Harkness v. Board of Canvassers

92 A. 567, 37 R.I. 266, 1914 R.I. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 18, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 92 A. 567 (Harkness v. Board of Canvassers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harkness v. Board of Canvassers, 92 A. 567, 37 R.I. 266, 1914 R.I. LEXIS 67 (R.I. 1914).

Opinion

*267 Sweetland, J.

This is a petition for a writ of certiorari to correct certain alleged errors in the record of the Board of Canvassers of the city of Central Falls in relation to the election of alderman from the fifth ward of said city for the term of two years, beginning January 4th, 1915. The respondents have appeared to show cause why said writ should not be issued.

The essential allegations of the petition in substance are that at the election for the office of alderman from the fifth ward of said city, for said term, held on November 3, 1914, the petitioner was the candidate for said office of both the Democratic party and the Progressive party and as such candidate his name appeared on the official ballot in the Democratic column and also in the Progressive column; that at said election one John J. Standring was the candidate of the Republican party for said office and as such candidate his name appeared on the official ballot in the Republican column; that on the day following said election the respondent Board of Canvassers counted the ballots given in at said election and erroneously declared and entered upon its record that said Standring had received at said election one hundred and twenty-one votes for said office, and that the petitioner had received at said election one hundred and eighteen votes for said office and that said Standring had been elected as such alderman for said term. The petitioner further alleges in substance that said Board in counting said votes and in making its decision, declared and recorded as aforesaid, erroneously counted a vote for said Standring appearing upon a ballot which was defective because it bore a distinguishing mark, and that said Board erroneously rejected as defective four ballots upon each of which appeared a vote in favor of the petitioner for said office.

The ballots cast at said election have been introduced in evidence and we have examined them. In Rice v. Town Council of Westerly, 35 R.I. 117,this court held that "whether the marks placed upon his ballot by a voter conform to the statutory requirements for a legal ballot is a question of *268 law rather than of fact ” and is a question properly reviewable-in certiorari.

(2) We will consider first the ballot which contained on its face a vote for said Standring for said office, which vote the. petitioner claims was erroneously counted in favor of said Standring by the respondents. The petitioner claims that said ballot was defective and should have been rejected because it bore a distinguishing mark. This ballot was marked with crosses each placed respectively in the squares to the right of the names of all but one of the candidates in the Republican column. These crosses appear to have been made with a lead pencil and are uniform in color with the-crosses placed upon the other ballots cast at said election. and presented in evidence before us. : There also appears upon this ballot in the circle under the eagle at the top of the Republican column a blotch of purple color nearly filling; said circle in which blotch of color are two crosses apparently-made with purple ink or with a pencil of soft purple lead.. Section 41 of Chapter 11, Gen. Laws, 1909, provides: “each voting shelf or compartment shall be kept provided, by the-city, town, ward and district clerks, with proper pencils for-marking the ballots, which pencils shall be by the supervisors-, kept in condition for use; but all pencils furnished.for said' purpose in any election shall, in each voting-district, be: such as will mark a uniform color, and in marking his ballot no voter shall useapencil marking a different color. ” In Rice v. Town Council of Westerly, 35 R. I. 117, referring to this-provision, we have said: “The clear intent of this section is to guard against the identification of a voter’s ballot by means of the medium used by him in marking his ballot.”' The purple blotch and the purple crosses in the circle on the-ballot now being considered must be held to be distinguishing marks placed upon his ballot by the voter whereby it may be identified as the one voted by him. Said ballot should have been rejected by the respondents as defective. The vote for Standring appearing thereon was erroneously counted in his favor:

*269 We will now consider the four other ballots which were rejected by the respondents as defective, and in regard to the rej ection of which the petitioner here complains. Neither ■of these ballots was marked in either of the circles appearing-under the party emblems thereon; but each was marked with a cross in the square at the right of the petitioner’s name as a candidate for alderman in the Democratic column and also with a cross in the square at the right of the petitioner’s name as a candidate for alderman in the Progressive column. In support of their action the respondents urge that such marking of the ballot is illegal, not being authorized by the statute, and further that such a method of marking the ballot constitutes a distinguishing mark. The respondents rely somewhat upon the authority of Thorpe v. Fales, 33 R. I. 394, to establish the illegality of these ballots. In that case the name of the petitioner Thorpe appeared upon the official ballots, then in question, as a candidate for the office of town councilman in the Democratic column and also in the column headed “Progressive Citizens Nomination Papers.” Upon each of the three ballots under consideration in that case the voter had marked a cross in the circle under the emblem at the top of the Democratic column and also a cross in the circle at the top of the column headed “Progressive Citizens Nomination Papers.” Relying upon the explicit language of the statute this court held in that ■case that said ballots were properly rejected. The court said: “Sec. 43, cap. 11, Gen. Laws, 1909, provides inter ■alia as follows: 'When a voter has placed a cross (X) in .any one circle, and has not made any mark in any other circle, ■such cross (X) shall be counted as a vote for each of the •candidates in the column above which it is placed except forthose candidates whose names have been cancelled. ’ The inference is plain that a cross in a given circle on the ballot is nullified by a cross in another circle on the same ballot •and the ballot must be rejected.” Thorpe v. Fales so far .•as it is relied upon by the respondents relates to voting marks placed in more than one of the circles above the columns of *270 party candidates on a ballot and is not an authority upon the question now before us. Neither of the four voters who cast the ballots now under consideration, marked his ballot in either of the circles over the party designation; and the statutory provisions regulating voting for groups of candidates do not affect either of these ballots. Sec. 43, Chap. 11, Gen. Laws, 1909, among other things provides as follows: “The voter may omit to mark in any circle and may vote for the candidate of his choice by making a cross (X) in the square opposite their names . . .

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Bluebook (online)
92 A. 567, 37 R.I. 266, 1914 R.I. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harkness-v-board-of-canvassers-ri-1914.