Morgan v. Wilkerson

182 N.E. 248, 204 Ind. 187, 1932 Ind. LEXIS 16
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1932
DocketNo. 26,150.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 248 (Morgan v. Wilkerson) 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
Morgan v. Wilkerson, 182 N.E. 248, 204 Ind. 187, 1932 Ind. LEXIS 16 (Ind. 1932).

Opinions

Martin, J.

Wilkerson, the appellee, and Morgan, the appellant were opposing candidates for the office of Trustee of Montgomery Township in Jennings County at the 1930 election. The board of canvassers declared Morgan elected and issued to him a certificate of election, under which he qualified and took possession of the office January 1, 1931. Within ten days after the election in November, 1930, Wilkerson procured a recount of the ballots and filed with the county auditor a contest proceeding (§7613 Burns 1926). The recount commissioners certified that Wilkerson received a majority of the ballots, and upon a hearing before the board of commissioners of Jennings County, he was adjudged duly elected to the office. Morgan appealed from the decision of the board of county commissioners (§7616 Burns 1926) to the Jennings Circuit Court. A change of venue was taken to the Jackson Circuit Court, which, after a trial on October 26, 1931, adjudged that Wilkerson had been duly elected as trustee. Wilkerson within ten days thereafter took an oath of office and filed an *190 official bond with the Auditor, who approved the same. From the judgment of the Jackson Circuit Court this appeal was taken. The transcript of the record was filed in this court on January 6, 1932, and the cause was submitted February 5, 1932.

On May 2, 1932, Morgan filed with the county auditor his resignation as trustee effective immediately and thereupon the Board of County Commissioners, being in session, accepted the resignation and purported to appoint Ossie Morgan as trustee “to fill the unexpired term of said Jesse T. Morgan.” On May 3, 1932, Jesse T. Morgan died. By reason of these facts the appellee Wilkerson, on May 20, 1932, moved the court to dismiss this appeal on the ground that the appeal was abated. The attorneys for the appellant Morgan .filed a verified objection to the motion to dismiss, admitting the facts but alleging “that said facts . . . are not sufficient in law or in equity to cause the abatement of this appeal” and praying that the motion to dismiss the appeal be denied.

The resignation of Morgan from the office of Township Trustee served to divest him of authority thereafter to hold the office, (if he had such authority by reason of the election). After Morgan’s resignation there could no longer be a contest between him and Wilkerson as to' which one of them had the right to thereafter occupy the office. But while Morgan’s resignation eliminated controversy by him as to whom thereafter had the right to occupy the office, it did not settle the controversy between him and Wilkerson as to who was elected to the office and who was entitled to the emoluments thereof up to the time of his resignation. A final judicial determination of the question of which candidate for public office received the most legal votes is a matter of public interest, and the legislature has also indicated that such contest also in *191 volves the right of the contesting party to the emoluments of the office, (by §7622 Burns 1926, relating to the appeals of election contests, which provides that the appeal bond shall be in a sum sufficient to cover the emoluments of the office, and which provides for a right of action on such bond). Kensinger v. Schaal (1928), 200 Ind. 275, 161 N. E. 262.

The decision of this appeal will determine the question of who was elected trustee of Montgomery township. If the judgment of the lower court is affirmed, then it would be settled that Morgan was not elected, that when he resigned and abandoned the office which he held by virtue of a certificate incorrectly issued by a canvassing board, no vacancy existed in the office for the county commissioners to fill by appointment, because by virtue of the judgment of the Circuit Court, Wilkerson who had qualified, was the lawful Trustee. If the judgment of the lower court is reversed then it would be settled that Wilkerson was not legally elected and that at the time the county commissioners appointed Ossie Morgan trustee a vacancy existed and they had lawful authority to make such appointment.

On June 9, 1932, appellee Wilkerson filed a second motion entitled a “motion to strike out brief and dismiss appeal”. In this he seeks to have the appellant’s brief, which was filed May 27,1932, stricken out on the ground that the death of Morgan, on May 3, 1932, terminated any existing employment of his attorneys and terminated the relation of attorneys and client existing between him and them; and he seeks to have the appeal dismissed on the ground that there is now no party appellant because no substitution of party appellant was made after Morgan’s death.

*192 *191 The statutes provide that the death of any party after the submission of a cause on appeal does not cause the proceedings to abate, but the judgment to be rendered *192 will be rendered as at the term at which the sub-mission was made without any change of parties. §§729, 710 Burns 1926. The attorneys of record at the time of the submission of the appeal not only have the right, but it is their duty to brief the appeal.

The motion to strike out the appellant’s brief and the motions to dismiss the appeal are overruled.

The appellant assigns as error the overruling of his motion for a new trial, (wherein it is alleged that the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law), and presents thereunder the correctness of the trial court’s decision that two ballots—Exhibits 1 and 2—were valid. The court found that appellee Wilkerson received 188 legal votes (including Exhibits 1 and 2) and that appellant Morgan received 187 legal votes. It was agreed and stipulated in evidence by the parties that the two contested ballots “are authentic and genuine, and in the condition in which they were at the close of the election and may be offered in evidence . . . without objection, except on the grounds substantially as stated above” (that the same were mutilated and bear distinguishing marks).

The. two ballots in controversy, are in the record and we have examined them. Each has a small, faint ink mark on its face near the bottom, the ink being of the same color as that used in affixing the initials of the poll clerks (on the back of the ballots). The ink mark on each ballot is oblique, is irregular in shape and is in the same relative location on the ballot. The mark on one ballot is a faint blur three-eighths of an inch long and less than one-eighth of an inch wide at its widest point. The mark on the other ballot consists of three parts separated by spaces,-—the lowest part is a faint blur three-eighths of an inch long, less than one-eighth of an inch at the base and running up to a point, and *193 above this, separated by spaces (three-sixteenths and three-eighths of an inch long respectively), are two narrow lines,—one-fourth and one-eighth of an inch long respectively. The marks on both ballots were apparently made by ink accidentally escaping from a pen, the back of which was applied to the edge of the ballot in lifting it.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 248, 204 Ind. 187, 1932 Ind. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-wilkerson-ind-1932.