Logan v. Moody

244 S.W.2d 499, 219 Ark. 697, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 592
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 10, 1951
Docket4-9628
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 244 S.W.2d 499 (Logan v. Moody) 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
Logan v. Moody, 244 S.W.2d 499, 219 Ark. 697, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 592 (Ark. 1951).

Opinion

Ed. P. McPaddin, Justice.

This is the second appeal in this case, which is a contest over the Democratic nomination for County Judge of Lawrence County. For the opinion on the first appeal, see Moody v. Logan, 217 Ark. 859, 233 S. W. 2d 548. Upon the remand of the cause there was a second trial, which resulted in a finding and judgment that Moody received a majority of 21 votes. Logan now appeals, and Moody has cross-appealed. Presented, inter alia, are the assignments herein discussed.

I. Appellant’s Effort to Introduce Testimony After the Case Had Been Closed. On the second trial the Circuit Judge conducted a most thorough trial. The contestant was permitted to add other names to his list of challenges. The contestee filed a cross-complaint, alleging irregularities and listing challenged votes. Then both sides were fully informed as to the trial Court’s rules of procedure. With hundreds of votes- challenged on each side and with more than two hundred witnesses actually testifying, the trial was naturally quite extended. It commenced on January 15, 1951; frequent recesses were taken for the convenience of the litigants and attorneys; and the trial was not concluded until February 22, 1951. Even with such extended hearings, the appellant now insists that he should have been allowed to offer some further rebuttal testimony. But a study of the 800-page transcript and the scores of exhibits, convinces us that each side had ample time to develop the case. At all events, we cannot say that the trial Court abused sound judicial discretion in finally bringing the hearing to a conclusion.

II. Absentee Ballots. Several hundred persons voted absentee ballots; and Moody moved the Court to exclude all of these ballots. The motion was not granted entirely, but was granted as to 147 of the absentee ballots ; and this ruling of the Court, in excluding the ballots, presents a most serious question. Act 325 of 1949 prescribes the procedure in absentee voting. In the case at bar the application form, as prescribed by the statute, was used by persons desiring absentee ballots; and such ballots were returned and counted. But the County Clerk failed to mark, on 147 of such applications, the date each was received by the Clerk; and because of such failure the Circuit Court refused to count any of the 147 ballots so east. In ruling on this point, the Circuit Judge stated:

‘ ‘ These applications are a part of the record and are exhibits in the case. There is no filing mark on any of these 147 applications; and there is no way whatsoever to show when the applications were executed and returned to the county clerk. This might not seem to be important if it were not for the fact that paragraph ‘C’ of Section 1 of Act 325 placed a time limit on the delivery of said applications to the county clerk. It says the application must be delivered to the office of the county clerk not later than 1:30 p. m. on the day of the election; and the provision is made that if it is mailed in it must be in the office of the county clerk at least one day before the election. Certainly time is of the essence of this section. The Court believes it to be the law that when a certain thing is required to be done within a given time, that time becomes of the essence of the transaction. It is obvious from the reading of this section of Act 325 that the intention of the Legislature was to fix an absolute lime limit upon a voter making application for absentee ballots. It is incumbent upon the county clerk; in fact, it is made Ms duty under this law to file these applications and to keep an accurate record of the filing of the applications showing both the time of day that it was filed as well as the day of the month. Of course, it might be argued that this is not any omission on the part of the voter casting his ballot; but certainly we must know what time these applications were filed, because without this knowledge there would be no way of determining whether or not the Act had been complied with. If this provision of Act 325 means anything, it means that they must be filed within the time prescribed by law. The Court cannot assume that these applications were filed by 1:30 on the day of the election for those people who voted in person; neither can the Court assume that those that were sent in by mail were filed within the time required In-law. It is impossible to ascertain when any of these 147 applications in question were filed. It is impossible to determine whether any of them were filed either in person by 1:30 on the day of the election, or one day before the election in cases of those that were mailed in. The Court believes that if there is not some way to fix the time of filing applications, that absentee voting would be thrown open to a great number of irregularities and fraud which Act 325 seeks to -prevent. . . . For the reasons set out, the Court believes that the ballots cast which were procured through these 147 applications should be thrown out and disregarded -and the vote established in other ways as provided by law.”1

Act 325 of 1949 has not been before this court in any previous case, and the trial Court was therefore without any holding to serve as a guide in construing the Act. But a careful study convinces us that the trial Court erred in the ruling here involved. The only defect here claimed, in the entire procedure of obtaining and returning the absentee ballot, was the failure of the Clerk to place on the application for the ballot the date such application was received in the Clerk’s office. It is true that such date should have been placed on the application in order that it would affirmatively appear that Act 325 had been obeyed.

But, should the failure of the Clerk to perform his duty in this one particular result in the disfranchisement of the voter? In Henderson v. Gladish, 198 Ark. 217, 128 S. W. 2d 257, in upholding the validity of a poll tax receipt issued by an officer who did not comply with the then existing requirement that the receipt be written in ink, we said:

“To hold that one who had complied with the law by regular payment of the tax, hut who becomes the victim of a careless, a designing, or an uninformed collector or deputy, would have the effect of completely disregarding the primary qualification of an elector, which, as has been shown, is the actual timely payment of the tax.”

In Blackard v. Kolb, 212 Ark. 332, 205 S. W. 2d 857, the Sheriff had failed to stamp on the back of the poll tax receipt certain language required by the statute there involved. Even so we held the poll tax receipt to be valid saying: “. . . such omission by the officer could not defeat the elector’s right of suffrage.” The underlying reasoning of these cases is applicable here. After the election, the voter, if otherwise qualified, should not be disfranchised merely because-of the failure of the County Clerk to have placed on the application for absentee ballot the date such application was filed in his office. This one omission of the County Clerk, in the absence of any other claim seeking to invalidate the ballot, is not sufficient to disfranchise the voter.

So we reverse the ruling of the Circuit Court on this matter of the 147 absentee ballots. In one place in the record it appears that 147 ballots were involved; in another place the figure 144 is used. Elsewhere in the record it appears that some of the 147 voters were challenged on other grounds in addition to the one here discussed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 S.W.2d 499, 219 Ark. 697, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-v-moody-ark-1951.