McCaffreys' Appeals

11 A.2d 893, 337 Pa. 552, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 15, 1940
DocketAppeals, 54 and 59
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 11 A.2d 893 (McCaffreys' Appeals) 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
McCaffreys' Appeals, 11 A.2d 893, 337 Pa. 552, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 452 (Pa. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Patterson,

These appeals are from the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County on appeal from the order of the County Board of Elections following a recount of the vote in the First Election District of the First Ward of the Borough of Carnegie for the candidates for council at the election held November 7,1939.

So that organization of the Borough Council might be effected without undue delay this Court entered an order on January 18, 1940, declaring Michael J. Mc-Caffrey elected to the office of member of Council of the Borough of Carnegie, opinion to be filed later. We now state the reasons for our conclusion.

Two members of council were to be elected in the first ward at the November 7, 1939, election. Michael J. McCaffrey was one. of two Democratic candidates and Joseph P. McCaffrey was one of two Republican nominees. The original return of the county return board showed 433 votes for Michael McCaffrey in the first district as compared with 331 for Joseph McCaffrey, giving the former a plurality of 9 votes over the latter when added to the votes cast for these candidates in the two other districts of the first ward. ■

Upon petition of appellants, Mary A. McCaffrey et al., under section 1701 of the Act of June 3,1937, P. L. 1333, the ballot box was opened by the court of common pleas and a recount was made. Corrections were made by the court and the correct count was certified to the county board in accordance with section 1703. The county board revised its return in obedience to the court’s certificate, reducing the plurality of Michael McCaffrey to 2 votes.

Thereupon, Mary A. McCaffrey et al. appealed from the “order or decision” of the county board changing its entries, asking the court to direct the board to exclude 4 ballots passed upon and counted by the court for Michael J. McCaffrey in the prior proceeding, which ballots appellants alleged were erroneously so counted *555 by tbe court. Section 1407, under which the appeal was taken, provides, in subsection (á), that “Any person aggrieved by any order or decision of any County Board regarding the computation or canvassing of the returns of any primary or election, of regarding any recount . . . thereof under sections 1101, 1102 and 1103 of this act, may appeal therefrom within two days after such order or decision shall have been made, . . . to the court of common pleas of the proper county, setting forth why he feels that an injustice has been done, and praying for such order as may give him relief.”

The court below took the position that it had jurisdiction on an appeal under this section to review the matters de novo and reverse its decision in the prior proceeding under section 1701 because of the provision in subsection (b) that “The court on an appeal shall have full power and authority to hear and determine all matters pertaining to any fraud or error committed in any election district to which such an appeal relates, and to make such decree as justice and right may require.” The court rejected 2 of the 4 ballots in question and ordered the returns of the first' district re-corrected accordingly. As thus changed, the total returns for the first ward gave each of the candidates the same number of votes. Both appellants and appellees in the proceeding appealed.

Section 1407, subsection (a) provides only for appeals from “any order or decision” of the county board “regarding the computation or canvassing of the returns” or “regarding any recount or recanvass thereof.” The provision, in subsection (b), that “the court on appeal shall have full power and authority to hear and determine all matters pertaining to any fraud or error committed in any election district to which such appeal relates” must be considered in connection with subsection (a), and so considered, it gives the court authority on appeal merely to hear and determine matters pertaining to any fraud or error in orders or de *556 cisions of the county board. Thus construed, the statute limits the jurisdiction of the court where the appeal is from an order or decision of the board regarding a recount or recanvass under sections 1701, or 1702, and 1703 to an inquiry as to whether the board, either fraudulently or mistakenly, has failed to correct its return in accordance with the decision of the court in the prior proceeding, as required by section 1703. It does not authorize the review of matters of fraud or error already judicially passed upon in the earlier proceeding nor of matters of fraud or error in the orders or decisions of the court in such proceeding. And, the authority and jurisdiction of the court on such an appeal is not to be regarded as extended beyond these limitations by the addition of the words “and to make such decree as justice and right may require.” As was said in Twenty-Eighth Congressional District Nomination, 268 Pa. 313, in construing section 15 of the Act of July 12, 1913, P. L. 719, as amended by the Act of July 9, 1919, P. L. 852, at 320, the power to make such a decree “necessarily means only the making of a right and just decree regarding the matter the court is expressly authorized then to investigate.”

The court below construed the statute as requiring precisely the same matter, i. e., fraud or error in the computation of the votes, to be twice gone over by the same tribunal, an anomalous situation which it cannot be supposed the legislature intended, in view of the plain language of the sections in question, and particularly in view of the manifest purpose of the Code that computation proceedings shall be held promptly and disposed of expeditiously without the protraction which such successive appeals would necessarily involve. The power given the court on an appeal under section 1407 to “hear and determine all matters pertaining to any fraud or error committed in any election district” is, with respect to the matters within the scope of review on such appeals, exactly the same as the power given *557 in proceedings under sections 1701, 1702, and 1703, where the court is charged with the duty to discover any fraud or error in the computation or canvassing of the returns, and the duty of the court to “make such decree as right and justice may require” on an appeal under section 1407, is not greater than the provision in section 1703 that the court in recount proceedings shall “correct, compute and certify the votes of such election district justly, regardless of any fraudulent or erroneous returns made by the election officers thereof”: see Twenty-Eighth, Congressional District Nomination, supra. The powers and duties of the court being.the same on appeals under section 1407 as in proceedings under 1701, it must be supposed that the legislature intended the scope of review on appeals under the former section to be limited as already indicated.

In this latter connection, it is significantly provided in section 1703, subsection (b), that “No order or decision of the court under the provisions of sections 1701 and 1702 of this act, shall be deemed a final adjudication regarding the results of any primary or election, so as to preclude any contest thereof under the provisions of this article. . .

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11 A.2d 893, 337 Pa. 552, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaffreys-appeals-pa-1940.