Kerrigan v. Vetsch

71 N.W.2d 652, 245 Minn. 229, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 642
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 8, 1955
DocketNo. 36,619
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 71 N.W.2d 652 (Kerrigan v. Vetsch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kerrigan v. Vetsch, 71 N.W.2d 652, 245 Minn. 229, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 642 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Christianson, Justice.

This is an election contest for the office of sheriff of Houston county. Clarence Yetsch and Beryl Kerrigan were the only candidates for the office of sheriff at the general election held in Houston county on November 2, 1954. The initial results as determined by the county canvassing board gave the contestee Yetsch a total of 3,371 votes while the contestant Kerrigan received only 3,294 votes— a difference of 77 votes. The report of the inspectors of the ballot, who were appointed by the trial court to recount the ballots, found that a total of 3,252 qualified votes were cast for the contestee Yetsch and 3,114 qualified votes were cast for contestant Kerrigan, thus giving Yetsch an increased, total plurality of 138 votes if the ballots cast for sheriff in the precinct of La Crescent village in Houston county are to be counted.

Kerrigan, in his notice of contest, alleged many serious violations of the Minnesota election laws in the precinct of La Crescent village and claimed that all the ballots cast in that precinct were invalid, thus giving him a plurality of the remaining votes cast in the election for sheriff in the county. The inspectors of the ballot found that Yetsch had received 465 votes to 169 votes for Kerrigan in the La Crescent village precinct. The trial court ruled that the total vote cast at La Crescent village was invalid and as a result held that' the contestant Kerrigan was entitled to the certificate of election. The contestee Yetsch appeals from the order denying his alternative motion for amended findings of fact and conclusions of law or for a new trial.

The contest of this election thus becomes focused upon the circumstances surrounding the voting at La Crescent village. About a month before the election in question, and after a regularly sched[231]*231uled village council meeting had adjourned, the mayor of La Crescent village discussed the question of an election hoard for the approaching general election with another member of the council and with the village clerk, William Lathrop, who was also a member of the council. At that time the mayor made several suggestions as to whom the clerk might get to serve as members of the election board and then more or less left the matter to the clerk. The village council took no formal action in regard to the selection of the board, and it does not appear that the other members of the council had any knowledge of the method of selecting the election board members. In choosing the five members of the election board, Lathrop made no distinction between those who were to act as election judges and those who were to act as election clerks. In fact, no differentiation was made between the two classifications and their respective functions throughout the entire preliminary election procedures or after the polls were closed.

On a Saturday the week before election, the Houston county auditor’s office prepared a package of 900 county ballots for La Crescent village, and they were picked up and delivered to the La Crescent village clerk, Lathrop, the Wednesday before the election. In spite of a duty to hold the ballots and turn them over to the election judges on the day of the election, Lathrop passed out three of the ballots to three persons who had not made proper application to the county auditor but who requested ballots from him so as to enable them to vote as absentees. In so doing, Lathrop had the three persons fill out blank applications left over from a special village election in regard to a municipal water well held earlier in the year. Lathrop initialed the three ballots as a judge of the election, although he was not serving in that capacity. In addition, he posted two of the ballots on bulletin boards and marked them “sample” the day of the election because he thought it “appropriate” to do so. At no time did the village cierk, who prepared the ballot receipt, count the number of the canary yellow ballots, i.e., the county ballots, nor did the three persons signing the receipt for 900 ballots as judges of the election count the number of ballots.

[232]*232Although the election register indicated that Lathrop had administered the oath of election judge to Delia Oldenburg, Eose Heyerdahl, and Josephine Fancher, and the oath of election clerk to George Y. Kelly and Alvilda Anderson, the oaths to all but Kelly were actually administered by Kelly and not Lathrop. Although Kelly was considered, at least by Lathrop, to be more or less in charge of the election, Kelly was unaware of the laws governing the election and made no effort to become acquainted with them.

Kelly had himself been sheriff for eight years until 1946 when he lost his race for re-election to Kerrigan, the contestant in this action. Kelly ran against Kerrigan again in 1950, but failed to win in that year also. The record indicates that the contestee Vetsch was a friend of Kelly and that Kelly told his friends that he would like to see Yetsch get the office.

Once the polls had closed Kelly took over the counting of the county ballots by reading off the ballots to others who tallied the results. He read off the county ballots for some 12 to 13 hours with intermittent rest and lunch periods, although Mrs. Eose Heyerdahl, one of the judges listed in the register, and Lathrop, who was not a member of the election board, took over for him on brief occasions. In addition to the original five members selected to the board and also Lathrop, who did not attempt to qualify as a judge or clerk,2 there were at least three other unauthorized persons, apparently taking no oath, who participated in the counting of the ballots. The three consisted of Mrs. Lathrop, wife of the village clerk; Myron Anderson, son of Mrs. Alvilda Anderson, one of the two people listed in the register as a clerk; and Francis Fancher, husband of Mrs. Josephine Fancher, one of those listed as a judge. Thus all three replacements had a relationship of husband-wife or parent and child to the original people acting as judges and clerks in apparent violation of the statute prohibiting such relationship.

[233]*233While the votes were being tabulated after the polls had closed in the various precincts in Houston county, Mrs. Ruth Corcoran, the county auditor, placed a large blackboard in the county courtroom at Caledonia on which the results of the races were posted as soon as they came in. A large crowd gathered in the courtroom throughout the night of the election to observe the results. It was the practice for the various precincts to call in their results as soon as they were tabulated and these unofficial returns were compiled on the blackboard. The individual- precincts then delivered the ballots, registers, and other election materials to the county auditor. At this time the official return, as taken from the official summary sheet, was compared with the unofficial returns on the blackboard and the blackboard entry was corrected if necessary. Although the record is not specific on the point, it appears that the unofficial returns or phone calls were in from all the precincts except La Crescent village by 3 a. m., and the results posted. Although the county auditor’s office made several calls to the La Crescent village precinct in an effort to get at least the unofficial tally, the workers there had not completed their counting.

While the people at La Crescent village were counting the ballots, there were other persons coming in and going out of the same room, including eontestee’s brother, Harold Yetsch, who was the custodian of the building in which the election was held. At about 4 a.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 N.W.2d 652, 245 Minn. 229, 1955 Minn. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kerrigan-v-vetsch-minn-1955.