Martin v. McGarr

1910 OK 278, 117 P. 323, 27 Okla. 653, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 13, 1910
Docket1453
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1910 OK 278 (Martin v. McGarr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. McGarr, 1910 OK 278, 117 P. 323, 27 Okla. 653, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 270 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

DUNN, G. J.

This is an action in the nature of quo warranto brought to try the title to the office of mayor of the city of Muskogee, and grows out of an election held in that city on April 27, 1909. The plaintiff, who is also the plaintiff in error, was elected mayor, on April 2, 1907, for a term of one year and until his successor was duly elected and qualified. Under this election he took possession of the office and remained therein until November 17, 1907, and from and after that date, by virtue of the Constitution and laws of the state of Oklahoma, he continued as *655 mayor of the said city and is now claiming, on grounds hereafter noted, that he is still entitled to hold and occupy the office. At the election held April 27, 1909, there were three candidates for mayor, Ira L, Reeves, Republican, A. E. McG-arr, Democrat, and L. C. Northeutt, Socialist. At said election 3105 votes were cast for the office of mayor, and the county election board of Muskogee county, on a canvass thereof, determined that A. E. McGarr, the defendant in error, had received a plurality of 14 votes and declared him elected, and issued to him a certificate of election to that office. The petition avers that under the said certificate he has taken possession and continues to exercise the functions of the office and to exclude plaintiff therefrom. It is plaintiff’s contention that, by reason of the various acts of the election officials who conducted the election, a sufficient number of qualified voters were corruptly and fraudulently denied the right to vote to change the result of the election and that, by reason thereof, the election was void; that, in effect, no election was held and that he is entitled to continue in the office of mayor under and by virtue of the terms of his first election. To his petition the defendant McGarr filed a demurrer, and, on the same being sustained by the trial court, the cause has been brought to this court by petition in error and ease-made.-

The petition is voluminous, covering something over forty-five typewritten pages, and presents for our consideration a multitude of charges under which plaintiff contends in excess of five hundred qualified electors residing in that city were disfranchised, over one hundred of whom duly presented themselves for voting and were denied ballots. Plaintiff’s attitude is not that of a contestant for the office of mayor, as no votes were cast for him: his contention is that the election is void, and of no force and effect whatsoever, and that this condition was brought about, among other things, by the deliberate, corrupt, and fraudulent conduct of the election officials, in consequence of which a sufficient number of qualified electors of the city, tendering themselves for -the purpose of exercising the right of franchise, were denied the priv *656 ilege to nullify the election. A comprehensive view of the aver-ments of plaintiff’s petition causes them to naturally fall into three parts, which may be disposed of as follows: First, as it is manifest plaintiff cannot be heard to plead an irregularity which does not have the effect of rendering the election void, those aver-ments relating merely to the admission of illegal votes must be eliminated; second, those irregularities, the remedy for which is plainly provided for and set forth in the statute available to plaintiff and the electors prior to the election, and which was not pursued, must be held on the part of plaintiff in error to have been waived; third, those averments relating to the alleged corrupt and^ fraudulent denial of the right to register and to vote to qualified electors sufficient in number to effect the nullification of the election. We will deal with these propositions in the order here presented.

While a contestant in an election may always object to the counting and consideration of fraudulent or illegal votes, yet the reception of the same will in no instance result in the avoidance of the election except where the entire poll is so tainted that the good votes cannot be separated from the bad, and it is impossible to ascertain for whom the majority of the valid ballots were east. The general rule obtaining throughout all the states of the union is that an election is not to be held invalid except as a last resort, the correct doctrine being announced by Judge Brewster, in the case of Batturs v. McGary, 1 Brewster, 162, as follows:

“The court have the power to reject an entire poll, but only in the extremest case — as where at is impossible to ascertain the true vote. Impossibility is the test.”

The rule thus annunciated finds support in the following authorities: McCrary on Elections (4th Ed.) secs. 523, 524; Paine on Elections, see. 513; 10 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 770; Windes v. Nelson, 150 Mo. 51; Ferguson v. Allen, 7 Utah, 263; Woolley, etc., v. Louisville Southern Ry. Co., 93 Ky. 223; State ex rel. Kellogg, Atty. Gen., v. Sullivan et al., 44 Kan. 43; Attorney General ex rel. Seavitt v. McQuade, 94 Mich 439, 53 N. W. 944.

*657 In the case last cited, the same doctrine is stated by the Supreme Court of Michigan, with numerous authorities to sustain it, as follows:

“When fraud on the part of the officers of election is established, the poll will not be rejected, unless it shall prove impos-, sible to purge it of the fraud.”

Under this rule, therefore, plaintiff cannot raise the question of the reception of illegal ballots and insist that the election be held void on this account, for, should they be established, the consequence would not be to avoid the election, but to reduce the votes to those which were legal and valid and from which the result would be determined. There is no averment that they could not be eliminated and the true result ascertained. Their rejection might result in the election of another man mayor but he must speak for himself — plaintiff cannot sue for him.

Within the rule laid down under the second proposition, in' our judgment all of plaintiff’s averments in reference to ward four will fall. Plaintiff complains that the county election board unlawfully failed and refused to recognize certain ward boundaries of the city of Muskogee as established by an ordinance of the city council. That in such action several- precincts were thrown partly, in one ward and partly in another and that the county election board refused to readjust the boundaries thereof, the consequence of which was that four hundred voters residing in the territory thus affected were disfranchised. It is further charged that this action on the part of election officials was deliberately done with -the intent to defraud the voters residing in this ward out of their, votes. Counsel for defendant insist that the action of the election board-was in strict conformity with the law and that the alteration of ward boundaries by the city council was void. As we view this case, it is of no consequence at this time whether the action of the election board in refusing to recognize the ward boundaries was correct or not. The statute under which the election board, acted is section 3106, Comp. Laws of Okla. 1909; herein it is made the dutv of the county, election board to create, " *658

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Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 278, 117 P. 323, 27 Okla. 653, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-mcgarr-okla-1910.