Koch Election Contest Case

46 A.2d 263, 353 Pa. 619, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 287
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 8, 1946
DocketAppeal, 41
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 A.2d 263 (Koch Election Contest Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koch Election Contest Case, 46 A.2d 263, 353 Pa. 619, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 287 (Pa. 1946).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Maxey,

Edwin M. Koch and Granville F. Rehrig were opposing candidates in the General Election on November 2,1943, for the office of School Director of the Borough of Lehighton. In the second ward of Lehighton, the election papers delivered to the Return Board 1 showed that 235 votes had been cast for Koch and 206 votes cast for Rehrig.

The tally strokes as counted by the clerks showed a total of 206 votes for Koch and 203 votes for Rehrig, but according to the minority inspector’s copy of the tally return sheet, Koch had received 235 votes and Rehrig 206 votes. On November 12th, 1943, the clerks certified their findings to the Return Board, basing them on the total of tally strokes appearing on the general tally return sheet and not on the strokes appearing on the minority inspector’s copy. The Return Board confirmed these findings and issued a certificate to Rehrig. On December 6th, 1943, Koch presented a petition pursuant to Section 1701, Article 17, of Act of June 3rd, 1937, P. L. 1333, 25 P.S. 3261 for a recount of the ballots. On *621 December 8th, 1943, the recount was had and it. showed 234 votes for Koch and 214 votes for Rehrig.

On December 23rd, a petition was presented by Koch and a rule issued upon Rehrig and the Return Board to show cause why an appeal should not be allowed nunc pro tunc from the clerks’ action in the tabulation of the vote for Koch in the Second Ward of the Borough of Lehighton and from the Return Board’s action in issuing a certificate of election to Rehrig. On February 21st, 1944, the rule was dismissed and an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court. In our opinion reported in 351 Pa. 544, the lower Court was reversed and Koch was allowed to appeal nunc pro tune. Such an appeal was taken, and on the hearing which followed the appellant offered in evidence the findings made in the recount of December 8th, 1943 for the purpose of showing that Koch had received 234 votes and Rehrig 214 votes in the Second Ward, thereby giving him a majority of votes in the Borough. To this offer, counsel for Rehrig objected on the ground that this recount having been made “later than five (5) days after the completion of the computation and canvassing, of all the returns of the County by the county board”, the evidence was incompetent.

The Court sustained the objection, and in compliance with this Court’s order, directed a recount of the ballots, but they had been destroyed in 1944, the box not having been impounded. Counsel for Koch then renewed his offer to show the result of the December 8th recount, asserting that since the ballots themselves were unavailable, the record of the recount of them should be received as evidence. The Court rejected this offer on the ground above stated. Later the Court dismissed the appeal from the “action of the Computation Board relative to its computation of the vote and the County Board 2 of Election’s action in issuing a certificate of election to Gran-ville F. Rehrig.”

In January 1945, when this case was first before us, we said: “There is no doubt that the board negligently *622 computed the returns . . . The board completely neglected to carry out its statutory duty. Had its duty been complied with, a recount would have been ordered and appellant would have been notified. Furthermore, the county board failed to publicly announce by posting at its office the final result of the election on November 20, 1943, as expressly required by Section 302 (1) of the Election Code, 25 P.S. Sec. 2642. Again, had this been done, appellant would have received notice of the erroneous result before the statutory limitations barred his remedies”. These circumstances, we held, entitled Koch to take an appeal nunc pro tunc.

Appellee says of the then action of this Court that it was “for the purpose of placing the petitioner in the same position as he would have been in two days 3 after the election held on November 2,1943.” . . . “The error found by the Supreme Court was that a recanvass was not made by the Board of the ballots, and under these circumstances, for this reason, the lower Court in carrying out the mandate of the higher Court, properly ordered a recount. There being no evidence found in the box,, the Court was without authority to do anything except to file a decree finding that no ballots existed upon which to have an adjudication to be certified to the County Board of Election.” [i.e. the “Return Board”]

Appellee contends that “Had the appeal, been taken before the certification and not later than five days after the completion of the count, there is no doubt the lower Court would have authority to correct the returns and issue a decree to the County Board of Election and *623 that under those circumstances the computation arrived at, in the recanvass could have been used,- but since the certification had been made at the date of the recanvass and more than five days having lapsed after the computation, the evidence secured by 'this recanvass is now barred for any purpose, excepting that of a criminal prosecution.”

The answer to that contention is that since an appeal nunc pro tunc has been allowed, the appellánt must be placed in the same position in respect to his rights as he would have been in had his appeal :been taken during the period prescribed by statute. An appeal nunc pro tunc is of little avail in any case unless the appellant is accorded all the rights, so far as it is practicable to do so, which would have been his had he‘ taken his appeal in due course.

The decision of the Court'below means that owing to our decision when this case was before us in 1945, the appeal to the Court below must be treated as a “timely” one, but that since the ballots, the primary evidence in the case, had disappeared from the box, evidence as to what those ballots disclosed when they were recounted on December 8,1943 cannot be received. We cannot accept this reasoning or its conclusion. If, for example, there had been photostatic copies made of the ballots before the recount got underway and the original bállots themselves had then been destroyed,- it would have been unjustifiably technical to hold that the photostatic copies could not be received as the basis of the recanvass because they were not in fact the actual ballots. Properly accredited secondary evidence is always received in evidence in lien of nonexistent primary evidence unless the reception of such evidence is positively forbidden. In the instant case, the secondary- evidence offered: consisted of “the findings of the recount the Board made on December 8, 1943”. The correctness of these findings was not challenged; they weré denied' as evidentiary character because the recount on which they were based *624 was made “later than five (5) days after the computation and recanvass of all the returns . . .” The lateness of the recount certainly did not destroy or impair the probative value of its revelations.

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

Related

Commonwealth v. Gazal
137 A.2d 814 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1958)
Chase Appeal
133 A.2d 824 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1957)
L. C. S. Colliery, Inc. v. Globe Coal Co.
84 A.2d 776 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1951)
Mackey Estate
62 Pa. D. & C. 421 (Montgomery County Orphans' Court, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 A.2d 263, 353 Pa. 619, 1946 Pa. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koch-election-contest-case-pa-1946.