Hebert v. Landry

193 So. 406
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1940
DocketNo. 2093.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 So. 406 (Hebert v. Landry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hebert v. Landry, 193 So. 406 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

This is a suit involving a contest over-an election fpr member of the Police Jury of the Parish of Assumption from Ward Five of said parish at the primary election which was held throughout the State of Louisiana on January 16, 1940. There were two candidates, Junior P. Hebert, the contestant, appellant herein, and Teles X. Landry, contestee, appellee.

On the result of the voting in the three-polling precincts of the said ward as announced by the commissioners of election-at each of the said polls, there was a tie vote. The contestant, however, claims that in Precinct One of the ward there was a. *407 vote illegally counted by the commissioners of election at that poll in favor of his opponent, Teles X. Landry, and that had that illegal vote been marked a spoiled ballot, as it should have been, the result would then have been a majority of one, out of all the votes cast in that ward, in his favor, and he would have been nominated for the office to which he aspired and for which he was a candidate at the election. He therefore seeks to have the .Assumption Parish Democratic Executive Committee, which is charged with promulgating the returns of the election, enjoined and restrained from doing so in so far as said office of police juror of Ward Five is concerned, and to obtain judgment in the District Court decreeing the ballot which he attacked to be a spoiled ballot, and ordering the Parish Democratic Executive Committee to correctly promulgate the returns of the election. He also makes the Clerk of Court of Assumption Parish, in whose custody the ballot box is, a party defendant, to the end that the said box may not be tampered with.

In his petition, the contestant sets out that the ballot is illegal for the reason that the voter marked the same in his favor and then smeared or partially erased that mark and also marked it in favor of his opponent, Teles X. Landry.

He charges that the marking of the ballot in such manner clearly shows an intention to either vote for him or to make it such a ballot as could later be identified. He also alleges that under the primary election law as interpreted by the jurisprudence of this state, a ballot so marked is an illegal and spoiled ballot and should have been so marked, and not counted for either candidate by the commissioners.

In his answer, the defendant, contestee, virtually admits the facts as they are set out in the plaintiff’s petition, denying, however, that the ballot was spoiled and that it was illegally counted, and denying also that under the jurisprudence of this state a ballot so marked is illegal and a spoiled ballot. The defendant insists that the ballot is a legal and valid ballot and that it was properly counted by the commissioners, with the result as herein stated.

It plainly appears, however, that the sole and only issue presented to the Court in this contest is the legality, vel non, of the ballot which has been attacked.

The trial court, after hearing, decided in favor of the defendants, dismissing plaintiff’s suit and ordering the Assumption Parish Democratic Executive Committee to meet and declare the defendant, Teles X. Landry, and the plaintiff, Junior P. Hebert, to be opposing candidates in a second democratic primary election to be held in the Fifth Ward of Assumption Parish on February 20, 1940, for the office of police juror in and for said ward, and that the said committee certify the names of such candidates to the Secretary of State so that they may be placed upon the official ballots to be used in said election.

From that judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

While the trial judge did not assign written reasons for judgment, it is apparent from the conclusion he reached that he was of the opinion that the attacked ballot was not an illegal ballot and that it was properly counted for the defendant Teles X. Landry.

The ballot in question was, under order of the court, withdrawn from the ballot box at the trial of the case in the district court and offered and produced in evidence and appears in the record as exhibit “P-1.” It reveals an official primary election ballot to be used in the election in Assumption Parish, in Ward Five, in Precinct One, for the offices of Senator from the Twelfth Senatorial District, and for Sheriff of the Parish of Assumption, for clerk of court of that parish, for Police Juror of Ward Five, and for justice of the- peace and constable. The voter marked his ballot regularly for a candidate for each of the said offices, and when he came to vote for the office of police juror of the ward, it is apparent that he made a cross mark, as required under the primary election law, in the square opposite the name of each of the two candidates, the parties in this contest, who were the only two candidates for that office. It appears that the cross mark in the square opposite the name of J. P. Hebert was erased. Whether the erasure was made before or after he had made the cross mark in the square opposite the name of T. X. Landry, it is impossible to tell.

The fact remains, however, that there is an erasure of the cross mark in the square opposite the name of J. P. Hebert, which erasure remains clearly visible, and the cross mark in the square opposite the name of T. X. Landry remains as it was placed there by the voter, and which is the same *408 kind of cross mark by which he indicated his choice of each candidate on the ballot.

The appellant relies on the two cases of Vidrine v. Eldred, 153 La. 779, 96 So. 566, and Perez v. Cognevich, 156 La. 331, 343, 100 So. 444, in support of his contention that the ballot in question in this case is a spoiled or illegal ballot and should not have been counted for the defendant.

There is no doubt that from expressions used by the court in these two cases the appellant might find considerable support for his contention, since in the first of these cases, particularly, the court might be understood as having rejected indiscriminately ballots which contained visible erasures, the nature of which, however, does not appear from a reading of the opinion. It is important to note that the court did describe the marks of identification on other rejected ballots, which marks were deemed sufficient to reject these other ballots as illegal. The same might be said of the opinion in the other case, wherein it is stated that there were several ballots found with erasures on them, which erasures were such as might reasonably serve the purpose of marks of identification. Yet we are again left without any description of the nature of those erasures, although the court in that case went to some length in describing the other marks of identification on other ballots.

It may be reasonably assumed that the erasures referred to in those cases were of such a nature as might have been placed there for the purpose of identifying the ballot and not for the purpose of correcting an honest mistake on the part of the voter such as is indicated in this case.

We think it is important in order to determine the purpose and intention of the voter to ascertain the nature as well as the extent of the erasures which might be capable of identifying a ballot.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hebert-v-landry-lactapp-1940.