In re Election of Supervisor of Whitpain Township

44 Pa. D. & C. 374, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 494
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedJanuary 5, 1942
DocketNo.1; no. 5
StatusPublished

This text of 44 Pa. D. & C. 374 (In re Election of Supervisor of Whitpain Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Election of Supervisor of Whitpain Township, 44 Pa. D. & C. 374, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 494 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1942).

Opinion

Per Curiam,

We have before us exceptions to the report of the recount board, filed by both candidates in a contested election proceeding involving the office of supervisor in Whitpain Township, Montgomery County, Pa.

B. Frank Cassel received the nomination on both the Republican and the Democratic tickets for the office of Supervisor of Whitpain Township, which is composed of two election districts, the North district and the [376]*376West Ambler district. As there was only one supervisor to be elected, his was the only name printed on the official ballot for township supervisor as the Republican and Democratic candidate at the municipal election held on Tuesday, November 4, 1941. Friends of Ross G. Rile, a former supervisor, conducted a sticker campaign in his behalf at this municipal election.

After the election the county board of elections made a return of the votes cast for supervisor in both districts of Whitpain Township, and the result was: Ross G. Rile, 341 votes; B. Frank Cassel, 326 votes.

Thereafter, on November 12, 1941, upon the petition of electors alleging fraud or error in computing the vote in the North district, the court appointed a recount board to compute the vote cast for supervisor in that ^district. The recount board reported that they rejected a total of 62 ballots for the following reasons:

(а) Stickers not in space provided;
(б) Erasures or mutilations voiding ballots;
(e) Ballots marked with ink;
(d) Ballots marked with a check instead of an X;
(e) Ballots marked for more than one candidate;
(/) Written-in name not in space provided.

As a result of this recount in the North district, the board reported:

B. Frank Cassel........150 votes
Ross G. Rile...........287 votes
Ross Rile.............. 20 votes
R. G. Rile............. 1 vote
Ross Reihl............ 1 vote
Ross Riles ............ 1 vote
G. Ross Rile............ 1 vote
Ros G. Rile............ 1 vote
Ross M. Rile........... 1 vote
Ross G. Reil........... 1 vote
Dr. Ed. Reil........... 1 vote

[377]*377Later, on December 17, 1941, upon petition of electors alleging fraud or error in computing the vote in the West Ambler district, the court appointed the same recount board, who reported that they rejected 13 ballots. Four of these were rejected for the reason that the name of the candidate was written in, but not in the space provided, and also because a large cross mark had been made over the entire office block for supervisor. The remaining nine were rejected because a large cross mark was made over the entire office block for supervisor.

As a result of the recount in the West Ambler district, B. Frank Cassel received 175 votes, Ross G. Rile, 9 votes, and Ross Rile, 3 votes.

Therefore, if the computation of the county board of elections was correct, Ross G. Rile was the successful candidate for supervisor by 15 votes; and if the computation of the recount board was correct, and also if the identity of Ross G. Rile was established under the different names on the ballots so that the vote could be cumulated, Ross G. Rile would be elected by one vote.

Both candidates have filed numerous exceptions to both reports of the recount board. These exceptions were argued before the court en banc on December 17th and on December 30th, respectively, and are now pending for decision. Notwithstanding separate petitions were filed to open the ballot boxes and recount the votes in each of the two election districts, and arguments on exceptions were heard at different times, we deem it advisable, since all exceptions refer to the same contest and time is short, to dispose of the entire contest in one opinion.

As the recount board rejected 62 votes for supervisor in the North district, considering all the exceptions filed to the return in this district, there are 61 ballots in the North district the validity of which is con[378]*378tested. These 61 votes for supervisor divide themselves into seven main classes:

I. Thirty votes rejected by the recount board where the sticker was placed in a space other than that provided on the ballot.

• II. Eleven votes rejected by the recount board where the name was written in a space other than that provided on the ballot.

III. Two votes rejected by the recount board where the name of the candidate for supervisor was written in the space provided but had a check mark after it; and in addition, one of the ballots had check marks in each office block instead of cross marks.

IV. Seven votes rejected by the recount board where the name was written in or the sticker was placed in the proper space, but where the name of B. Frank Cas-sel and Democrat or Republican printed on the ballot was stricken out by lead pencil.

V. Six votes rejected by the recount board where the name was written in or the sticker placed in the proper space, but also where a cross mark was made after B. Frank Cassel, Republican, so that the voter marked for more than one candidate.

VI. Four votes rejected by the recount board where there was an evident erasure of the cross mark in the office block for supervisor.

VII. One vote rejected by the recount board where the name was written in the proper space but with ink.

As Mr. Cassel had both the Democratic and the Republican nominations for township supervisor on the official ballot for the municipal election in the office block for “Supervisor” (vote for one), the name of B. Frank Cassel appeared with bracket pointing to and enclosing two spaces, one designated “Democrat”, followed by a blank square for the cross mark, and the other designated “Republican”, also followed by a blank square for a cross mark. Near the lower end of this office block there is a blank space provided for writing [379]*379in a name, or inserting a sticker, before coming to the heavy printed line separating the supervisor office block from the tax collector office block.

There were 41 ballots in the North district, which were not counted by the recount board appointed by the court, because, as we explained in classes I and II, either the sticker inserted, or the name written in, was not in the space provided in the office block for supervisor, and this action has been the subject of exceptions by Mr. Rile.

In 30 of these ballots the name of Ross G. Rile was printed on a sticker and pasted not in the blank space provided for that purpose, but immediately under the name of Cassel opposite the square which would be used by a voter desiring to vote for Mr. Cassel as a Republican. In most of these cases the sticker covered wholly or in part the word “Republican”.

In 11 ballots the name of Ross G.

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44 Pa. D. & C. 374, 1942 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 494, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-election-of-supervisor-of-whitpain-township-pactcomplmontgo-1942.