In re Ammer

3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 295
CourtCuyahoga County Probate Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329 (In re Ammer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Probate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Ammer, 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 295 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

White, J.

This is a petition to contest an election held under the act of the General Assembly of Ohio, passed April 18th, 1904, and approved by the governor of Ohio, April 19th, 1904 (97 Ohio Laws, page 87), commonly known as The Brannock Law.’ ’ This election was held on the 7th day of July, 1904, in a residence district of the city of Cleveland. The petitioner is a qualified elector of the residence district in which the election was held. He sets forth in his petition a description of the residence district, which is somewhat lengthy, and which I do not quote for the reason that, while it is stated in the petition that said resi[330]*330dence district is not a clearly described, contiguous and compact section, or territory in a municipal corporation, bounded by streets, corporation or other recognized lines or boundaries, as required by the Uferms and conditions of said act known as the Brannock Bill, yet, on the hearing, no insistence ivas made upon this irregularity, if it was an irregularity, in the petition for the election.

The petitioner states that there were to be two voting booths or places for holding the election in said district on the 7th day of July, 1904, one of which booths or voting places was not within the residence district so defined and described in the petition, and that the order of the Honorable T. K. Dissette. judge of the court of common pleas, designates one of said booths or election place, known as “Ward 22, H,” as. being located on the southeast corner of Lexington and Giddings avenues, in the city of Cleveland, which southeast corner of Lexington and Giddings avenues is not within the district described in the petition filed with the said Honorable T. K. Dissette. and not within the district described and defined in the order for said election, issued by the said judge; and that said voting place or booth known as “Ward 22,' IT” should have been placed within the boundaries of the district described therein, as required by said law.

There are other allegations of irregularity in said petition upon which some evidence was offered, but which, in argument, and on submission to the court, counsel for the. petitioner do not insist. The chief of these was the irregularity charge.d in the petition that the election officers failed to comply with the sections of the Revised Statutes of Ohio providing for elections in the state of Ohio, in this, that they did not record the names of electors in the poll books at the time the votes were cast, and that votes were cast by electors in which the “secondary stub,” so called, was not detached from the ballot by the election officer or officers, and that ballots were east at said election on which the electors themselves wrote their respective names, or numbers, or both, upon the secondary stub, so called, instead of their being written by the proper election officers as required by law.

[331]*331This case comes before the court after the taking of some evidence as to the irregularities of this election, and the improper location of the voting place, without the introduction of any countervailing evidence, and upon a motion or submission in the nature of a demurrer to the case made by the petitioner.

It is stated in the petition that the majority of votes cast in favor of prohibiting the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, within the limits of said residence district, was about forty.

The petition is urged chiefly, and I may say exclusively, upon the irregularity as to the actual order for, and the actual location of, the booths or voting place at the southeast corner of Lexington and Giddings avenues in this city. The easterly boundary line of the residence district which, I believe, was known as “District No. 16,” as described in the petition for the election, and in the order made by the Plonorable T. K. Dissette, was the center line of Giddings avenue for a certain distance. The voting booth known as “Ward 22, H,” and which constituted one of the voting places, was located on the east side, within the street lines, of Giddings avenue, but upon the east side thereof, and about fifteen feet from the center line of said avenue; when it should have been, to have been actually within the lines of the district, on the southwest side of Giddings avenue, at the corner of Giddings and Lexington avenues. It was located at the corner of Giddings and Lexington avenues, but on the southeast corner, instead of the southwest corner, and within fifteen feet of its proper location, so as to have been wholly within the residence district.

The number of votes cast at this polling place is not stated in the petition, nor is it shown in the evidence, and it is not shown that any fraud was practiced in thus placing the booth and polling place; nor that any electors were misled thereby, or deprived of their right and opportunity to vote at said election; nor is it insisted that the result would have been changed if said polling place and booth had been properly located within said district.

It is insisted by the petitioner, by his counsel, that the Brannock Law, so-called, provides that the election shall be held at [332]*332the usual place or places for holding municipal elections “in said residence district,” if there be such place or places; and if not, at such place as the mayor or judge may direct “within” said residence district, and notice shall be given and the election conducted in all respects as provided by law for the election of members of the council of said corporation, so far as said law may be applicable.

Again, that at such election only duly qualified electors residing “within” the residence district shall be entitled to vote.

Again, that when the petition, with the proper percentage of qualified electors of any residence district, is presented to a-common pleas judge, or the mayor of the city, the common pleas judge or mayor shall order a special election to be held in not less than twenty days, nor more than thirty days from the filing of such petition.

It is contended that in.respect of all these requirements and conditions to be contained in the order of the judge or mayor, and in the mayor’s proclamation, giving notice of the election; the designation of voting places within the district, and not without; the time of the election, not less than twenty, nor more than thirty, days from the filing of the petition; that the election shall be conducted in all respects as provided for by law for the election of members of the council of the corporation; and that only the qualified electors residing within the district shall be entitled to" vote—are each and all mandatory provisions, and must be strictly complied with by the respective officers upon whom the duty is devolved of making the order and proclaiming tire election, the enactment itself being in its nature a penal statute, which must in every particular be strictly construed; that the placing of an election booth a few feet from .the residence district is as fatal an irregularity, in considering ■the validity of the election, as though it were placed miles away and in another párt of the city; and that it is not incumbefit upon the petitioner to satisfy the court by the evidence, that this or any other irregularity by the failure of any other duty on the part of any of the officers, thus made mandatory by the strict terms, of the law, resulted in either depriving the electors who would have voted, from yoting, or caused their [333]

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 329, 1904 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ammer-ohprobctcuyahog-1904.