Huff v. Duffield

251 S.W. 298, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1923
DocketNo. 6992.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 298 (Huff v. Duffield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huff v. Duffield, 251 S.W. 298, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 143 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

FLY, O. J.

This is an action contesting the election of B. S. Duffield, appellee, to the office of county and district clerk of Willacy county at the general election held on November 7, 1922, instituted by R. W. Huff, appellant. At that election appellant and appellee were the candidates f br the offices in question, and the commissioner’s court having canvassed the votes, declared that appellant had received 168 votes and appellee 169 votes and issued a certificate of election to appellee. This cause was tried by the district judge, and he concluded, after finding numerous facts as to various and sundry voters, that appellee received 164 legal votes and appellant received 163 legal votes, and consequently adjudged B. S. Duffield to have been duly and legally elected to the office of district and county clerk of Willacy county.

The first and fourteenth propositions, under the first and eleventh assignments of error, attack the conclusion of the court that O. g. Stockwell was a qualified voter. The facts show that this voter had not paid the poll tax and obtained a receipt that would have entitled him to vote in the year 1922. However, he testified that he was born on February 1, 1860, and consequently was 62 years old on February 1, 1922, and therefore exempt from the payment of poll tax. Not living in a city of 10,000 inhabitants or more, he was nbt required to obtain an exemption certificate. Article 2939, Vernon’s Tex. Civ. stats. gupp. 1922. That the voter may at other times have stated that he was born in 1861, and not in 1860, was a matter that merely went to his credibility, and the court concluded that his last statement was true. The first and eleventh assignments of error are overruled.

The second, third, eighteenth, and nineteenth assignments of error assail the action of the court in counting the ballots of O. H. Pease and Mrs. O. H. Pease for appellee, on the ground that he “was a married man and residing with wife, Mrs. O. H. Pease, in McAllen, Hidalgo county, on November 7, 1922.” While there was evidence tending to show that Pease and wife were not residents of Willacy county, he swore that he was only living in Hidalgo county temporarily, had a home in Willacy county, and had always intended to return and live. in it. The court found that no residence had been fixed in Hidalgo county and counted the two votes for appellee. The election law provides that every person 21 years of age, who is a citizen of the United gtates, and who shall have resided in this state one year next preceding an election, and .the last six months within the district or county in which he or she offers to vote, shall be deemed a qualified elector. Article 2939, Vernon’s Civ. gtats. 1922 gupp. The word “resided,”. as used in the election law, and through a long line of decisions,.it has been held that the intention of the individual often has a strong, if not a paramount, influ *300 ence in determining residency. Savage v. Umphries (Tex. Civ. App.) 118 S. W. 893; Linger v. Balfour (Tex. Civ. App.) 149 S. W. 795; Aldridge v. Hamlin (Tex. Civ. App.) 184 S. W. 602; Read v. King (Tex. Civ. App.) 227 S. W. 960.

We have seen no Texas case denying the test as to whether the person from the place with intent to return or with the intention to abandon it as a residence is a proper te'st, except the case of Garvey v. Cain (Tex. Civ. App.) 197 S. W. 765, decided in 1917, by the Court of Civil Appeals at Beaumont, which if followed would change the residence of every United States Senator and member of the House of Representatives, the Governor of the State, and heads of departments, disfranchising the former, because they could not vote in the District of Columbia, and forcing the latter’ to vote in Travis county. No such construction of constitution or statute is warranted by statute or decision, and the same court afterwards repudiated the doctrine herein cited:

“A removal to divest one of his right to vote must be accompanied by an intent to make a new' domicile and quit the' old. Mere removal, coupled with an intent to retain the original domicile and return to it, will not constitute a change.”

We will agree with this decision which is in harmony with all the Texas decisions, rather than the one in Garvey v. Cain, which is supported by no authority and so far as can be ascertained ,by us has never been cited by any court. The decisions of Texas, on the subject of intent, entering so largely into the determination of the place of residence, is fully supported in an exhaustive report on the subject of “residence” made by a congressional committee in the contested election case of Cessna v. Meyers, Appendix to McCrary on Elections, p. 557.

The evidence fails to show that Conrad Schmidt was a resident of precinct No. 2, or that he had a poll tax receipt or accounted for not presenting it. He lived in precinct No. 1, but voted in No. 2, where he has been at work for about two weeks before the 'election, and if the decision in the case of Garvey v. Cain were the law, he was entitled to vote in precinct No. 2, because he had been sleeping there for two weeks, if he had obtained a poll tax receipt. No poll tax receipt was produced or accounted for. We think his vote should not have been counted for appellee.

We are of opinion that there was evidence tending to show that Romaldo Garza lived in precinct No. 2, where he voted, and that he was qualified to vote. We overrule the fifth and twenty-first assignment of error.

In connection with the votes of. Guadalupe A. de Davila and other Mexicans, it was disclosed that the provisions of Article .3003, Yernon’s Civ. Stats. Supp. 1922 prohibiting the use of any other than the English language in aiding votors or in ¿performing any of the duties of the judge of an election, was utterly, disregarded and totally ignored. This is such a flagrant disregard of the election law that it should at least cause ballots cast in connection with such contempt for law to be cast out and not considered in the count, if it should not invalidate an election altogether. The law in question, after providing for assistance by two judges of election of voters unable to prepare their ballots on account of bodily infirmity which renders them physically unable to write, or are over 60 years of age and are unable to read and write, and it goes further and provides that such voters must explain how they desire to vote in the English language,, “and no judge of the election shall use any other than the English language in aiding the voter, or in performing any of his duties as such judge of the election * * * that they will confine their assistance to answering his questions in the English language, to naming candidates, and, if the voting be at á general election, to naming the parties to which such candidates belong, and that they will prepare the ballot as such voter directs, in the English language.” Although sworn to comply with the requirements noted, the uncon-troverted evidence shows, and the trial judge so found, that voters who could not speak or understand the English language were assisted through a foreign'language in making out their ballots. The court found the following facts in connection with others:

“(a) I find as a fact that Guadalupe A. de Davila east her ballot at the election under investigation in voting precinct No.

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 298, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huff-v-duffield-texapp-1923.