Hart v. Board of Elections

211 A.2d 276, 100 R.I. 62
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 23, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 A.2d 276 (Hart v. Board of Elections) 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
Hart v. Board of Elections, 211 A.2d 276, 100 R.I. 62 (R.I. 1965).

Opinions

Powers, J.

These are two petitions for certiorari seeking to quash separate but related decisions of the respondent board made in passing on the validity of certain ballots cast for the office of town councilman in the third council district of the town of Tiverton at the general elections held November 3, 1964. We issued the writ in each case and pursuant thereto the relevant papers were duly certified to this court. Because of our conclusion in each case we deem it advisable to consider them together so that they may be reported in a single opinion.

Moreover, although in the second case, M. P. No. 1714, the writ was issued subsequent to the issuance of the writ [63]*63in' the companion petition, a logical sequence is best achieved by first considering the merits of the second- filed petition.

It appears from the records in M. P. No. 1714 that petitioner was the incumbent and candidate for re-eleotion to the office of councilman for the third district in the town of Tiverton and was opposed for that office by Ralph C. Wells, hereafter referred to as the intervenor, at the general election held November 3, 1964.

When all of the ballots cast at the election for the office in question were counted by the local board of canvassers it was determined that petitioner had a total of 280 votes and the intervenor had a total of 286 votes. Included in petitioner’s total, however, was a vote cast by absentee ballot.

It further appears that a municipal absentee ballot as prepared by the secretary of state has on the face of it at least two vertical columns, one for each of the major political parties. At the top of each such column is the symbol of the appropriate political party, beneath that a circle, and below the circle the name of the corresponding political party. There then follows in vertical succession rectangular boxes within each of which is printed the office and the name and address of the party candidate for such office. To the right of each such rectangular box is a smaller box within which the voter marks a cross ■ (X) to' vote for the candidate of his choice when voting a split ticket.

However, where a municipal office is confined to a district within any municipality, the name and address of the candidate does not appear. In lieu thereof there appears the following, “A vote for this office is a vote for the appropriate candidate of the [name] party whose name appears on the reverse side.” This arrangement is used by the secretary of state to avoid the necessity of printing multiple ballots for a single municipality. In the city of Providence, for example, there are thirteen wards with two' coun[64]*64oilmen elected from each ward. Thus thirteen separate ballots would be required for that city if recourse Avere not had to the method used by the secretary of state.

In the instant case six 'bailóte are required for the reason that Tiverton is divided into six council districts. However, every absentee ballot printed for the Tiverton municipal election and distributed to each qualified elector who made application therefor had printed on its face but one box for the office of a council district stating “For Town Council” and the language previously quoted in lieu of the candidate’s name and address. On the reverse side of the ballot there appear the names of each party’s candidate for each council district as well as for the office of district moderator and clerk.

The vote for petitioner which is in question was cast not by marking a cross (X) in the box to the right of the rectangle designated “For Town Council” but rather was placed to the right of petitioner’s name where it appeared on the reverse side of the ballot. Consistently the voter also adopted this method in voting for the office of district moderator casting no vote for the office of clerk.

In considering this ballot the local board of canvassers treated it as a valid vote for petitioner and from its action the intervenor appealed to respondent board pursuant to the provisions of G. L. 1956, §17-7-5, as amended. From a ruling of respondent board reversing the action of the local board of canvassers, a review thereof was sought in this court by way of certiorari.

The respondent board biased its decision on the provisions of §17-20-18, as amended, which require an absentee voter to make his cross (X) in the square provided to the right of the candidate’s name. It and the intervenor acknowledge the intent of the voter in question to have cast his or her ballot for petitioner, but argue that although the intention of the voter is material such intention is unavailing if con[65]*65trary to an expressed statutory requirement, citing In re Petition of Wilcox, 27 R. I. 117.

That case clearly stands for the proposition for which it is cited but it must be read in the light of the then prevailing applicable statutory provisions, P. L. 1904, chap. 1197. It is clear from a reading thereof that in the Wilcox case this court was of the opinion that it was bound to give a strict and literal construction to language which, the court defined as “imperative.” Nothing in chap. 1197 either expressly or impliedly directed judicial liberality in ascertaining the intention of the voter.

The statutory provisions governing the case before us, however, give significant direction. Section 17-20-19, as amended, reads in pertinent part, “No ballot shall be rejected if the intention of the voter is clear unless it contains clear evidence of the identity of the voter.” Further, §17-20-26, as amended, provides, “This chapter shall be construed liberally to [effect] the purposes hereof.”

We are persuaded that in the light of the circumstances of the instant case the vote in question should not be invalidated either on the ground that it was not cast in compliance with the applicable statute or that by marking a cross (X) to the right of petitioner’s name on the reverse side of the ballot there is clear evidence of the identity of •the voter. Section 17-20-18 provides that an absentee voter not voting a straight ticket may mark a cross (X) in the square opposite the name of the candidate chosen. However, in the block where there would ordinarily appear the name of petitioner, the ballot contains in lieu thereof the information heretofore quoted. This, as has been observed, was done to avoid the printing of six separate municipal ballots for the town of Tiverton.

The ballot was thus arranged by the secretary of state in accordance with §17-20-12, as amended, which provides that [66]*66absentee and shut-in ballots shall be arranged so as to conform with the style .provided by §17-21-20, as amended. The economies thus achieved as well as the expediting of ballots are readily apparent, but the absence of the candidate’s name where it would normally appear, coupled with the fact that the name does appear on the reverse side of the ballot, may tend to confuse a voter notwithstanding the printed instructions on the face of the ballot.

With the enactment of P. L. 1889, chap. 731, entitled “An Act To Provide For Printing And Distributing Ballots At The Public Expense, And To Regulate Voting At State And Congressional Elections,” the legislature, acutely aware of fraudulent practices which led to the furnishing of ballots by the state, expressly invalidated a ballot which had been marked in any manner that, could be identified with the voter, intending thereby to minimize by making more difficult the .buying of votes at the .polls.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ball v. Board of Elections
229 A.2d 617 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1967)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 A.2d 276, 100 R.I. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-v-board-of-elections-ri-1965.