Houston v. Steele

34 S.W. 6, 98 Ky. 596, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 19
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 24, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 6 (Houston v. Steele) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houston v. Steele, 34 S.W. 6, 98 Ky. 596, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 19 (Ky. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

JUDGE HAZELRIGG

DELIVERED the opinion op the court.

At the November election,- 1892, the appellants composed the canvassing board of elections for Boyd county, and on [599]*599the day provided by law the returns of the various precincts at that election were presented to them for their official action. They found before them the stub-books of the various precincts, containing the proper official certificates, of. the number of votes cast, and for whom, together with four sealed envelopes from precincts 2, 3, 8 and 9, purporting to contain “doubtful or questionable ballots,” properly endorsed by the respective precinct officers. At that election the appellee, Steele, and one Meade were rival candidates for circuit court clerk, and on the face of the returns, as shown by the stub-books alone, Steele had received 1,542 and Meade 1,541. The board then proceeded to canvass the doubtful ballots, counting 6 for Steele, 10 for Meade, including 2 given him by the precinct officers, and, therefore, included in his vote of 1,541, and rejecting 15 others.. This elected Meade by 1 vote, and his certificate of election was issued to him accordingly. Thereupon Steele filed his petition in equity in the Boyd Circuit Court against the members of the board, in which he set out in substance the facts stated above, and in .which he questioned the right of the board to canvass or consider the doubtful ballots.. He claimed his own election and right to the certificate, and asked that the board, by mandamus, be compelled to meet again, re-canvass the vote, and give to him the certificate of election; and that the board be directed not to count for Meade certain-named ballots, or any ballots unless without distinguishing marks, and marked with the cross, in the, way provided by law.

After the disposition of some preliminary motions affecting the notice for the mandamus, and an order overruling a' demurrer to the petition, an answer was filed, without objection to the form of the action, in which Meade was alleged to have in fact received the highest number of votes, [600]*600as shown by the returns, and was, therefore, entitled to the certificate. The details of "the canvass of the returns were set out, and the fact admitted that the doubtful ballots had been canvassed as part of the returns.

Upon final hearing the court granted the writ, and directed the canvassers to meet at a time certain and proceed to canvass the returns of the election in question. They were further directed to count of the doubtful ballots two for Steele, known in the record as “S 1” and “S 2,” and two for Meade, known as “M 1” and “M 2,” and no others for either of the candidates. The court further adjudged that as Steele had received 1,544 votes and Meade 1,543 votes the former was entitled to a certificate of election, and the board was directed to issue it to him. From this judgment the members of the board have prosecuted this appeal.

It will be seen that the learned trial judge upholds the right of the board to open the sealed envelopes and canvass the doubtful ballots. If-he is right in determining this to be its duty, an inspection of the ballots, ihe originals being before us, will readily show whether or not his award of the certificate was to the proper candidate. This inspection we will postpone until we have determined the more important question presented in the record of whether the canvassing board was authorized to canvass, as a part of the election returns, the doubtful or questioned ballots.

The law affecting the disposition of these ballots, and the duty of the precinct officers with respect thereto, is found in the Kentucky Statutes, as follows:

“§ 1482. When the polls are closed the officers of election shall, in the voting room, immediately count the votes, and certify the same as hereinafter provided; and no adjournment shall be had until the same is completed. When the result of the ballot is ascertained, it shall be immediately [601]*601announced by one of the judges in front of ihei voting room, and thereupon the judges shall, in the presence of the clerk, sheriff and the inspectors provided for in the preceding section, destroy the ballots voted, mutilated or spoiled, and the ballots remaining unvoted: Provided, That if there are any ballots cast and counted, or left uncounted, concerning the legality or regularity of which there is any doubt or difference of opinion in the minds of the judges of election, said ballots shall not be destroyed, but sealed up and returned to the clerk of the county court, with the returns of the election, for such judicial or other investigation as may be necessary, with a true statement as to whether they have or have not been counted, and, if counted, what part, and for whom.

“§ 1483. * * * When the foregoing requirements have been complied with, the judges shall deliver the stub-book containing the foregoing returns, together with the unde-stroyed ballots, inclosed in an envelope, to the sheriff of election before they separate.”

“§ 1508. Within two days next after an election the sheriff shall deposit with the clerk of the county court the returns of the different precincts. On the next day the board shall meet in the clerk’s office, between ten and twelve o’clock in the morning, open and canvass the returns of such election, and give triplicate or more written certificates of election over their signatures of those who have received the highest number of votes for any office,” etc.

It will be noticed that nowhere in the law are the doubtful or questioned ballots to be separated from the stub-book containing the other returns of the election. They are to be sealed up and, with the stub-book, delivered to the sheriff. That officer must then deposit with the clerk of the county court “the returns of the different precincts.” The [602]*602word “returns,” as here used, must include the undestroyed ballots, for, otherwise, there is no law directing the sheriff what to do with them; and immediately following the clause so using the word we find the direction to the canvassing-board “to open and canvass the returns of such election.”

The “returns” deposited by the sheriff would, therefore,, seeem to be the “returns” to be canvassed by the board. And if these, in the one instance- — where the statute defines, the sheriff’s duties — include the doubtful and' questioned ballots, they must be held to do so in the other — when the same section of the statute defines the duties of the board.

While this conclusion would seem to be logical enough when looking to the very language of the law, it may be admitted to involve a somewhat narrow construction, if not. otherwise supported; and certainly it would not be in the way of a different construction, if the duty of merely canvassing the returns, which is confessedly the whole duty of the board, can not be held to embrace a revision or correction of the action of the precinct officers in counting or rejecting doubtful or questioned ballots.

It has been said, often, by this court, and at least once since the adoption of the present election law, that the duties of this board are purely ministerial (Clark v. McKenzie, 7 Bush, 523; Broaddus v. Mason, 95 Ky., 421), and this fact is supposed to prevent the exercise, on the part of this tribunal, of the revisory or correcting power .in question.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 6, 98 Ky. 596, 1896 Ky. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-steele-kyctapp-1896.