Patterson v. Hanley

68 P. 821, 136 Cal. 265, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 698
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1902
DocketL.A. No. 1091.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 68 P. 821 (Patterson v. Hanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Hanley, 68 P. 821, 136 Cal. 265, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 698 (Cal. 1902).

Opinions

BEATTY, C. J.

This is an election contest prosecuted under the provisions of sections 1111 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure.

At the general election in the year 1900 appellant and respondent were rival candidates for the office of supervisor *267 in the fifth district of Los Angeles County. As a result of the official canvass, respondent was declared elected, and appellant thereupon filed his contest, based upon various grounds, requiring a recount of the ballots. During the recount many of the ballots were objected to by the respective parties upon the ground that they were void or illegal, and it is to the rulings of the court sustaining or refusing to sustain these objections that most of the exceptions appearing in the record were reserved. There were counted and tallied by the court 4,984 votes, of which 535 were found to be scattering. Of the remainder, 2,219 were counted for the appellant and 2,230 were counted for respondent, giving him a plurality of eleven votes. At the close of the recount, and of plaintiff’s evidence,—which, aside from the ballots, related mainly to allegations of misconduct of the election officers in precinct 57B of the city of Los Angeles,—the court, upon motion of the respondent, ordered a nonsuit, from which the contestant appeals. In support of his appeal he contends that many more than eleven illegal ballots were counted for respondent, and that the votes of precinct 57B, in which, according to the recount, respondent had a plurality of twenty-one, should have been wholly rejected on account of the misconduct of the board of election. He also contends that the trial court erred in refusing his offers to prove that certain ballots cast by unqualified or disqualified electors were cast for the respondent.

1. As to the ballots there are two objections urged by appellant, each of which affects a considerable number:—

a. Ballots with a cross stamped in the voting square after the words “No nomination”;
b. Ballots with crosses stamped after both “Yes” and “No” upon proposed constitutional amendments.

Besides these principal objections, there are various others of a miscellaneous character.

The form of the official ballot used at this election was that prescribed by the amendments to the election law of March 20, 1899. (Stats. 1899, p. 133.) By section 1197 of the Political Code, as then amended, the various party tickets are required to be printed on the official ballot, in parallel columns,—under headings composed of the party designations,—with a blank column at the right, *268 containing only the titles of the various offices to be filled at the election, leaving blank spaces underneath in which the voter may-write the name of any person whom he may prefer to the candidates whose names are printed on the tickets. Whenever any questions—such as the ratification of proposed constitutional amendments—are to be submitted to a vote of the people, such questions are required to be printed in a separate column to the right of the blank column, and opposite said questions on separate lines the words “Yes” and “No” (the law as printed says “Yes” or “No,” but this is evidently a mistake), the choice of the voter to be expressed by stamping a cross (X) in the voting-square after the word “Yes,” if he is in favor of the amendment, or after the word “No,” if he is opposed to its adoption. To the right of each column,.except the blank column, a ruled space half an inch wide must be left, and this must be divided by horizontal lines into voting-squares corresponding to the various offices to be filled and questions to be answered. Among other minute and detailed provisions of this section, it is further enacted, that no candidate’s name must be printed on the ballot in more than one place, and that if the same person is nominated by more than one party or organization for the same office he must make his election of the ticket he desires his name to appear upon, failing which his name must be placed upon the ticket of the party first certifying his nomination, and upon the ticket of any other party which has nominated him the words “No nomination” must be printed instead of his name; just as the same words must be printed in any party ticket under the title of an office for which such party has actually failed to name a candidate. The regulations prescribed to the voter for the preparation of his ballot, so far as they are material to the present discussion, are as follows: “He shall prepare his ballot by marking a cross after the name of the person or persons for whom he intends to vote or by writing a name or names in the blank column, and in case of a constitutional amendment, or other question submitted to the vote of the people, by marking in the appropriate margin a cross (X) against the answer which he desires to give. Such marking shall be done only with a stamp, which with the necessary pads and ink shall be provided by” the proper officers. (Stats. 1889, p. 139, see. 1205.)

*269 Section 1211 reads as follows:—

“1. In canvassing the votes any ballot which is not made as provided in this act shall be void, and shall not be counted; but each such ballot must be preserved and returned with the other ballots. Any name written upon a ballot shall be counted for the office under which it is written; provided, it is written in the ‘blank column.’
“2. If a voter marks more names than there are persons to be elected to an office, or if for any reason it is impossible to determine the voter’s choice for any office to be filled, his ballot shall not be counted for such office.” (Stats. 1899, p. 140.)

Section 1215 provides, among other things, that “No voter shall place any mark upon his ballot by which it may be afterward identified as the one voted by him.” (Stats. 1891, p. 178.)

There is no difference of opinion as to the meaning of these and other provisions of the election law with which they are co-ordinated. It has been held by this court, and by many other courts, as is indeed evident, that the whole design of the statute, in this aspect, is to prevent the intimidation or corruption of electors by defeating its object. It is assumed that there can be no effective bribery or intimidation in the absence of any means of determining whether the elector has voted according to his promise, and that if any mark or indication which .will serve to identify the ballot cast by a particular person will at the same time insure its rejection, there will no longer exist any motive for attempting to influence him by threats or promises. The cogency of this reasoning must be conceded, but there are good grounds for doubting whether it can be effectively applied in legislation. Certain it is that no law hitherto enacted has ever provided any effective means of preventing a voter so disposed from putting upon a perfectly legal ballot a mark by which it may be certainly and easily identified. As remarked by' Justice Temple, in delivering the opinion of this court in Jennings v. Brown, 114 Cal. 307: “The so-called Australian ballot system only secures secrecy of voting when the elector desires it and has sufficient independence to insist upon it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 P. 821, 136 Cal. 265, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 698, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-hanley-cal-1902.