Mullen v. State Ex Rel. Robson

172 N.E. 391, 35 Ohio App. 271, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 54, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 337
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 11, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 172 N.E. 391 (Mullen v. State Ex Rel. Robson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullen v. State Ex Rel. Robson, 172 N.E. 391, 35 Ohio App. 271, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 54, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 337 (Ohio Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

MAUCK, J.

The record shows that the presiding judge of elections in the ward in question was called to the stand and testified that there were twenty two absent voters’ ballots challenged, and that the ballots of all these absent voters were placed in an envelope and returned to the Deputy State Supervisors; that none of the envelopes containing these several ballots were opened by the local judges. She testifies that every one of the votes in question was refused by the local board by the unanimous votes of all the judges upon the ground that the voters so offering to vote were non-residents. She testifies that the local board took no evidence but decided to return the ballots to the county board unopened because they did know what else to do with them. Again she testifies:

“The evidence on the envelope was all the evidence we had.”

There then followed this question and answer:

“Q Now, the only thing on the envelope was the address from which they are mailed?
A Their address and where they were living.”

One of the clerks of the election testifies that the ballots were laid to one side and that when others came in to vote whose votes were protested that the latter votes were placed with the absent voters’ ballots and all of them given to the presiding judge to rp^rn to the county election board, there being twenty seven in all, making necessarily five votes that were received but not cast and twenty two absent voters ballots in identification envelopes that had never been opened.

Another judge testifies that

“These ballots, as they were rejected or protested, of non-residents were put on the table and they were kept there. Those that were non-residents we discussed. The judges among themselves agreed that they were not residents of Middleport and therefore had no right to vote. All the ballots were put on the table and kept there until later in the evening, when they were put under the table and kept there until Mrs. Gilfilen brought them to Pomeroy.”

She says that the ballots were rejected and put there as dead ballots. This, in substance, is i the. whole record.

The question of who was elected central committeeman in this ward is not perhaps a matter of paramount importance. The questions raised, howeyer, are of very great importance and of considerable obscurity. They involve interpretations of the general elections statutes, the primary election statutes and the operation of the absent voters’ law.

So far as the five votes that are referred to as “protested votes” are concerned we see no difficulty. Two of them were official ballots issued to R. O. Fowler and Edna Howard. They are marked “Protested” and quite evidently were never *55 cast, and there is nothing to indicate that they were not properly rejected. The other three ballots, bearing in lead pencil the names of Jacob Young, Peter Stace and Ella Stace, are not official ballots .at all, but unofficial, and we are at a loss to know what could be claimed for them or any of them. We have then twenty two absent voters’ ballots which were neither counted nor cast, but were turned over to the county election board, and which it is claimed the board ought to count as disputed ballots.

The trial court was confronted with a question of great difficulty and took the not unnatural view that these ballots were to be treated as some sort of ballots, and as the local election board only had a right to send disputed ballots to the county board, and as they did "end these ballots to the county board, they must of necessity be disputed ballots. There is a sort of logic to this which might be permitted if we were dealing with nrivate rights. In such a case it might be said that the local judges, having power to send to the county board disputed ballots only, when they sent ballots to that board they must be estopped from asserting that they were not disputed. This is not such a case. It is a question of power. The county board can not be required to count votes where it has no power to do so. Power to count votes must be derived from statute. It can not be conferred by acts of omission o" commission on the nart of local judges. So far as the general election is concerned the power of the county board to count disputed ballots proceeds from Section 5090. In that section they are called uncounted ballots and refer to the ballots described in Section 5083 as ballots upon which the judges did not agree as to'how the same should be counted. In a primary election the term “disputed ballots” is employed. It is found in Section 4983.

It is thus seen that both under the general law and the primary law the uncounted ballots or the disputed ballots which the county, board may count are votes that have actually been placed in the box but which have been so imperfectly marked that the judges disagree upon the way they shall be counted or whether they shall be counted at all. The only other ballots which can ever be counted by the county board are those absent voters’ ballots that never reach the precinct officials.

We might- dispose of this case with what has already been said, it being apparent that the votes in question have never been cast and having never been cast are not disputed ballots; that the judgment of the Common Pleas must be reversed because the county board has no power to do what the decree complained of requires it to do. But while mandamus can not issue to compel the county board to canvass and count these ballots it may be that the writ awarded by the Common Pleas may be modified by this court so as-to require the county board to issue the relator a certificate of election on the ground that the several absent voters had an undoubted right to have their votes cast and counted, and the court can proceed on the theory that the thing that -had to be done was in law actually done. That theory of the situation gives rise to this question: After an absent voter has made the affidavit required and prepared his ballot and mailed it as prescribed by law is his right to have that vote cast an absolute one and has .he placed himself in such advantageous position that he can not be challenged as other voters are? It is perfectly apparent that this interpretation of the statute .would make the absent voters’ law a convenient instrument for fraud and corruption, but the statutes loan themselves to that view'.

The process of voting when the voter personally appears is as follows:

“One of the judges of election shall receive the ballot, examine the secondary' stub bearing the elector’s registered number or name, for the purpose of identification, and thereupon pronounce with an audible voice the name of the elector. If the judges are satisfied that he is a citizen of the United states and legally entitled to vote at the election”

the ballot shall be immediately deposited in the ballot box. Section. 5073.

If it is an absent voter’s ballot, however, the presiding judge

“shall take up one absent voter’s identification envelope in the presence of all the judges and after announcing in an audible voice the name of such absent voter he shall tear open such envelope *** and deposit the same in the proper ballot box.”

Section 5078-5.

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Bluebook (online)
172 N.E. 391, 35 Ohio App. 271, 8 Ohio Law. Abs. 54, 1929 Ohio App. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullen-v-state-ex-rel-robson-ohioctapp-1929.