Jones v. Glidewell

7 L.R.A. 831, 13 S.W. 723, 53 Ark. 161, 1890 Ark. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 19, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 7 L.R.A. 831 (Jones v. Glidewell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Glidewell, 7 L.R.A. 831, 13 S.W. 723, 53 Ark. 161, 1890 Ark. LEXIS 59 (Ark. 1890).

Opinion

Cockrill, C. J.

Jones and Glidewell were opposing ndidates for the office of county treasurer of Pulaski county the general election in 1888. Glidewell received the certificate of election, and entered upon the duties of the office. Jones thereupon instituted this contest for the office. In the circuit court, where the cause was heard on appeal from the county court, the judge found that Jones had received a majority of the votes cast at the election, but refused to award him the office upon the ground that the evidence showed that his adherents had been guilty of illegal practices of such character and so wide spread as to avoid the election. Jones contends that the finding is not warranted by the testimony, and asks us to review the evidence for the purpose of reversing the judgment on that ground.

i. Circuit judge’s findings of fact — Conclusiveness, It is not the practice of appellate tribunals, and has never' been the practice of this court, to enter anew into the investigation of issues of facts which have been tried in a law case by a circuit judge upon conflicting testimony. When a jury isj waived by the parties, and the issues of facts are tried before! the judge, his findings of fact are as conclusive on appeal as| the verdict of a jury; and when the law makes the judge the! trier of facts in cases to which the constitutional right of triaJil by jury does not extend, the same presumption attends hiq findings. Corley v. State, 50 Ark., 308. The reasons whicl sustain the rule in the one case exist as well in the otherj The statute has not established a different rule for electioijl cases, and there is nothing in the policy of the law towarranl the courts in doing so. On the contrary, the rule was foil lowed in Powell v. Holman, 50 Ark., 85, and in Wheat v. Smith, ib., 275; and in Patton v. Coates, 41 Ark., 111, the cause was remanded to the circuit court for a new trial whereas if the court were at liberty to review the facts as il an equity case, judgment would have been entered here accordance with this court’s conclusion upon the facts. Bif while we will not enter upon an investigation to ascerta where the weight or preponderance of the testimony lies, is our province to determine whether a given finding or ve diet has testimony to sustain it; and where there is no col fiict in the evidence, or the facts are specially found, the conclusion of law or judgment to be deduced therefrom is purely a question of law to be finally determined by this court.

In the case at bar the court found generally for the contestee, refused the contestant’s request to find that the evidence of illegal practices was not sufficient to warrant the exclusion of the vote of any precinct, and made a special finding of facts.

The trial consumed many days, and the record is voluminous. The evidence which counsel have pointed out as material is in hopeless conflict upon most of the issues, but these conflicts have been determined by the trial judge in favor of the contestee, and that determination is, as we have seen, final. The questions are, what conclusions of fact could the trial court legally draw from the evidence, and what judgment does the law pronounce upon those conclusions?

2- what efforts awManeiection! It may be said that a preponderance of the testimony shows that at the outset of the campaign many of the negro electors of Pulaski county evinced a desire to vote for favored candidates on the Democratic ticket — the contestee among the number; that, as the election approached, a bitter feeling was engendered against them among the people o.f their own race on that account; that it grew to such an extent that negro adherents of the Democratic ticket were silenced in public meetings, stoned in political parade, and cut off in a great measure from the society and sympathy of their race, or threatened with that fate if they persisted in so doing.

There was testimony tending to show that ministers of the gospel were threatened with deprivation of their pastorates, and members of churches of the privilege of worship in their accustomed places, if they persisted in the design of voting for a Democrat; and that voting with that political party was denounced as a sin from some of their pulpits, and that the church influence was potent with the negro race. The practice was disproved as to the other negro churches, and it was shown that some of their most intelligent and influential men who were adherents of the contestant discountenanced all these practices and advised the electors to vote intelligently and as they pleased.

But that this spirit of animosity was common in the townships where the black race predominated, the preponderance of the evidence establishes; and that threats of social ostracism, of expulsion from the community, of personal violence and of persecutions from Republican candidates for township offices in case of success, and many indignities which the circuit judge has specially pointed out, were freely indulged in, even to the close of the polls on election day, the circuit judge has specially found from evidence which we are not at liberty to disregard. These influences operated with more or less intensity at different localities, but the court was justified in finding they were the result of a common spirit on the part of a large part of the black citizens to enforce their political views at the polls against those of their race who were disposed to differ from them. To make the plan effective, political societies were formed just before the election, in some of which it was resolved, and in others the members were sworn, to vote open or unfolded tickets. The circuit judge, after finding that a systematic plan was arranged before the election to have all the negroes vote open tickets and that it served the purpose of keeping a reasonably accurate tally for testing the returns of the election officers and also of disclosing to his fellows any negro voter who might try to slip in what was called “a Democratic split or stripped ticket,” by which was meant a Union Labor or Republican ticket containing the names of Democrats pasted or written on the printed form, concluded as follows: ‘‘This (the latter) object seemed to be especially emphasized by the fact that when a colored man would try to vote without exhibiting his ticket, the cry was often raised, ‘Democratic negro,’ ‘mark him,’ ‘spot him,’ ‘we will remember him,’ and various such like methods. Representative colored men were shown to be at the polls for the purpose of keeping these tallies, examining their ballots, and noting how all colored men voted. There did not appear to be as much noisy demonstration at the polls as had been made on former occasions, but those regulations as to open tickets, voting and keeping tallies seem to have been very persistently and strenuously enforced in many of the outside townships; and, as was said by some of the witnesses, it was almost impossible for a colored man to get in a vote for any part of the Democratic ticket, that is by ‘stripping’ his ticket, without it being discovered. And many of the witnesses testified thaj: the colored men, with few exceptions, did not like to have it known that they were voting any part of the Democratic ticket.”

The case of Patton v. Coates, 41 Ark., supra, presents many of the same features as the case at bar, but there is a marked distinction between the two.

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Bluebook (online)
7 L.R.A. 831, 13 S.W. 723, 53 Ark. 161, 1890 Ark. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-glidewell-ark-1890.