Nguyen v. Nguyen

70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753, 158 Cal. App. 4th 1636, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 17, 2008
DocketG038705
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753 (Nguyen v. Nguyen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nguyen v. Nguyen, 70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753, 158 Cal. App. 4th 1636, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 79 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

SILLS, P. J.

I. INTRODUCTION

Trung Nguyen seeks, in this appeal from a judgment after an election contest, to be declared the winner of an election for an Orange County supervisorial seat. The winner of the election, as certified by the Orange County Registrar of Voters (Registrar of Voters or Registrar) after a recount, was Janet Nguyen. That is, after the recount, Janet Nguyen had the highest number of legal votes among all those running for the office. Trung Nguyen’s theory is that Janet Nguyen requested a statutorily incorrect methodology for the recount, and therefore the recount itself was invalid, and he is thus entitled to take office as the certified winner of the election based on the results prior to the recount.

In specific terms, Trung Nguyen asserts this: Janet Nguyen’s request that paper absentee ballots be recounted by hand but ballots cast by “direct recording electronic” (DRE) machines be recounted electronically ipso facto invalidated the recount. He contends that sections 15627 and 19253 of the Elections Code 1 do not permit a recount in which paper absentee ballots or valid paper provisional ballots are recounted one way (manually), but electronic ballots are recounted another (electronically).

As we explain in detail below, this argument is not persuasive. There can be no doubt that, in a recount, paper ballots may be recounted manually while electronic ballots may be recounted electronically. (A recount requester *1641 does, of course, have the right to have electronic votes recounted manually, and if they are, the manual count governs over any electronic count.)

Moreover, even if Trung Nguyen’s statutory analysis is correct, two undisputed facts require us to affirm the judgment in Janet Nguyen’s favor:

(1) Trung Nguyen presented absolutely no evidence to the trial court that a manual recount of the electronic ballots in this case would have made any difference. (A manual recount would have been performed by examining an internal printout of each voter’s choices recorded by the machine and then kept within the machine.) There are in this case, conspicuously, no allegations, much less evidence, that the electronic voting machines in this particular election were tampered with, manipulated, or in any way electronically recorded anything other than a totally accurate vote count. (To be sure, Trung Nguyen did present evidence that the particular kind of machine used in the election could be tampered with. But he did not present any evidence that any machines in this Orange County, California election were tampered with, or were in any way inaccurate.)
(2) Trung Nguyen deliberately decided to waive the right that he had to ask the trial court in his election contest to order the electronic ballots to be recounted manually. There is no question that if such a recount was “necessary for a proper determination” of his election contest, the trial court would have been obligated to order such a recount. (See § 16601; Enterprise Residents etc. Committee v. Brennan (1978) 22 Cal.3d 767, 773, fn. 6 [151 Cal.Rptr. 1, 587 P.2d 658].) Rather, in open court, Trung Nguyen disavowed his right to have a manual recount of the electronic ballots. Rather, he chose to stake his entire case on the idea that he is entitled, as a matter of law, to be placed in office by the courts as a result of an election contest based on what he claims is a statutorily invalid recount.

As we show below, our Supreme Court has made it clear in numerous cases that election results are not to be invalidated based on the technical noncompliance with election statutes where there is no showing that the noncompliance would have made any actual difference to the election. Under that line of jurisprudence, we cannot reverse the judgment even if Trung Nguyen’s statutory arguments regarding the kinds of recount permitted by sections 15627 and 19253 were well taken.

Finally, there is no way that this court, on this particular record, could legally declare Trung Nguyen the winner in this case. Simply put, there is no substantial evidence that he received the highest number of legal votes in the *1642 election. A court cannot declare a candidate the winner who has not received the highest number of legal votes. (Bradley v. Perrodin (2003) 106 Cal.App.4th 1153, 1170 [131 Cal.Rptr.2d 402].) The most that Trung Nguyen might achieve in this appeal is a judgment annulling the February 2006 election and holding a new one, but that is relief he manifestly does not seek.

II. A GLOSSARY

Election cases often have their own nomenclature, which is not always obvious or intuitive to lay readers. Here is a quick glossary of terms and abbreviations that are relevant to this case:

DRE: Stands for “direct recording electronic,” that is, it represents an electronic voting machine. In the present case, the DRE machines worked this way: A voter arrives at his or her polling place and is given a code. When the voter enters the booth, he or she enters the code into the machine. The voter then uses a small wheel to scroll through the names of the various candidates and offices; when the voter wishes to cast a vote for a candidate, he or she presses a button corresponding to the candidate indicated on the scroll. After completing all voting, the voting machine prints a paper facsimile of the votes cast by the voter, which allows that voter to confirm that the machine is indeed correctly recording the votes cast by the voter. The paper facsimile is displayed through a pane of glass, but is not given to the voter. Rather, the printout is kept by the machine internally.
VVPAT: Stands for “voter verified paper audit trail,” which is the paper facsimile printed out by the DRE machine which the voter sees through the pane of glass but does not keep. As mentioned above, the printout is stored inside the DRE machine. We should note here that the VVPAT printouts are relatively fragile pieces of paper (as anyone who ever experienced a paper jam in an office printer knows), that would not qualify as proper paper ballots in an election where a voter was casting his or her votes by means of a paper ballot.
MBB: Stands for “mobile ballot box,” but it is really a computer memory storage device inside a DRE machine that electronically records the various tum-of-the-wheel-and-press-the-button votes made by a voter on a DRE machine. When the votes are counted, the data on the MBB is downloaded in order to ascertain the vote count from the machine.
“Official canvass” is the actual, “public process of processing and tallying all ballots received in an election” (§ 335.5), that is, the official counting of the votes.

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Bluebook (online)
70 Cal. Rptr. 3d 753, 158 Cal. App. 4th 1636, 2008 Cal. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nguyen-v-nguyen-calctapp-2008.