Moss v. Hunt

1913 OK 544, 135 P. 282, 40 Okla. 20, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 4
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 9, 1913
Docket5150
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1913 OK 544 (Moss v. Hunt) 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
Moss v. Hunt, 1913 OK 544, 135 P. 282, 40 Okla. 20, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 4 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

HAYES, C. J.

Plaintiff in error, hereinafter called plaintiff, commenced this proceeding in the district court of Wagoner county to contest the election of defendant in error, hereinafter called defendant, to the office of county judge of said county at the general election held on the 5th day of November, 1912.

In the district court a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence was sustained, and judgment rendered in favor of defendant. At said election plaintiff was the nominee and candidate of the Republican party to the office of county judge, and defendant was the nominee and candidate of the Democratic party, and one E. L. Moore was the candidate of the Socialist party, for said office. There are 22 election precincts in the county. In accordance with the canvass of the votes made by the county election board, plaintiff received 737 votes, defendant 787, and the Socialist candidate 382. A certificate of election was accordingly issued by the county election board to defendant, who now occupies the office. The election board did not count any votes cast at precincts Nos. 6, 8, 14, and 16. At precinct No. 14 no election was held. The votes from the other precincts were not canvassed because of *22 the manner in which the returns had been made by the precinct election boards, which, in the minds of the county election board, constituted such irregularity as did not authorize them to make a canvass thereof.

At the trial the returns from these precincts were opened, and a canvass of the votes thereof made, either from the certificates of returns of the precinct officials, or by a count of the ballots, and as a result thereof it was shown that plaintiff had received 914 votes, and defendant 926 votes. In arriving at this total of the votes cast for the respective candidates, however, 50 votes were counted for defendant and 34 votes for plaintiff, as shown by a purported certificate of returns of the election officers from precinct No. 5.

Plaintiff contends that the returns from said precinct No. 5 were in fact never executed by the officers required by law to execute them; that they were falsely and fraudulently made, and therefore they could not be considered as evidence to establish the votes cast for the respective candidates. He also contends that the ballots were handled in such a manner and with such irregularities by the election officials as to discredit them, and render them not the best evidence of the votes cast. In order to secure an opening of the ballot boxes and of the returns from precincts 6, 8, and 16, and a consideration of same by the court in arriving at the total votes cast for the respective candidates in those precincts, plaintiff introduced a great deal of testimony to show that said returns had been in the hands of the proper officials, and had been so preserved since the same had been received and canvassed by the county election board that their identity was beyond question, and that such ballots and returns could be considered by the court. This evidence was held by the trial court, and we think correctly, to be sufficient to entitle the ballot boxes from said precincts to be gone into, and the returns and ballots therefrom considered. It was also agreed by plaintiff that the same evidence should apply as to the returns and ballots from precinct No. 5; but this agreement extends only to the manner in which the returns from precinct No. 5 were kept after the same reached the county election board. It is not the contention *23 of plaintiff that their identity was destroyed by conduct of the-county election board, but by the acts of the precinct election, officers.

By the statute, the election board of each precinct is required to appoint four official counters, not more than three of whom shall be from the same political party. Two of the official counters, who must be of different political parties, are required to call from the ballots the names of the candidates voted, for, while the other two record the votes at the same time upon: different tally sheets provided for- that purpose. When the votes-have all been called, and count made upon the tally sheets, the-four counters are required to sign the tally sheets. After theyr have signed same, it becomes their duty to fill out the certificate-in the back of the book of ballots, without detaching it from said book, and to make at least three duplicates of such certificate. Each certificate shall have only the total vote of each candidate, which shall be written with pen and ink in words and figures. Each of these certificates must be signed by each of the four counters, and sworn to before one of the precinct board. All ballots, when they have been counted, are required to be strung upon a twine string, and the two ends of the string brought together over such ballots .and tied together by the counters; a piece of stiff paper placed under each knot, and the knot then sealed with sealing wax and stamped with the election seal of the precinct by the precinct board in the presence of the counters. It then becomes the duty of the counters to place said ballots thus tied in a bundle into an envelope, labeled “Voted Ballots,” and to seal said envelope by moistening the gummed flaps. -After they have been thus sealed, they are required to place the seal of sealing wax upon such gummed flaps and in the center of such and imprint thereon the precinct election seal. When these duties have been performed by the official counters, it then becomes the duty of the clerk and judge to- write their names across the gummed flaps of the envelope, one upon one side of such wax seal, and the other upon the other side. Sections 3077, 3088, Rev. Laws 1910.

*24 Counsel for plaintiff in the court below, in presenting his evi•dence in support of his case, recognized the rule of law that the returns of the precinct election officials, when executed by them in the manner prescribed by the statute, are prima facie evidence of the votes cast for each of the candidates, but that this prima facie evidence may be controlled and overcome by the ballots cast at the election in a precinct, when the ballots have been preserved in the manner and by the officers prescribed by the statute, and have not been exposed to the reach of unauthorized persons so as to afford a reasonable probability of their having been changed or tampered with. He introduced a great volume of evidence to impeach the purported returns from precinct No. 5. His evidence shows that, when the counters appeared at about twelve o’clock on the date of the election, they were requested then by one Fayette Wertz, the election inspector of that precinct, to sign up the tally sheets, and to execute the certificate of returns in the back of the book of ballots. To this request objections were made by some of -the counters, that the votes had not been counted, and the returns had not been made out. But the inspector insisted upon their, being signed by the counters at that time-, which was done.

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Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 544, 135 P. 282, 40 Okla. 20, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-hunt-okla-1913.