidence, and fix the time and place for hearing any matters relating to the administration and conduct of primaries and elections in the county under the provisions of this act”.

In Boord et al. v. Maurer et al., 343 Pa. 309, Justice Maxey, speaking for the Supreme Court, declared (p. 312) :

“The Election Code makes the County Board of Election more than a mere ministerial body. It clothes it with quasi-judicial functions . . .”

Therefore, we are of the opinion that the county board of elections is not only authorized to canvass and compute the vote and issue certificates to successful candidates, but under the authority of Boord et al. v. Maurer et al., supra, it is empowered to hear testimony as to the identity of a candidate who has been voted for under different names and cumulate the votes.

[348]*348Section 1222(c) of the Election Code provides:

“In returning any votes cast for any person whose name is not printed on the ballot, the election officers shall record any such names exactly as they were written, stamped or applied to the ballot by sticker”.

We conclude that this section applies merely to the returns and prohibits the local election officers of any given voting precinct from attempting to cumulate votes without knowledge or evidence of the intention of the voters.

Section 1223(a) of the Election Code provides that any ballot indicating a vote for any person whose name is not printed on the ballot, by writing, stamping, or sticker, shall be counted as a vote for such person if placed in the proper space or spaces provided for this purpose.

Thus it is obvious that votes are to be counted for the individual, as a candidate, and not for the name, and where the intent of the voter to vote for the individual is manifest such intention should be given effect.

A hearing was held before President Judge D. M. Larrabee, sitting as the acting county board of elections, and testimony was presented by Warren Clyde Harer in support of the allegations in his petition.

Clyde Rook, chief registrar in the office of the Commissioners of Lycoming County, who also served as one of the assistants on the recount board, testified that the tabulated returns show that 155 votes were cast for Warren Clyde Harer, 57 votes were cast for Clyde Harer, and 2 votes were cast for Warren Harer as candidate for the nomination to the office of register and recorder on the Democratic ticket, thus making a total of 214 votes cast under these three names for said nomination. This witness further testified that the registration lists for Lycoming County showed that there is no name registered therein as Warren Clyde Harer; that the only person having the surname of Harer whose Christian name begins with the letter “W” is registered as W. Clyde Harer; that there are [349]

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49 Pa. D. & C. 344, 1943 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harers-petition-pactcompllycomi-1943.