Hausam v. Parker

1911 OK 387, 121 P. 1063, 31 Okla. 399, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 14, 1911
Docket2567
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1911 OK 387 (Hausam v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hausam v. Parker, 1911 OK 387, 121 P. 1063, 31 Okla. 399, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 65 (Okla. 1911).

Opinion

*400 WILLIAMS, J.

This proceeding in error is to review a judgment in an action in the district court of Wagoner county wherein J. H. Parker, the defendant in error, as plaintiff, contested the right of A. L. Hausam, the plaintiff in error, as defendant, to the office of commissioner of district No. 1 of said county. The contest grew out of the election held on the 8th day of November, A. D. 1910, and involved precincts Nos. 3, 4, and 6. The findings and judgment of the trial court'are in part as follows :

“* * * That the names of the said plaintiff and defendant were upon the tickets of their respective parties voted in all precincts within the said First commissioner’s district at the general election held November 8, 1910. .It appears, and I so find from the testimony of G. D. Carl, who was on the 8th day of November, 1910, and now is, secretary of the county election board of Wagoner county, and the custodian of the records of said board, and all of the ballot boxes returned from the several precincts in the First commissioner’s district, that the First commissioner’s district of Wagoner county is divided into eight voting precincts, numbered 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 16; that there was canvassed by the county election board, composed of Hon. J. M. Reed, chairman, Dr. G. D. Carl, secretary, and Lion. C. J. Brown, the following precincts in the First commissioner’s district, to wit: Precincts numbered 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 16. That the abstract and certificate of votes received by the several candidates for county, district, and township officers show that in the precincts above named the plaintiff and defendant received the following votes for the office of county commissioner, A. L. Plausam, 260; J. PI. Parker, 263. That the said election board did not canvass the returns from precincts 4 and 6. Upon the trial of this cause it was shown that in the ballot box from precinct No. 6 there were found four papers entitled certificates. The plaintiff contends that three of these purported certificates show upon their face that they are in fact papers used by the counters for the purpose of tallying the votes. From a careful review and inspection of these papers, and the testimony of the witnesses in relation to same, it is apparent that three of the purported certificates were used for the purpose of tallying the vote, and that only one was intended as a certificate of the returns from said precinct, but inasmuch as the four have been signed, some by all, and some by a part of the counters of that precinct, and that the paper which plaintiff claims is the official certificate from said precinct was signed by only two of *401 the four counters, I do not think it is entitled to admission, and its rejection by the county election board was proper. It appears from the testimony of the witnesses introduced in this case, and the court finds, that precinct No. 4 was not canvassed by the county election board for the reason that no certificate of returns was in the box. ' ’
“The inspector from this precinct, Luther McCormick, was produced as a witness on behalf of plaintiff, and in his explanation as to the failure of the officers of the election in precinct 4 tc/ inclose the certificate in the ballot box from said precinct, and as to the correctness of the certificate which he produced on the witness stand, made the following statement: ‘A. When we held our election November 8th, after we got done counting I held a certificate like that. I fetched the box over here on November 9th. Left Wagoner on the M. O. & G. about 4:30 for Muskogee. After I left here, they opened my box, and found that my counters’ returns were not in there, and I had the certificate in my pocket that day that I was to keep, and I had showed it here to the election board and others and kept that. They knew that I had it. They caught me at Wagoner and told me that my returns were not in the box, and that I had a certificate and that they wanted it, so they could count the box. I says, “All right, they are sure in there.” I says: “I think you will find them in there somewheres. We might have got them in the wrong envelope, but I am certain they are in there. But,” I says, “you can have this one.” So I goes home at 11:15 Wednesday night. On Thursday noon I was informed that there was some stuff left there at outvoting precinct that ought to have been left in that box. I went:, and when I found it, it was the envelope that contained this certificate, the envelope, ballots of the county, and the two tally sheets, and the envelope was unsealed, and so I didn’t know what to do with them, and I telephones to the Democratic chairman of the county, and asked him what to do with it, and what I had done, and he said everything was all right, and so I asked him if I must express that to him, and he says yes, just express it over to him, and I went and looked at it again and seen what was in it, and I seen that this certificate was in there, and it struck me that I ought to have a certificate, and I took that certificate out of that envelope, and put it in my pocket, and I have had it ever since, and the other stuff I expressed to Hess Watts.’ Mr. McCormick was corroborated by W. E. Tow and J. L. Davis, both official counters in precinct No. 4, both of whom testified that the said certificate is in the same condition as it was when *402 prepared by them, and that it is a true certificate of the vote in said precinct.
“From said evidence, I am of the opinion, and so find, that said certificate is genuine, has not been altered or changed in any particular, and is in the exact condition as when prepared by the office'rs in precinct No. 4; that it gives a true account of the vote received in said precinct by the plaintiff and defendant herein; that it has been in the possession and under the control of the official inspector from said precinct since it was found on the morning after the election; that it was lost, and therefore in the possession of no one before that time; that the statement made by the several witnesses produced from said precinct that said certificate is now in the exact condition as it was when signed by the officers, and that the record of the vote contained therein for the officer of commissioner from commissioner’s district No. 1 is true and correct; and that said certificate shows that in said precinct there was cast for the plaintiff‘ herein 71 votes, and for the defendant herein 55 votes.
“In support of his allegation of fraud in the conduction of the election held on the 8th day of November, 1910, in precinct Nd. 3, many witnesses were produced, sworn, and examined. I will review the testimony of- said witnesses only in so far as I deem necessary in arriving at the conclusions reached by me in this opinion.
“The first witness produced on the part of the defendant upon said allegation was Lester Sappington. When first sworn, this witness seemed exceedingly anxious to relate his story, and to finish his narrative as quickly as possible. When he lifted his hand -to be sworn, it required some effort on the part of the court and bailiff to prevent his telling the whole story. After succeeding in quieting him, he finally gave the court information that he saw Kelly Gibson give a white man a dollar on election day, and tell him to go and get his dinner and vote for Parker, and also gave a negro a dollar, and told him to go and get his dinner and vote for Parker.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1911 OK 387, 121 P. 1063, 31 Okla. 399, 1912 Okla. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hausam-v-parker-okla-1911.