Peebles v. Commissioners of Davie County

82 N.C. 385
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 82 N.C. 385 (Peebles v. Commissioners of Davie County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peebles v. Commissioners of Davie County, 82 N.C. 385 (N.C. 1880).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The cause is before us on the appeal of the-defendants from an interlocutory order of injunction, to continue in force until the hearing, restraining them from- *386 subscribing in the name of their county to the capital stock of the "Winston, Salem and Mooresville railroad company .■and issuing bonds in payment therefor. The action is brought by the plaintiff on behalf of himself and other residents and tax payers in Davie county, and he insists that a majority of the qualified voters of the county have not voted for and authorized the proposed subscription as required by the act of March 5, 1879. In the case agreed the following .are the material facts :

A new registration of electors was ordered and taken in ¡the different townships of the county just prior to the election in August last, preparatory to obtaining an expression <of their will on. the proposition of a county subscription of .$85,000 to the capital stock of said railroad, and an election for that purpose was held on the 7th day of August, 1879. 'There were enrolled on the registrars’ books the names of 1,953 persons as entitled to vote; of this number on the day ■of the election and just before, in Callahan township, were ■entered the names of seventeen persons who in age and residence were competent electors, but failed to take the oath prescribed by law. The name of one of these was transferred by the registrar from the old to the new registry without authority from the voter and nine directed him to make the transfer of their names. Of the nine thus registered one voted .for and four voted against the subscription, .and .the others did not vote. The remaining seven, upon their own direct .application, were registered, and of these, five voted against, one registered on the day of election voted for the subscription, and one did not vote. These ¡seventeen names were stricken from the list of voters by the county canvassing board when met to canvass the returns, after enquiry and proof of the facts stated, upon the ground of their incompetency to vote on such registration.

The whole number of votes cast, as shown by the returns, wap 1,953, reduced by the action of the board to 1,936, of *387 which 972 were in favor of subscription, being a majority of four votes. If the two rejected votes .for subscription are added to this majority, and any six of the other fifteen are counted, the .result is reversed; and even upon the construction of the statute that a majority of those voting is sufficient, as contended for the defendants, the subscription fails to obtain the popular approval.

The point thus presented then is this; Have the county canvassers the authority, in discharging their official.duties, to go behind the registry of voters and to examine into the regularity of the action of the registrars, and their associate judges of election, to strike from the roll the names of all such as they may deem to be improperly entered, and to change the voting lists accordingly ? The power, it must be conceded, is susceptible of great abuse, and its exercise in the present case neutralizes thé force of the popular will, as expressed at the ballot box in the form regulated by law. The proposition which .asserts that this power resides in such a body is so fundamentally at variance with the practical workings of our electoral system, and the well understood functions of the public agents charged with collecting and reporting the popular vote from .the different,precincts, that its bare statement would, seem to be its refutation. This will be fully manifest from an examination of the provisions of the law regulating .elections Act 1877, eh.. 275.

The registrars are required to revise the registration books so that they shall show an accurate list, of .electors previously registered, and still residing in their precincts or townships, without requiring the .electors tobe registered .anew, .and then for thirty days before an election to beep the book-s «open for the registration of such as are entitled to vote, and whose names have, not been previously registered ; and instead of this, the.board of justices may order .an entire new registration. .§ S.

*388 On the Saturday before the election, the registrar with the four appointed judges of election must attend at the place of election with his books open for inspection and challenge of any whose names have been entered. If any voter is challenged, a day and place are appointed for the trial of the challenge and the determination of the question of his legal qualifications, and if found incompetent, his name is erased. § 8.

On the day of election any elector may, and it is the duty of the judges to, challenge the vote of any person “ who may be known or suspected not to be a duly qualified voter.” § 14. Such are the safeguards thrown around the ballot box to preserve the elective franchise and protect it from illegal and fraudulent invasion. Obviously the whole duty of preparing the registration lists and rectifying errors, devolves exclusively upon these officers, and a supervising power over them and the other public agents conducting the election is not conferred upon that body, constituted of representatives from the several voting precincts, whose duty is to ascertain and declare the general result. The county canvassers are directed “ to open and canvass the returns, and make abstracts, stating the number of ballots cast in each precinct for each office, the name of each person voted for, and the number of votes given to each person for each different office ” and “ sign the same." § 25.

No authority is given to the board to revise the registry, nor to examine into the qualifications of those who have been allowed to vote, and whose names are on the returns, with a view to the erasure of such as are found tobe incompetent, any more than to enquire who offered to vote and were wrongfully refused, and for whom such person would have voted, in order to restore their names to the voting lists. The prosecution of such an enquiry is foreign to the purposes of their organization and would lead to embarrassments and delays seriously obstructing the. execution of the *389 election laws, and evidently not necessary in the performance of their duties, nor contemplated bj’’ the act creating the board.

To canvass, as defined by Worcester, “to sift,to examine, to scrutinize ” the returns, not the qualifications of the electors whose names appear therein, is the duty enjoined, and more specifically set out in the words that follow. They may and must determine the authenticity and regularity of the returns themselves; but when received, they must be counted as importing absolute verity, as far as the county canvassers are concerned, in determining the aggregate vote and its result. This we think fairly deducible as the true doctrine as to the functions of the county board, from the decisions in this and other states. Moore v. Jones, 76 N. C., 182; Swam v. McRae, 80 N. C., 111; Brightly Elections, 300, 306, 434; McCrary Elections, § 84, and numerous cases cited by both authors.

While in Swain v. McRae, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.C. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peebles-v-commissioners-of-davie-county-nc-1880.