Humphrey v. Perry

141 N.E. 776, 310 Ill. 373
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1923
DocketNo. 15625
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 N.E. 776 (Humphrey v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Humphrey v. Perry, 141 N.E. 776, 310 Ill. 373 (Ill. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Farmer

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment of the circuit court of Cass county in a proceeding to contest the election of mayor of Beardstown. Guilford M. Humphrey, the contestant, was a candidate for mayor of said city at the election held April 17, 1923, on the Independent ticket, and the contestee, Wesley Perry, was a candidate for the same office on the Independent-Labor ticket. There were no other candidates for mayor at the election. The election returns as made by the election officers, and the proclamation of the result made by them, gave Perry a majority of 64 votes in the five wards of the city, and he was declared elected, duly qualified and entered upon the discharge of the duties of the office. Humphrey filed his petition to contest the election of Perry in the circuit court. After the ■issues were made up the cause was tried. On the trial of the case the ballots were re-counted, and the court declared Perry was duly elected by a majority óf the votes cast and adjudged the costs against Humphrey, the contestant. He has prosecuted this appeal from that judgment. The parties will hereafter be referred to as appellant and appellee.

The petition is lengthy and sets out numerous grounds of contest, but the decision of the case depends, as appellant says in his brief, upon two questions: (1) Whether the court erred in not making a proportionate reduction in the first ward of ballots initialed by a judge other than the judge who handed the ballots to the voters; and (2) whether the ballots should have been counted in the third, fourth and fifth wards or the election returns should have been accepted as the best evidence.

There were a considerable number of ballots cast by absent voters. None of them, except in the fourth ward, were indorsed by the initials of any judge of the election. The court rejected those ballots and also made a proportionate reduction of ballots in the second ward on the ground that ballots were handed voters by a judge other than the one whose initials were indorsed on them, and appellee has assigned cross-errors on those rulings.

There are five wards in the city of Beardstown and each constitutes one election precinct. The judges in the first ward were Howard, Tobin and Rebman. All of them at times handed ballots to the voters. Howard testified he thought he indorsed his initials on one-half the ballots voted in that ward. Tobin thought he indorsed about one-third of them and Rebman thought he indorsed about one-third of them. Howard testified he handed the voters ballots indorsed by him and that each of the other judges handed out a few. Tobin testified he handed no ballots to voters except those he indorsed, and Rebman testified he did not know whether he handed any ballots out which were indorsed by another judge. The court held sections 22 and 26 of the Australian Ballot law were mandatory, and that the ballots must be handed to the voters by the judge who indorsed his initials on them. (Laird v. Williams, 281 Ill. 233.) The court correctly held that under the evidence a proportionate reduction was not required in the first ward. In the second ward the evidence showed the judges were Phelps, O’Reilley and Barneycastle. Phelps indorsed his initials on the ballots. They were handed the voters by O’Reilley, were received from the voters and deposited in the ballot-box by Barneycastle. The proof was that Phelps saw the ballots delivered to the voters with his initials indorsed on them, and appellee contended what was done was a compliance with the law, as much so as if Phelps had himself handed the ballots to the voters. The court overruled appellee’s contention and made a proportionate reduction, under the rule announced in Choisser v. York, 211 111. 56, of 246 votes for appellee and 210 for appellant. The result as declared by the court gave appellant 253 votes and appellee 381 in the first ward, appellant 34 votes and appellee 41 votes in the second ward, — a majority in the two wards for appellee of 135. None of the absent voters’ ballots in those two wards were counted because they were not initialed by a judge of the election. The same is true of absent voters’ ballots in the third and fifth wards. In the fourth ward the absent voters’ ballots were properly indorsed by initials of a judge and were counted.

The result of the count of the ballots in the third ward as declared by the court gave appellant 299 votes and appellee 312 votes, — a majority for appellee in that ward of 13 votes. In the fourth ward appellant was given 382 votes and appellee 292 votes, — a majority for appellant in that ward of 90 votes. In the fifth ward 192 votes were counted for appellant and 418 votes for appellee, — a majority for appellee in that ward of 226. After the count had proceeded for a while in the third ward, ballots were discovered which were marked with a cross in the circle at the head of the Independent (or Humphrey) ticket and also in the square opposite the name of appellee on the Independent-Labor ticket. Appellant objected to all such ballots in the third, fourth and fifth wards being counted, but the court overruled the objection, counted said ballots, and that ruling is the principal question argued in appellant’s brief.

It was stipulated between the parties that the ballots, tally-sheets and all files connected with the election, and which were then in the possession of the city clerk, might be admitted in evidence without objection to the manner in which they had been kept after the election; that the ballots and other papers connected with the election were delivered to the city clerk on the evening of the day of the election in the same condition they were in when they left the polling places; that they had since been in the possession of the city clerk, who had kept them in the same condition they were in when he received them, until May 23, when they were brought to Virginia, the county seat, and placed in a vault in the court house, where they have since been kept. The trial began May 24, during' which day the ballots cast in the first and second wards were counted. Court adjourned the evening of May 24 to the next day, May 25, and it is contended by appellant that at some time before the ballots were to be counted by the court, the ballots in the third, fourth and fifth wards had been tampered with and were not the best evidence as to the result of the election in those wards, and the court erred in not so deciding and in not holding the election returns of those wards were the best evidence. If that contention is sustained it would necessarily follow that the judgment is wrong. By the count of the ballots by the court in the first and second wards appellee was given 135 majority in those wards. The election returns gave appellant a majority in the third and fourth wards of 323 and appellee a majority of 143 in the fifth ward. That would give appellant a net majority of 45 votes.

Appellant contends that there were 24 ballots in the third ward, 72 in the fourth and 82 in the fifth which unmistakably show they had been tampered with, and for that reason the ballots were not the best evidence and the election returns as to those wards should have been accepted as the best evidence. All of those ballots, as we understand it, were marked in the circle at the head of the ticket on which appellant’s name appeared and also in the square opposite the name of appellee and were by the court counted for appellee.

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Bluebook (online)
141 N.E. 776, 310 Ill. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphrey-v-perry-ill-1923.