Oliver v. Bode

3 Ohio N.P. 298, 6 Ohio Dec. 57, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 274
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedOctober 29, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 298 (Oliver v. Bode) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Bode, 3 Ohio N.P. 298, 6 Ohio Dec. 57, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 274 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The plaintiff is a citizen, tax-payer and qualified elector of the city of Cincinnati, County of Hamilton, and State of Ohio, and is a duly nominated candidate for member of congress of the United States, for the second congressional district of this state at the election to be held November 3, 1896, which is a public election 'for state, county, and congressional officers, and for officers of the First Judicial District and the First Judicial Circuit.

The defendants constitute the Board of Elections of the city of Cincinnati and County of Hamilton, and by virtue of their offices are the deputy stale supervisors for this county.

It is provided in Sec. 2926(c) Rev. Stat. as amended 87 v. 360 that :

“The board may from time to time make and issue all such rules, regulations and instructions not inconsistent with law as they shall deem necessary for governing or guiding their secretary and his deputy or assistants, and the registrars of electors and judges and clerks of elections, or other persons under their control, in the proper discharge of their respective offices and duties. ’’

In the exercise of the power thus conferred upon the defendant board, it has undertaken to make, print, issue and circulate certain books of instructions to the judges and clerks of said election, and it is admitted by the board that it intends to enforce these instructions upon election day unless restrained by the action of the courts.

■The plaintiff claims that certain of these instructions in the language of the statute authorizing the board to give instructions, are “inconsistent with law,” transcending the power of the board, and are therefore illegal and void; and that unless the board is restrained from continuing to issue such instructions and to enforce the same, he will suffer irreparable damage.

He therefore asks for a perpetual injunction restraining the board from the further issuing of such instructions, and from the enforcement of the same, and for such other and further order as may be necessary to restore him to the position he occupied with reference to the election before the instructions were issued.

The instructions complained of relate to the right of the Democratic party, of which the plaintiff is a member, and of which he is a candidate as before stated, to designate certain persons who shall be permitted to be present in the polling room on election day and act as challengers and witnesses or inspectors.

The allegations of the petition upon this point are as follows:

“The said executive committee of the Democratic party has designated two electors m each polling precinct of said ward of said city of Cincinnati included in the second congressional district, to attend said election on said day in said precinct, and to be present in the polling place from the opening of the polls until the close of the count of the ballots, in the interest of said Democratic party, and especially in the interest of this plaintiff as the candidate of said Democratic party; one of said electors being designated for the purpose of challenging electors, and the other of said electors being designated for the purpose of witnessing and inspecting the reception of the ballots, and the counting thereof. That the Democratic party precinct men in each of the polling places of said congressional district outside of said city of Cincinnati in the county of Hamilton, have each designated thiee electors in such precinct to be present at the polling place from the opening of [299]*299the polls until the close of the count of the ballots in the interest of said party, and especially in the interest of this plaintiff as the said party’s candidate, two of whom are for the purpose of challenging electors, and the other for witnessing the voting and the count. ”

The petition .further alleges that it is the intention of the defendants, acting in their capacity of Election Boards and Deputy State Supervisors of Elections, by the promulgation of its books or pamphlets of instructions to deprive this plaintiff of the right to have such challengers and witnesses present in the polling places on said election day.

The contentions of the board, and the instructions sent out by it on this question, may be summarized as follows. As to the precincts of the city, it denies the right of any political party to have a challenger in the polling place at any time during the day, but admits the right of such party to have< a witness or inspector of the count present from the time the count begins until its close. As to the precincts in Hamilton county outside of the city, and popularly known as the country precincts, it concedes the right of any political party to have one challenger present in the polling place during the receiving of the votes, but not after the count has commenced, and also concedes the same right to have a witness or inspector as in the city precincts, viz: only during the time of the count.

It thus appears that there are wide and serious differences of opinion bewteen these parties touching the right to have challengers and witnesses or inspectors present in the polling places.

As our election laws touching these questions are entirely statutory, the first question presented m this case is one of statutory construction, and as in many instances it is impossible to properly construe these laws unless there is constantly borne in mind certain fundamental canons of construction with reference to repeals by implication I think it necessary at the outset to refer briefly to such fundamental principles.

Without seeking for further authority, I take the decisions of two cases cited in ar gument at the bar as clear and forcible expressions of these principles.

In Lessee of Allen v. Parish,3 Ohio 193, it is declared that:

“A statute should be so construed that the several parts will not only accord with the general intent of the legislature, but also harmonize with each other, and a construction of a particular clause that will destroy or render useless any other provision of the same statute, cannot be correct. No word ever should be rejected if the statute will admit of a rational and consistent construction without it.”

And in The State of Ohio ex rel. Olds v. Comrs. of Franklin County, 20 Ohio St. 424, it is held that:

“The rules for the construction of statutes in cases of this kind have been announced frequently by the court, viz: That the doctrine of statutory repeals by implication is not favored, and that such repeals will not be declared unless they are necessarily implied. And that statutes in pari materia should be so construed as to give effect to all their provisions, and if they can be construed so as to stand well together, there is no repeal by implication.”

Bearing in mind these principles, I proceed to examine the various statutes bearing upon this question.

First, as to the city precincts: The earliest legislation upon this subject now upon our statute books, was passed in May, 1886, as a part of the registration law for the city of Cincinnati, and is known as Sec. 2926n, Kev. Stat. That section is as follows: (the italics being my own for the purpose of making prominent certain parts of the section.) Sec. 2926n.

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Related

Lessee of Allen v. Orris Parish
3 Ohio 187 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1827)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 298, 6 Ohio Dec. 57, 1896 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-bode-ohsuperctcinci-1896.