Hayes v. Kirkwood

69 P. 30, 136 Cal. 396, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 724
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1902
DocketSac. No. 840.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 69 P. 30 (Hayes v. Kirkwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Kirkwood, 69 P. 30, 136 Cal. 396, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 724 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

McFARLAND, J.

This is a contest for the office of sheriff of the county of Mono. Kirkwood was declared elected by *398 the board of supervisors, and Hayes instituted this action to have it adjudged that he, and not Kirkwood, was legally elected to said office. The superior court recounted all the votes, and found that Kirkwood had a majority, and rendered judgment accordingly. Hayes appeals from the judgment.

There is no question raised as to the marking of the ballots, or as to the legality of any ballot, provided the election at Antelope Precinct was legally held; but appellant contends that, for reasons hereinafter mentioned, all the votes at said precinct should be rejected, no matter for whom given or counted, and that the case should be decided as if no election had been held at that precinct. If that contention can be maintained, appellant should be declared elected; for he had a majority of all the other votes polled in the county.

The main contention of appellant is, that the election in Antelope Precinct was not held at the proper place. The order of the board of supervisors was, that the election in that precinct should be held at “Todkill’s Store.” It appears from the evidence, and was found by the court, that a man named Todkill kept a store in said precinct at the place where the election was held; that on the lot on which he carried on his business he had two buildings, one of which was the main store, and the other a building- which he used as part of his trading premises. The latter building was used mainly as a storehouse, but goods were also sometimes sold and delivered there. In the latter building the election was.held. It was the same building in which the election had been held at the last two previous elections, and was the place which the election officers, and all the electors, understood to be the designated place. No one objected to it, and it is clear that no one was deceived or expected to vote elsewhere. Under these circumstances there was not a failure to hold the election at the proper place. In a populous and closely built-up city or large town, no doubt, the designation of a particular building or room in which an election is to be held would have to be quite strictly complied with; but in the country the designation of a well-known “store” not near any other houses—as was shown in the case at bar—would certainly include, as part of the “place,” a building on the trading premises used in connection with the business. No one who went to the *399 “store” for the purpose of voting could possibly be deceived as to the place of voting; and no one was so deceived.

It is contended that the precinct should be thrown out because the voting booths were not in view of the election board and the bystanders. The facts are these: The election was held in a one-story building, but there was a partition across it. The space on one side of the partition was about fourteen feet in width, and on the other about nine feet. The election board and the bystanders were in the larger space, and the two Vandecar voting booths in the smaller. There was a door in the partition through which the booths could be seen from parts of the space where the board and bystanders were, but not from every part thereof. The door in the partition was kept open, except that upon two or three occasions it became temporarily closed, or • partly closed, but' was immediately opened again. Every one in the large room could easily put himself in a position to see the booths. The only provision of the statute touching the subject to which our attention has been called is found in section 1203 of the Political Code, which says that the arrangement shall be such that the booths “shall not be hidden from the view” of the bystanders. Under these circumstances we do not think that the provision of the law that the booths must not be hidden from view was violated. Neither do we think that the fact that there were two windows in the room, where the booths were is sufficient to invalidate the election. The court found that they were securely fastened, and there is no evidence that they caused any improper conduct.

It appears that at one time two voters were discovered occupying the same booth, but they were at once informed that this could not be permitted, and they immediately occupied separate boths, and it is contended that this circumstance should invalidate the election. The contention is not maintainable ; to hold otherwise would be to put it into the power of any designing and mischievous person, by simply thrusting himself for a moment into a booth occupied by another voter, to set aside all the votes at a precinct where the majority was known to be adverse to him or his party or his friend.

The other points of appellant merely go to irregularities in the election board in conducting the election, which were so explained by members of the board and others who were *400 sworn as witnesses in the ease as to show that no injurious result followed. These points are mainly as follows: It is contended that the board, contrary to law, closed the polls for an hour at noon; but the court, on sufficient evidence, found that at noon some of the members of the board absented themselves from the polling-place for less than an hour to eat luncheon, and that the ballot-box and all the election papers were left at the polling-place in charge of other members; that there was no formal closing of the polls; and that during their absence no one asked to vote. It is contended, also, that at the closing in the evening the board left the polling-place iand the ballot-box for an hour; but with respect to this contention the court found, on sufficient evidence, that the facts were the same as those which occurred at noon,—namely, that a part of the board absented themselves for a short time to eat dinner, leaving the ballot-box and the other election papers in charge of the other members of the board at - the polling-place. It is also contended that the precinct should be thrown out, under section 1204 of the Political Code, because, in some instances, the election clerks failed to require some persons desiring to vote to give their names and addresses “or to announce the same, and failed to state to the voter that he must mark his ballot with the stamp provided by law or it would not be counted, and because, in some instances, they failed to write on the register opposite the name of the voter the number of the general ticket given him, and because, in a few instances, the inspector neglected to announce the name of the voter or the number of his ticket, and the ballot-clerk neglected to repeat the name or number of the ballot, as provided by section 1205 of the Political Code, and because the clerks, upon the completion of the tallies, did not draw lines in ink or otherwise from the last tally-mark to the end of the line in which the tallies terminated, and the name of the person making the last tally was not written in the line, as required by section 1258. But the court found, upon sufficient evidence, that all the above irregularities were the result of ignorance or inadvertence, and not of any fraudulent design or for the purpose of doing any wrong; and it found affirmatively that the said irregularities did not in any way affect the result of said election. Under these circumstances, the above-mentioned acts and omissions are *401

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Bluebook (online)
69 P. 30, 136 Cal. 396, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-kirkwood-cal-1902.