Miera v. Martinez

145 P.2d 487, 48 N.M. 30
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1944
DocketNo. 4787.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 P.2d 487 (Miera v. Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miera v. Martinez, 145 P.2d 487, 48 N.M. 30 (N.M. 1944).

Opinion

SADLER, Chief Justice.

This is a contested election case. The-contestant (appellee here) and the contestee were rival candidates for the office-of Sheriff of Taos County in the general election held on November 3, 1942. The contestee received the certificate of election to the office following the official canvass by the Board of County Commissioners sitting as the County Canvassing-Board. The canvass as conducted by the board showed the contestant to have received 2281 votes and the contestee 2297’ votes, giving the latter a majority of 16-votes for the office mentioned.

In conducting the canvass the board did not include returns from Precinct No. 25 in Taos County, known as the RodartePrecinct. If included, as the trial court found or concluded it should have been, in this contest later instituted by the contestant, his total vote for sheriff was 2395 and that of the contestee was 2359, giving the former a clear majority. Having so determined, the trial court rendered judgment for the contestant, declaring him' to have been duly elected to the office involved and entitled to “all the privileges, power and emoluments belonging thereto”. The judgment contains language of ouster of contestee from the office and ordering the contestant to be placed in possession thereof. This appeal followed.

In conducting the official canvass of the results of the election, the County Commissioners did not include Rodarte Precinct, as already noted. However, the results without the count from this precinct were tabulated. The canvass was then recessed to await the result of proceedings before the district court of the county, initiated by the County Canvassers under 1941 Comp. § 56-349(6) by an entry in the minutes of the proceedings which, in so far as material, reads as follows:

“The Board at this time finds the Poll Books from Precinct No. 25, Rodarte, defective so this Precinct is not finished today and the following is written to Judge Taylor.
“To the Honorable Judge of the 8th Judicial District Sitting in and for the County .of Taos.
“Dear Judge :-
“You are hereby notified that the returns of the last election held in Taos County, New Mexico on the 3rd day of November, 1942, are defective in and for Precinct No. 25, Rodarte, New Mexico, in that the vote cast for said Precinct was not tallied and placed in Poll Book, and that said vote cast cannot be corrected without a recount of the ballots of said Precinct as provided by law: * * *”.

The letter to the district judge was filed as a petition and docketed on the civil docket of the district court as Cause No. 3828, whereupon the district judge entered an order fixing Tuesday, November 17, 1942, in the court house at Taos, as the time and place for a recount of the ballots in Rodarte and one other precinct. The clerk was ordered to give notice to the County Chairman of each dominant political party of the time and place for the recount and also was directed to summon the election officials of the precincts involved. Whatever order, if any, was entered by the district court in the proceeding in Cause No. 3828, is not before us. However, a transcript of the proceedings at such hearing appears in the record filed in this court. It discloses comment of the district judge, following testimony of certain of the election officials, as well as colloquy between him and one of the counsel now appearing for contestant in the contest, in which the district judge announced, that he was excluding the Rodarte precinct from the canvass.

In this hearing before the district court, initiated as a recount proceeding, the district judge did not proceed with the recount because upon an examination of the returns it was held that some unregistered electors had voted and, the election officials' having failed to place opposite the name of the voter the number of the ballot cast by him, as required by 1941 Comp. § 56-313, there was no way of determining for whom the unregistered voter had cast his ballot. After these conclusions, there followed the announcement by the district judge that the Rodarte box would be excluded from the canvass in accordance with what was considered a mandatory requirement in such circumstances under the provisions of the controlling statute, 1941 Comp. § 56-349(6).

In explanation of the failure of the election officials to enter opposite the name of each voter the number of the ballot cast by him, it may be said that this was due to ignorance and inexperience on their part as the district judge himself concluded, attributing the omission to “honest mistake” on their part. As a matter of fact, they started in with No. 1 and placed that number in the poll book opposite the name of every voter who cast a ballot.

In due course, and seasonably, the contestant as the defeated candidate on the face of the returns officially canvassed instituted this contest proceeding against the contestee alleging that he, the contestant, had received the greater number of the legal votes cast for the office of sheriff of Taos County at the general election held on November 3, 1942. Specifically, he alleged that he had received 114 votes in the Rodarte Precinct as against 62 votes cast for the contestee, as officially certified to the County Canvassing Board of said precinct, “but that the County Canvassing Board of the County of Taos, State of New Mexico, did in their canvass fail to credit either contestant or contestee with having received any votes in said precinct”.

These allegations by the contestant were met by specific denials of the contestee, who set up by way of affirmative defense that the vote of the Rodarte Precinct had been properly excluded from the canvass as a result of the proceedings before the district court hereinabove related as having been conducted under the provisions of 1941 Comp. § 56-349(6). Thus it results that the sole question for decision before the district court in the contest was whether the vote of the Rodarte Precinct was entitled to be included in the official canvass of the election involved.

The court heard evidence and made findings from which it concluded the contestant was entitled to judgment declaring him to be the duly elected sheriff of Taos County. Following are the findings and the trial court’s conclusion thereon, to-wit:

“1. That the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the parties to this action.
“2. That the hearing in this matter is not res adjudicata by virtue of Cause No. 3828 of this Court as contended by the contestee, and the court in said cause No. 3828 had no jurisdiction to throw out Rodarte precinct No. 25 of Taos County, New Mexico, as shown by the record of the canvassing board of Taos County, and that in fact said purported Order in said cause No. 3828 amounts to no order at all, and that the within case shall proceed as and if the court in Cause No. 3828 had sat merely in a ministerial capacity;
“3. That it was stipulated in open court pending said trial, by and between contestant and contestee that the only votes regarding which there is a question concerning whether the voter was registered or not, are the following: Mrs. Aniseta Medina, Mrs. Juan Manuel Romero, Mrs. Noberto Cruz, Mr. Felipe Romero, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
145 P.2d 487, 48 N.M. 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miera-v-martinez-nm-1944.