In re South Charleston Election Contest

3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 373, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 191
CourtClark County Probate Court
DecidedApril 26, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 373 (In re South Charleston Election Contest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Clark 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 South Charleston Election Contest, 3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 373, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 191 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

Geiger, J.

An election was held on March 14, 1905, in the municipal corporation of South Charleston, Ohio, under the provisions of an act commonly known as the Beal Law, Vol. 95, page 87, Ohio Laws.

The result of the election was certified by the judges to be—

“For the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, 166 votes; against the sale of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, 167 votes; three ballots not miarked, .and two ballots marked incorrectly.”

On the 24th day of March, and within the time limited by the statute, a petition was filed in the probate court to contest the result of the election. The contestors- claim that the election was illegal and invalid for the following reasons: That there were no ballots cast at said election which were printed as required by law; that illegal votes were cast at the election by persons not entitled to vote, which changed the result of the election ; iand that a ballot was illegally thrown out by the judges; that said election was not petitioned for by forty per cent, of the qualified élebtors at the last municipal election of said corporation.

Many questions have arisen in the course of the trial, and such as seem to the court to be important will be passed upon in the order in which they were presented.

[375]*375The first claim made by the contestors is that the petition filed with the city council does not show upon its face the required percentage of electors in said corporation, and that the action of said council in ordering the election was illegal and void, and that the election for that reason should be set -aside.

The petition for the election, as filed, contained 136 names. A committee of council was appointed to investigate the petition, and reported that in their opinion there were the sign atures of 128 qualified voters upon the petition, and that it required J.24 signatures to call an election; such number being forty per cent, of the number of votes cast at the November election of 1904, to-wit, 309 votes. The council thereupon ordered the election, and -a certificate of the result was entered by the cl-erlr upon the minutes of council.

It is contended that, under the provisions of Section 4364-20e, Revised Statutes, in municipalities having wards the petition would be sufficient if signed by as many qualified voters as equal in number forty per cent, of the votes cast in said municipal corporation at the last preceding general election; and that, in all 'other municipalities not having wards (as is the case of South Charleston), the phraseology “forty per cent, of the qualified electors- at -the last preceding municipal election” requires the petition to contain forty per cent, of all who may have been electors, whether they voted or not, at the last preceding municipal election; and it is sought to introduce evidence to show that there were electors in South Charleston at the time of the November election of 1904 who did not vote, and that- the total number of electors upon which the percentage is based would be the number voting, to-wit, 309, plus the number who were qualified to vote, but did not vote.

It is necessary, then, to determine the meaning of the phrase “forty per cent.- of the qualified electors at the last preceding municipal election.”

Section 4364-20a provides that whenever forty per cent, of the qualified electors in a municipal corporation shall petition for an election, a special election shall be ordered. Section 4864-20e endeavors to define what this forty per cent, should [376]*376be in the two classes of municipalities. It is evident that the Legislature in passing Section 4364-20e endeavored to lay down a rule that would enable those petitioning for an election to determine when they had a sufficient number upon their petition. If we adopt the construction that the phrase “forty per cent, of the qualified electors at the last preceding municipal election ” means forty per cent, of the total number of those who were electors, whether or not they exercised' their right of franchise, then the rule is -but an imperfect one, as those desiring to petition for an election would have no means of determining whether or not they have secured the requisite number, without taking a census of the electors of the municipality; whereas, if we accept the construction that the phrase means forty per cent, of the qualified electors who voted or exercised their right of franchise at the last preceding municipal election, then we have a fixed and certain rule by which the petitioners may be guided.

It is urged that the Legislature would not have changed the phraseology in these two provisions without an intention to distinguish in the measures by which the forty per cent, would be determined; but it appears to this court that the two provisions, one for municipalities having wards, and one for municipalities not having wards, relate wholly to' the number of votes cast at the different elections provided for by said section. In municipalities having wards the number on the petition must be forty per cent, of the number of votes east at the last preceding general election: while in the case of municipalities not having wards it should be forty per cent, of the votes cast at the last preceding municipal election; the only difference between the two provisions being the election which should be used as a standard in determining the forty per cent. This position seems to be sustained in Hines v. Hillsboro, 3 N. P., page 17.

The contestors claim further that the term “forty per cent, of the qualified electors at the last preceding municipal election” requires that .the petition be sighed by forty per cent, of those individuals who appeared and cast their ballots at the said election ; and that it is not sufficient to have forty per cent, of the [377]*377number; but the very individuals who voted at the last preceding municipal election should sign the petition to the extent of forty per cent. This position is not tenable. The intention of the Legislature was not to give to the voters who east their ballots at the preceding election any advantage over those who, by reason -of absence, sickness, or other cause, did not. The body of the electors, as it may have existed at -the last preceding-election, may have phanged considerably at the time of the filing of the petition, by reason of death', or otherwise. The plain intention of the statute is that when the petition is signed by as many qualified electors .as shall equal forty p.er cent, of those who oast their votes ¡at the last preceding election, then the petition shall be sufficient.

The next question arises upon the offer of the contestors to prove that the publication of the mayor’s proclamation was not for the time specified by the statutes. This at once brings us to the consideration ¡of the question, whether or not the contestors can introduce testimony upon -points not set out in the petition. The petition states that the -election was illegal, and then enumerates certain grounds upon which it- is illegal. Said grounds relate to the ballot cast, illegal votes, and the throwing -out of a vote, and the ground that the election was not petitioned for by the requisite percentage of electors. Nothing is said in the petition about the proclamiation of the mayor; no allegation is made that the election was illegal for that reason.

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3 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 373, 1905 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-south-charleston-election-contest-ohprobctclark-1905.