Linger v. Balfour

149 S.W. 795, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 742
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 149 S.W. 795 (Linger v. Balfour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linger v. Balfour, 149 S.W. 795, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 742 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

PRESLER, J.

This is an election contest, in which appellant, Linger, contests the right of appellee, Balfour, to hold the offices of county and district clerk of Oldham county, as a result of the general election held November S, 1910. A trial resulted in a judgment, rendered August IS, 1911, in favor of contestee, and contestant duly appeals from *798 said judgment and here seeks to have the same reversed and rendered in his favor. The issues involved in this contest and the evidence bearing on the same will sufficiently appear in this opinion, as the respective issues raised are separately considered and disposed of.

[1, 2] Contestant, by his first assignment of error, complains of the action of the court in rejecting certain testimony offered by contestant in support of the right of John Lan-dergin to vote, which evidence was, upon objection by contestee, by the court excluded. The testimony objected to was as follows: “Q. State whether or not you were residing with the family of Pat Landergin during the time of this leasehold [referring to the lease of the residence in Wichita]. A. I might not have been a resident here the whole time. I was in St. Louis when he moved from Kansas here. Q. Where has been your home since that removal was made from Greenwood county? A. It has been out here ever since I came down. I did not come down when the furniture came down. I came down a little over a year after that time. Q. State whether or not you have any other home, or ever claimed any other home since you took up your headquarters in Oldham county, except the ranch headquarters here in Oldham county. A. No, sir.” The objection made was that they embodied a conclusion as to a mixed question of law and fact. We are of the opinion that the assignment is without merit, in that the test of a single man’s right to vote, as prescribed by the statute, is fixed with reference to the place where he usually sleeps; and we are unable to see what bearing the questions propounded, or the answers thereto, had upon the determination of this question, and think the court properly sustained the objection to the same. We are further of the opinion that the matter complained of in this assignment becomes immaterial in view of the fact that the right of John Landergin to vote was sustained by the trial court. Savage v. Um-phries, 118 S. W. 893.

We also conclude that contestant’s second and third assignments are without merit, and should be overruled upon the same ground and for the same reason and authority given in overruling the first assignment.

[3] Contestant, by his fourth assignment, as corrected in his supplemental brief, complains of the action of the court in excluding, on objection of contestee, the testimony of J. T. Owen, to the effect that he and his wife had not done anything, prior to January 1, 1909, toward establishing a home in Texas, and did not do anything until about the middle of January, 1909. We are of the opinion that this assignment is well taken, and that upon the issue joined as to whether this voter, who had removed from Missouri to Texas, -was residing in Texas on the 1st day of January, 1909, so as to make him owe to the state and county of his residence ‘ in. Texas a poll tax for that year; that it was material and competent to ask and have him. state that he had not, prior to about January 15, 1909, done anything toward establishing a home in Texas; and that such testimony is-not such conclusion of the witness as renders-the same objectionable.

[4] Contestant, by his fifth assignment, complains of the action of the court in excluding the testimony of the witness Matkin. as to where he had been living since March,, 1907, where his headquarters were during-said period, and as to where he considered, his -home since March, 1907. The objection, of contestee to this testimony was that the same called for and gave the conclusion of the witness on mixed questions of law and fact and on irrelevant matters. We are of the opinion that the objections were well taken. The law prescribes that the residence of a single man is where he usually sleeps; and we are unable to see that these questions and answers had any relevancy to this issue. An unmarried man. may room and sleep in one ward of a city, may take his meals in another ward, and his occupation and business require him to spend all of the balance of his time in still a third ward. Matkin was a cowboy, working for Jackson Bros., whose principal headquarters were at Vega. They had a ranch in Oldham county, and also one in Deaf Smith county.- Suppose he worked indiscriminately upon both ranches, and was at -headquarters only when he was not at work, arid when out on the range he usually slept with the outfit, and the outfit might be in either Oldham or Deaf Smith counties, according as the territory which was being worked required. This man’s home may have been in a distant state. These conditions illustrate the wisdom of the Legislature in definitely fixing the residence of an unmarried man to be the place where he usually sleeps; and, as none of the questions propounded threw any light upon that issue, wef think the court did not err.

We are of the opinion that the evidence referred to in contestant’s sixth and seventh assignments, and which the court refused to-admit, was hearsay, and that there was no error in the action of the court complained of. Said assignments are therefore overruled..

[5] Contestant, under his eighth assignment, complains of the action of the court in rejecting the following questions and answers, propounded to the witness Morgan: “Q. Is that [referring to the house he had been living in with his wife and furniture in Vega] your home? A. Ves. Q. Have you had any other home except Vega, Texas, since the 22d day of July, 1909? A. No, sir.” To which questions and answers contestee objected, because the same involved mixed questions of law and fact, and called for a conclusion of the witness. We think the objection was *799 well taken, and the court did not err in excluding the testimony.

[6] Contestant, under his ninth assignment, complains that the court erred in excluding, on objection of contestee, the testimony of Roy Harrell, to the effect that he did not go on a claim, which he had filed on in New Mexico, to live, offered in rebuttal to contestee’s testimony that he filed on a claim in New Mexico. It appearing from the record that the voter in question, Roy Harrell, was a single man, and that his right to vote is fixed by the statute at the place where he usually sleeps, it does not occur to us that the question as to whether he had either filed on a claim in New Mexico, or as to whether he ever went on the claim to live, is material and relevant to the issue of his right to vote in Oldham county. Proof that he had filed on a claim in New Mexico October 1, 1909, does not establish or tend to establish, under the state of this record, the faet that such filing had destroyed his citizenship in Texas. We think the court properly rejected the evidence offered by contestant, and should also have rejected that offered by contestee, if objection had been made to the same. There is no merit in the assignment, and the same is accordingly overruled.

[7] Under contestant’s tenth assignment, he complains of the following matter: This question was propounded to the witness Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.W. 795, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linger-v-balfour-texapp-1912.