Lugar v. Burns

150 N.E. 774, 197 Ind. 646, 1926 Ind. LEXIS 70
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1926
DocketNo. 24,447.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 N.E. 774 (Lugar v. Burns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lugar v. Burns, 150 N.E. 774, 197 Ind. 646, 1926 Ind. LEXIS 70 (Ind. 1926).

Opinions

Ewbank, C. J.

Appellant, as contestor, brought this action before the board of commissioners of Benton county, Indiana, to contest the election of appellee as trustee of Bolivar township in said county. An appeal having been taken to the circuit court, appellee, as contestee, joined issue by an answer of general denial, and by a paragraph of special answer alleging that certain persons who voted for the contestor were not legal voters of the township, and that the contestee received a majority of the legal votes cast. The trial court made a general finding in favor of the contestee, whereupon the contestor filed his motion for a new trial for the alleged reasons that the finding is not sustained by suf *648 ficient evidence, and that it is contrary to law. This motion was overruled and a judgment was rendered to the effect that the contestee was duly elected to the office of township trustee of Bolivar township, and should receive a certificate of election, and that he should recover his costs from the contestor. Overruling the motion for a new trial is assigned as error.

The undisputed evidence showed that 701 votes cast for candidates for the office of township trustee were received and counted, of which 347 votes were counted in favor of the contestor and 354 in favor of the contestee, who was thereupon declared elected. The evidence tending to show that illegal ballots were cast at the election related only to the votes of fifteen persons. Of these, it was admitted that Mary Quinn was not legally entitled to vote, because she was not registered, and that she did vote, and cast her ballot in favor of the contestee. And there was evidence which appellant' (the contestor) admits was sufficient to prove that Elmer Waddell was not lawfully entitled to vote, and that he voted for the contestor., Of the other thirteen persons whose right to vote is called in question, it was necessary for the contestor, in order to establish his right to the office of trustee, to prove that at least eight of them had voted without being lawfully entitled to do so, and that eight illegal votes had been cast for the contestee; since the contestor had the burden of proof in this action, and he cannot recover except he has affirmatively established the fact that he received more legal votes than the contestee ; not merely that he received as many, the certificate of election being sufficieht to support the contestee’s right to the office until overcome by evidence that the contestor received more votes than he did. But, two of the thirteen voters, Mrs. Hattie Snapp and Earl Ford, each testified that they voted for the con *649 testor, while another, Hilliard F. Stephens, testified that he belonged to the party represented by the contestor, but was an “independent voter, though,” and the only other evidence as to whom he voted for was testimony that his wife was of the other party, and that he and she were “sore because they did not get schools.” And still another voter, Hazel Cooper, was shown to be the daughter of a father who belonged to one political party and a mother who testified that she belonged to the other, and that she had voted a straight ticket on which the contestor’s name appeared as a candidate. And the only evidence tending to show for whom Miss Cooper voted was testimony to the effect that, at the request of a committeeman of his party, the candidate for assessor on the same ticket with the contestee took her back to Lafayette, where she worked, after she had voted, when he drove down there to take a woman of his own party there, and went after another voter of that party who was working there. And that man testified that he understood the women of Miss Cooper’s family (her mother and herself) were of the party to which the contestor belonged. So that whatever basis the evidence that she rode back to Lafayette with a candidate might afford for an inference that Miss Cooper voted for the contestee, it is not so clear, explicit, and unequivocal that this court can say, on appeal, that the trial court committed an error in failing to draw that inference.

There remain only nine voters whose right to cast ballots is challenged. Of these the evidence showed that Nicholas Donohue was born in the State of Indiana, was fifty years of age, and prior to February 9, 1922, had lived in the east precinct of Bolivar township about four years; that he had a house in Otterbein, a small town in that precinct, which was purchased in 1920, in the name of himself and his *650 wife, Bridget Donohue; that on February 9, 1922, he went to work for Samuel Foster who lived about a mile from Otterbein, being half a mile beyond the township line, in Warren county; that before moving, he had rented his house to a tenant from month to month, and, at the time, told the tenant that he wanted to return; that at the time of so renting his house, he said to a druggist in Otterbein and to another person that he was coming back to vote, and that, at the time he left, he intended to move back to Otterbein any time that Foster should no longer want his services; that he had no understanding with Foster how long he and his wife should work for him, and Foster paid them by the month; that at the time when he went there, his wife also went to work on Foster’s farm; that his wife had lived in Bolivar township all her life (fifty-two years), and her father resided there; that all her father’s people attended church at Otterbein, and both Nicholas and Bridget Donohue continued to get their mail there; that they left their cookstove and window shades at their house in Otterbein, and had no property anywhere except in Otterbein; and the wife, after testifying to the same facts, testified that they intended to come back, that she understood when they moved to Foster’s to work on the farm that they intended to come back to Otterbein, and said so to her husband; that they had no home only in Otterbein; that they were just working for Foster, and nothing was said about how long they would stay, and that she didn’t want to take her window shades down there, as they would move back, but left them so they would be there when this was done; that she did not register in the other county. And both Nicholas and Bridget Donohue testified that they registered in Otterbein, and voted there without challenge or objection. As to Matthew and Julia Malady, it was shown that he was born in Indiana, was forty-three *651 years old, and was the oldest son of his mother who lived in a house that she owned in Otterbein; that Julia Malady, the wife, was born in Benton county, Indiana; that Malady had lived at his mother’s in Otterbein and cultivated a farm north of there, and then he and his wife had both worked for John Murphy, a bachelor, on his farm in the precinct in which they voted in Bolivar township, she doing the housework and her husband the farm work; that they registered in Bolivar township in September, and the next day took their son, eleven years old, to Lafayette to send him to the parochial school; that they left their household goods at “home” at his mother’s, cooking utensils, dishes, stoves, beds, all the property they had; that all their household goods were at his mother’s, where they had lived for a year before going to work for Murphy.

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E. 774, 197 Ind. 646, 1926 Ind. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lugar-v-burns-ind-1926.