Nelson's Contested Election

34 Pa. Super. 591, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 184
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1907
DocketAppeal, No. 98
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 34 Pa. Super. 591 (Nelson's Contested Election) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson's Contested Election, 34 Pa. Super. 591, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 184 (Pa. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

Beaver, J.,

By the Act of May 13, 1856, P. L. 574, entitled, “An act authorizing the citizens of the borough of Mercer to erect a union school house in said borough,” it was enacted “ that all that territory lying within the following bounds,” which are fully set forth therein anR said to constitute parts of three several townships adjacent to, and outside of, the limits of the borough of Mercer, “ shall hereafter form a new school district and be known by the name of the Mercer school district, which said district shall possess all the rights and privileges and be subject to all the restrictions contained in the school laws of this commonwealth, except so far as the same is modified by this act.”

On May 8,1855, P. L. 509, an act, entitled, “A further supplement to an act for the regulation and continuance of a system of education by common schools, approved the eighth day of May Anno Domini one thousand eight hundred and fifty-four,” provided for the establishment of independent school districts, in which it is provided : “ Section 6. That whenever [593]*593a new district shall be erected, according to the provision's of this act, it shall become, to all intents and purposes of the common school system of the state, a separate and independent district,” etc.

In the ninth section of the Act of April 11, 1862, P. L. 471, it is provided: “ That in independent districts, established or hereafter to be established by the legislature, without specifying the mode, time or place of electing directors, the first election shall be held at such time and place, within the proper district, as shall be specified by written or printed notices thereof, put up at not less than ten public places therein, signed by not less than five taxable citizens thereof, and giving ten full days’ notice of such election, and subsequent elections shall be held at such time and place annually as shall be designated by similar notices, signed by the president and secretary of the proper board; said elections, in all other respects, to be held and conducted in the manner in this section before provided.”

An election for school directors in the district established by the special act of 1856, was held on February 20, 1906, at the general municipal election in the borough of Mercer. The appellees are R. N. Nelson and R. C. Kerr, who claim to have been elected school directors of the aforesaid special district at this election. The certificate of election was signed by “ the judge and inspectors of an election held in the borough of Mercer, in the county of Mercer.” ,

It appears from the testimony taken at-a former hearing, on an application for a writ of quo warranto, which by consent was incorporated in the record of this case, that the borough of Mercer is divided into two election districts ,• that the usual notice of election in the borough included school directors for the special district; that there was no separate polling place and usually no separate ballot box for receiving the votes for school directors; that school directors were usually nominated by the caucuses of the several political' parties within the borough and that the persons from the several-townships outside the limits of the borough composing the special district voted for school directors by using the usual municipal ballot. There does not seem to have been any special designation as to the polling place in the borough at which the citizens of the district outside its limits should vote. It will thus be seen that [594]*594the inhabitants of the several townships outside the borough had practically no voice in the choice of the candidates for school directors of the district in which they resided; that, if they voted at the municipal election for school directors, they were compelled to use the ballot containing the names of officers to be chosen for the borough, and that there was no special designation as to the polling place at which they should vote. There was, therefore, a double inducement for illegal voting: first, as to the municipal officers to be elected, for whom, of course, the inhabitants of the several townships had no right to vote, and, secondly, as to the voting at both of the polling places instead of one, it being assumed that they were permitted to vote at either one or the other.

Is there no escape from this anomalous condition of affairs ? Is there no way of avoiding the temptation and inducement to wrongdoing, under the guise of a legal right ? It seems to us that the demands of the law must be strict and unyielding, under which such an election should be held valid. It is true that the school district created by the special act of May 13, 1856, might have been created under the general law of May 8, 1855, by the court of common pleas of Mercer county, under ordinary conditions, but it must be remembered — and this is very significant — that special powers were sought and given, by the special act, to the commissioners appointed therein to carry out the provisions thereof in relation to the organization of the new district thereby created.

For example, in the second section of the special act, it was provided: “ That the property, real and personal, of the Mercer Academy and of the common school districts, as existing within the limits of the said new district and of the Mercer Female Institute, be converted into money to the best advantage, and appropriated to the erection of a suitable building for a union school, and that Joseph Kerr, Samuel Geibner and William M. Stephenson be commissioners to sell and convey said property for said purpose and to take charge of the moneys or securities for moneys and all funds belonging to said academy, common school and female institute, and appropriate the same to the purpose aforesaid.”

Other special provisions were contained in the act which could not have been provided for in a decree of the court of [595]*595common pleas, as, for example, in the seventh section, it was provided: that “ all students pursuing classical studies may be required to pay the prices usual for such branches in academies or private schools, also for those branches denominated ornamental, such as painting and drawing and instrumental music; foreign modern languages may also be taught in said school, but to be considered extra and to be paid for by the persons receiving instruction in them.”

It was also provided in the eighth section : “ That the female department in the higher branches shall be under the separate superintendence of a competent female principal, and shall be subject to the visitation and control of the executive committee of the Mercer Female Institute, as now organized.”

These and other provisions clearly show why application was made to the legislature instead of to the court, under the general act of 1855.

It is argued that, because the legislature did not, in the act of 1856, use the words “ independent school district ” and chose to use the words “ new district,” it was, therefore, not an independent school district within the meaning of the act of 1855, and that of 1862, which provides for the election of school directors in the ninth section, as above cited.

What was the new district created by the act of 1856 ? It was a separate district. It was independent of territorial limits, as previously established by the several municipalities from which it was carved. It had all the attributes of an independent district, as provided in the general act of 1855, and, by the very terms of the act creating it, possessed “ all the rights and privileges ....

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Related

New Britain Borough School District
145 A. 597 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1929)
Claysville Borough School District v. Worrell
37 Pa. Super. 10 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1908)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 Pa. Super. 591, 1907 Pa. Super. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelsons-contested-election-pa-1907.