Montgomery v. Dormer

79 S.W. 913, 181 Mo. 5, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 23, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 79 S.W. 913 (Montgomery v. Dormer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery v. Dormer, 79 S.W. 913, 181 Mo. 5, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 97 (Mo. 1904).

Opinion

VALLIANT, J.

This is a contested election case. The parties were rival candidates for the office of clerk of the circuit court of Sullivan county at the election held November 4, 1902. By the official returns of the election officers it appeared that Dormer, the contestee, received 2,252 votes, and Montgomery, the contestant, 2,251. Dormer appearing then to have a majority of one, was awarded the certificate and entered into the office. On November 24, Montgomery served notice on Dormer that at the next term of the circuit court in that county, to be begun and held on the 15th day of December, 1902, he would contest the election. The grounds alleged for the contest were substantially that certain persons named were not legal voters because they had not resided in the State one whole year before the election, and were not residents of the township or precinct in which they voted, yet that they did vote for the contestee and their votes were counted for him; also [11]*11that certain persons named were legal voters and voted at the election for contestant, and the election officers wrongfully refused to count their votes for him; that the contestant received a majority of the legal votes cast and should have been declared elected.

On December 13th the contestee filed in court and served -on contestant a counter notice of contest, stating that certain legal ballots cast for him had not been counted and certain illegal ballots cast for contestant had been counted, and that contestee had in fact received the majority of the legal votes.

There are three regular terms of the Sullivan Circuit Court, January, April and October. The October term, 1902, was in session November 6th, and adjourned to December 15th. On December 15th, this cause was by agreement of the parties continued to the January term, 1903, and at that term it was again by agreement continued to the April term, during which term it was tried.

The only evidence adduced at the trial was that on the part of the contestant; it tended to prove, if it was competent evidence, the facts presently mentioned set out in the special findings of the court. Upon the eon» elusion of the contestant’s evidence the contestee asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which the court refused, and exception was duly taken. At the request of the contestee the court made a special finding of facts. In this it is found that certain persons named, nine in number, were lawfully entitled to vote and did vote for the contestant, but their votes were not counted; that certain other persons named, thirteen in number, were not lawfully entitled to vote,-because they had not resided in the State a year before the election, but that they did vote for the contestee, and their votes were counted for him; that deducting from the contestee’s number those thirteen illegal votes that had been counted for him, and adding to the contestant’s number those nine legal votes that had been cast [12]*12for him but not counted, the contestant had received 2,259 votes while the contestee had received only 2,238; therefore, the contestant had a majority of the votes cast and was entitled to the office. There was a judgment in accordance with this finding, and from that judgment this appeal is taken.

On the trial the contestant called as witnesses certain of the judges of the election, and by them proved that the thirteen persons whom the court found to have been not entitled to vote, but whose votes had been received and counted by the election officers, had voted for the contestee. The contestee objected to this evidence when it was offered on the ground that it was not the best evidence, the ballots themselves being the best, and second, it was unlawful for a judge of an election to disclose how anyone voted. The objection was overruled and the contestee excepted. The contestant produced as witnesses the nine persons whom the court found to have been lawfully entitled to vote and who did vote, but whose votes were afterwards rejected by the judges and not counted, and they testified that they had voted for the contestant. This testimony was also objected to by the contestee on the ground that the ballot was the best evidence, and that it was not lawful to require or permit an elector to disclose the secrecy of his ballot. That objection was also overruled and exception preserved.

Appellant assigns for error the overrulings of the objections to the evidence above mentioned, and also that the court did not have jurisdiction of the case.

I. The last assignment is based on the fact that the original notice served on the contestee was that the contest would be made at the next term of the court to be held on the 15th of December, whereas on that day was to be held only an adjourned session of the October term, the next regular .term being in January.

Section 7029, Revised Statutes 1899, confers on the circuit court jurisdiction in cases of contested elections [13]*13for county and municipal offices. It provides that no election for such office ‘ ‘ shall be contested unless notice of such contest be given to the opposite party within twenty days after the votes shall have been officially counted . . . and the notice shall be served fifteen days before the term of court at which the election shall be contested, by delivering a copy,” etc.

. Section 7033 is, “Every court authorized to determine contested elections shall hear and determine the same in a summary manner, without any formal pleading; and the contest shall be determined at the first term of such court that shall be held fifteen days after the official counting of the votes, and service of notice of contest, unless the same shall be continued by consent, or for good cause shown.”

The main purpose of the statute as it relates to the notice required, is to compel the contestant to act promptly and give timely notice; the only penalty imposed is upon his failing to give the notice within twenty days after the official countin'g of the votes; his right to contest depends on his first giving that notice. Higbee v. Ellison, 92 Mo. 13, to which the appellant refers, was a contest for the office of circuit judge; the statute required in such case that the contestant present his petition to the court at the first term next after the election, or else to the judge in vacation; but in that case the contestant had allowed the next regular term of court which was begun after the election, to pass without presenting his petition, and did not afterwards present it to the judge in vacation. It was held that he had suffered his opportunity to pass and his suit was dismissed.

State ex rel. Hancock v. Spencer, 166 Mo. 279, is also relied on by apellant to maintain this assignment, but in that case also the contestant had failed to give the notice within the time required by law; it was held that he had no right to further prosecute his contest.

In the case at bar the notice was given within the [14]*14time prescribed, but instead of naming the next regular term of court, tire adjourned term, or rather the adjourned session of the October term, was named.

Section 1605 provides that “special' or adjourned sessions of any court may he held in pursuance of such proclamation (that is, proclamation by the sheriff) or in continuation of the regular term, when so ordered by the court in term time, the order being entered in its record. ’ ’

The statute contemplates special terms, adjourned terms, and regular terms.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W. 913, 181 Mo. 5, 1904 Mo. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-dormer-mo-1904.