King v. Board of Education

164 S.E. 52, 174 Ga. 685, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 14, 1932
DocketNo. 8289
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 S.E. 52 (King v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Board of Education, 164 S.E. 52, 174 Ga. 685, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 122 (Ga. 1932).

Opinion

Russell, C. J.

This case is one of contest of an election, which arose upon a petition brought to validate an issue of $1,000,000 in bonds to be issued by Richmond County for school purposes. The plaintiffs in error filed an intervention setting up that the return of the managers of the election, for reasons stated, did not truly report the result of the plebiscite, and for this reason the vote in favor of the issue of the bonds was not sufficient, and the proposed issue of bonds should not be validated. It was agreed that the trial judge, without a jury, should pass upon all issues of fact as well as law. At the conclusion of the trial the court passed an order adjudging that the bonds had received the requisite majority of votes to require the validation of the bonds. The intervenors carried the case by bill of exceptions to the Court of Appeals, where the judgment of the lower court was affirmed. The plaintiffs in error in due course filed in this court a petition for certiorari. In view of the gravity and importance of the questions involved in the litigation, the court saw fit to grant the writ of certiorari, and so the case is before us for review. The evidence in the trial was so voluminous that it will not be set forth in detail, though it” has been carefully considered.

In addition to many facts stated in the decision of the Court of Appeals (42 Ga. App. 563, 156 S. E. 710), others will be referred to in this opinion. Much has been said in argument as to the fact that the issue of bonds here involved is for school purposes. The education of our youth is a matter of deepest concern and paramount importance to every parent as well as to every well-wisher of his country. However, in a country governed by democratic ideals and dependent for its very existence upon the perpetuation of republican institutions in all their strength and purity, and where the taxpayers are to be subjected to extremely heavy burdens, it would seem that the election which creates or promotes the schools is primarily of vastly more importance than the support of any object which it is the duty of the government to promote. In an ideal democracy, pure elections are the mudsills on which the entire superstructure of good government must be built. If the foundations are based on sands or are laid in mire, the waters of popular indignation, falling like rain in a cloudburst, will under[688]*688mine and sweep away the structure which has been foolishly based on foundations insecure and unstable.

In the trial in the superior court the learned judge properly went to extreme lengths in affording the parties litigant ample time and opportunity to produce evidence in support of their intervention. His conduct in this respect entitles him to the highest commendation. However, we are of the opinion that his judgment was error, and the judgment of the Court of Appeals in affirming the result of his conclusions was likewise erroneous. We think that one ingredient of this error arises from a misapprehension of the rule as to the burden of proof in cases of contested elections. It is well settled, of course, that the returns and consolidation of the managers in an election such as we have before us are taken prima facie to be true, and any one who wishes to pick a flaw of any kind in such returns must assume the burden of proof of rebutting the prima facie case made by the returns of the managers. But when evidence has been submitted by the contestant (intervenors in this case) which demands a finding that fraud has corrupted the election as well as the returns of the managers, and involved the result of the election in such doubt that no man can say what was the, actual result, the prima facie verity of the return .of the managers is destroyed. Then the burden of proof is shifted; and unless the party who has apparently gained the election. can rebut the showing made by the contestant, he will not be permitted to enjoy the benefits of the wrongs done in his favor merely because, through the instrumentality of the managers and others, he has succeeded in so concealing and obliterating his tracks that the exact result can not be ascertained. Substantially, the decision of the Court of Appeals, which the petitioners in certiorari seek to set aside, reverses the judgment of the trial judge upon the evidence, but affirms his judgment as a whole, upon the doctrine that the intervenors failed accurately to show a sufficient number of illegal votes to have been cast to change the result of the election declared by the managers. Cases have been cited in support of that well-recognized principle. If the decision in this case rested upon any one, and only one, of such defects as the failure to have proper managers at a precinct, or that they were not sworn, or to have managers who had not been selected by law, or failure to make an absolutely correct return, these requirements might be held to [689]*689be merely directory. As it was apparent in all of the cases cited that there was no appearance of fraudulent intent, but there appeared only innocent ignorance of the requirements of the law, they could well be held to be merely directory; and not having affected the result of the election they would be regarded as harmless'. But in the consideration of the case the Court of Appeals, though referring to a far more important principle and one which we think is particularly applicable to the facts of this ease, did not apply it. In plain language, this rule may be stated to be that in an election of any kind, where there are so many evidences of fraud that the actual result is left in such an impenetrable gloom of doubt that no man can say what would have been the result had the election been free from fraud, the election should be held void. If necessary, another election, in which the true result may perhaps be ascertained, should be held.

Where an election board are found to have wilfully and deliberately committed a fraud, even though it affect a number of votes too small to change the result, it is sufficient to destroy all confidence in the'ir official acts, and to put the party claiming anything under the election conducted by them to the proof of his votes by evidence other than the return.” McCrary on Elections, 576. “While it is well settled that mere neglect- to perform directory requirements of the law, or performance in a mistaken manner, where there is no bad faith, and no harm has accrued, will not justify the rejection of the entire poll, it is equally well settled that when the proceedings are so tarnished by fraudulent, negligent, or improper conduct on the part of the officer that the result of the election is rendered unreliable, the entire returns will be rejected and the parties left to make such proof as they may of the votes legally cast for them.” Paine on Elections, 500, § 596. “Upon the rejection of the returns from an election precinct on the ground of fraud, the legal votes cast are not thereby invalidated, but it places upon the persons who claim to have received any benefit from them the burden of proving them.” 20 C. J. 240, § 325 (b). “When the result in any precinct has been shown to be so tainted with fraud that the truth can not be deducible therefrom, then it should never be permitted to form a part of the canvass. The precedents, as well as the evident requirements of truth, not only sanction, but call for, the rejection of the entire poll when stamped [690]*690with' the characteristics here shown.” McCrary on Elections, § 569.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tripp v. Holder
168 S.E.2d 189 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 S.E. 52, 174 Ga. 685, 1932 Ga. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-board-of-education-ga-1932.