People ex rel. Hull v. Taylor

100 N.E. 534, 257 Ill. 192
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 100 N.E. 534 (People ex rel. Hull v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Hull v. Taylor, 100 N.E. 534, 257 Ill. 192 (Ill. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Chiee Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

At the October term a petition was filed for a writ of mandamus against the respondents, who are the board of election commissioners of the city of Chicago and ex-officio commissioners of elections of the town of Cicero, requiring them to furnish ballots and ballot-boxes, in accordance with the requirements of the Ballot law, for the election to be held on November 5, 1912, in the city of Chicago and the town of Cicero. The relators are electors of the city of Chicago and candidates from different districts for representative in the General Assembly. The petition alleged the adoption in the city of Chicago of the “act to provide for the use of voting machines at elections,” etc., approved May 14, 1903; (Hurd’s Stat. 1911, p. 1065;) the appointment of the board of voting machine commissioners; their report recommending the Empire voting machine as complying with the law, and the intention of the respondents to install 460 of these machines in certain election precincts for use at the general election to be held on November 5, 1912. Objections are alleged against the use of the machine. It is alleged that the machine does not afford an opportunity to each voter to vote for the candidates of his choice for the office of presidential elector but only allows him to vote for all or none of the electors under one party name, and, if he chooses to vote for other candidates than, those indicated by a party name, only provides space for not exceeding seven names, and allows him to vote for those seven and no others. It is further áverred that in voting for representatives in the General Assembly the' law compels the voter to cast three votes and limits him to casting one vote for each of three candidates, three votes for one candidate or one and a half votes for each of two candidates, while in addition to these three ways the machine permits him to cast two votes for one candidate and one for another, or to cast one vote or two votes only. A further objection is that each elector cannot understandingly and within one minute cast his vote. It is also insisted that the law, as a whole, is unconstitutional.

An answer - was filed by the respondents, alleging the appointment of a board of voting machine commissioners, their examination of the Empire voting machine arid report that it complied with the requirements of the act, and the purchase by the respondents of a number of the machines. It was alleged that the machines were used at the primary elections in April, 1912, at which the relators were nominated, and the relators knew of the purchase of the. machines, their use at the primary election and of the respondents’ intention to have them used at the November election, 1912, many months before the petition was filed and in time to have applied at the June term of this court for the writ of mandamus now sought, but instead of'filing their petition then, they waited until the October term, only twenty-two days before the election. It was averred that by the use of paster printed ballots which will be' furnished at the election, a voter can divide his vote for presidential electors in any way he may choose; that the method of voting for representatives is in accordance with the constitutional and legal method of voting for such officers, and that any voter can understandingly and intelligently cast his vote by the use of said machine, upon all candidates, questions and propositions to be voted for, within one minute.

Issue was joined as to the allegation in the petition that the voter cannot intelligently and understandingly cast his vote by the use of the machine within one minute, and the remainder of the answer was demurred to.

The demurrer admits the averment of the answer that ample opportunity is afforded by the voting machine to vote for the full number of electoral candidates otherwise than by writing in their names, viz., by means of pasters made to fit the opening provided in the machine for that purpose, having the back gummed* and having printed on the face a list of the electoral candidates of a party, by the use of one or more of which pasters the voter may vote for any combination of electoral candidates he may choose to vote for. This appears to be a sufficient answer to the averments of the petition as to the vote for electors.

The answer admits that votes may be cast for candidates for representative in the General Assembly in the manner stated in the petition, and insists that such method is not only lawful, but that under the constitution the voter cannot be deprived of the right to divide his vote for representative in any of the ways possible by the use of the machine,—that is, one vote for each of three candidates, three votes for one candidate, one and a half votes for each of two candidates, or one vote for one candidate and two for another. The constitutional provision is found in sections 7 and 8 of article 4. It authorizes the voter to cast as many votes for one candidate as there are representatives to be elected, to divide his votes among .the candidates as he shall see fit, or to divide equal parts of his votes among the candidates as he shall see fit. This gives the right to cast two votes for one candidate and one for another if the voter sees fit to do so, and the objection made to the machine on account of its permitting this method of voting is therefore of no force.

On the issue of fact it is averred, on the one hand, that it will be impossible for each elector understandingly within one minute to cast his vote by said voting machine for all the candidates of his choice and for or against all public policy questions and proposed bond issues, and on the other hand, that it is easily possible for each elector understandingly within one minute to cast his vote by said machine for all the candidates of his choice and for or against all public policy questions and proposed bond issues. It is insisted on behalf of the respondents that the action of the board of voting machine commissioners and the board of election commissioners in determining that the voting machines complied with the requirements of the law in this particular should be held conclusive upon this question; that the powers conferred on these officers require the exercise of judgment and are discretionary in their character, and that their determination of the question of fact is final. If a discretionary power is exercised so as to produce a manifest injustice, the courts may interfere to require its due exercise and prevent a public wrong. (Village of Glencoe v. People, 78 Ill. 382; Illinois State Board of Dental Examiners v. People, 123 id. 227.) If votes cannot, in fact, be cast upon the machines within the time allowed by law, their use will result in some voters being deprived of their votes. Such an injustice, if clearly shown, will justify the interference of the court to afford a remedy by mandamus. It is alleged "in the answer that the voting machines in question have been in satisfactory use in various cities of different States for a number of years, and that arrangements have been made for the instruction on the day of election, and before that day, of-voters in the use of the machine. On the argument of the cause one of the machines was present and demonstrations of the manner of its use were made by various persons. Fifty-three officers were to be voted for besides the presidential electors, and there were three public policy questions and four propositions to issue bonds. There were party nominations by six parties, although one was for a part, only, of the offices.

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Bluebook (online)
100 N.E. 534, 257 Ill. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hull-v-taylor-ill-1912.