Petition of Anderson

107 N.W.2d 496, 12 Wis. 2d 530, 1961 Wisc. LEXIS 394
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 107 N.W.2d 496 (Petition of Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petition of Anderson, 107 N.W.2d 496, 12 Wis. 2d 530, 1961 Wisc. LEXIS 394 (Wis. 1961).

Opinion

Broadfoot, J.

Upon this appeal three absentee ballots are challenged. They were included among the 10 challenged in the proceedings in circuit court. One of the ballots is challenged because the application therefor was requested one day before the election. The second ballot is challenged because the application therefor was dated two days before the election. The third ballot is challenged because the application therefor was made more than sixty days before the election.

It is contended by the petitioner that none of the three ballots can be counted because of the provisions of sec. 11.57, Stats., which reads as follows:

“Upon receipt of such request not less than three days prior to such election, such clerk, or his deputy or deputies shall write on the back and outside of the official ballot in the space for the official indorsement of the ballot clerk, his initials or name and his official title and shall mail to the *533 applicant, postage prepaid, said official ballot or ballots if more than one are to be voted at said election or such officer shall deliver said ballot or ballots to the applicant personally at the office of the clerk, not less than one secular day before said election. Any such ballot not mailed or delivered personally as herein stated shall not be counted.”

Although statutes permitting absentee voting have been in existence for a number of years and although the language thereof is sometimes ambiguous and in one instance, which we will mention, inconsistent, there have not been many cases involving the construction of these statutes brought to our attention. Among the more-recent cases are Sommerfeld v. Board of Canvassers, 269 Wis. 299, 69 N. W. (2d) 235; Olson v. Lindberg, 2 Wis. (2d) 229, 85 N. W. (2d) 775; and Kaufmann v. La Crosse City Board of Canvassers, 8 Wis. (2d) 182, 98 N. W. (2d) 422. In the Sommerfeld Case we said, pages 302, 303 :

“Our statutes are not only divided into chapters but they are divided into titles. Title II, denominated ‘Elections,’ embraces chapters 5 through 12 of the statutes. Sec. 5.011, Stats., provides that Title II shall be construed so as to give effect to the will of the electors, if that can be ascertained, notwithstanding informality or failure to comply with some of its provisions. . . .
“. . . In passing upon statutes regulating absentee voting, the court should look to the whole and every part of the election laws, the intent of the entire plan, the reasons and spirit for their adoption, and try to give effect to every portion thereof.”

Throughout the statutes with reference to elections the intent of the legislature is apparent. It is to encourage and assist qualified electors to cast their ballots for candidates of their choice. To prevent fraud, the legislature in some instances has specifically stated that there must be strict compliance with a statute or a ballot cannot be counted. In so far as we have been called upon to construe the statutes *534 we have held that where the legislature has provided in explicit language that absentee ballots shall not be counted unless certain provisions of the statute are complied with, compliance with those provisions is mandatory. Where it has not done so expressly and in clear language we have held that the provisions regulating absentee voting are directory, and that strict compliance therewith is not required.

Sec. 11.55, Stats., refers to the application of qualified electors for absentee ballots. There is no direction by the legislature that applications not strictly in conformity therewith disqualify voters who are otherwise eligible to vote. A time element is expressed therein which states that electors may apply not more than sixty nor less than three days before an election for ballots to be forwarded to them by mail. Or they may apply in person to the proper election official at his office not later than during the regular office hours of the day prior to an election and there vote. In sec. 11.57, which is quoted above, the sixty-day period is not mentioned but the clerk is directed to mail ballots not less than three days prior to an election upon proper application being made.

The trial court held that the time element in both sections was directory. Any other construction would make the two sections inconsistent. A qualified elector has a right by statute to apply by mail for ballots within three days prior to an election. If a qualified elector in Milwaukee made application for ballots three days before an election the application would not normally be received in the office of the board of election commissioners until after the expiration of the three-day period. If all of sec. 11.57, Stats., is held to be mandatory and no ballots could be mailed less than three days prior to an election, then electors who had fully complied with sec. 11.55 would be deprived of their right to vote.

In our search for the legislative intent in the language employed in these two sections we note that time itself is not the essential point. An elector may apply in person at the *535 office of the clerk or of the board of election commissioners one day prior to an election. This is another indication of the fact that the legislature is attempting to encourage and to assist qualified electors who will be unable to appear at the polls on election day.

One elector filed an application for ballots more than sixty days prior to the election held on April 5, 1960. The petitioner claims that invalidates the ballots that were mailed in response to that application, perhaps ten days prior to the election. The secretary of the board of election commissioners testified at the hearing herein and stated in detail what their procedure was. Early applications received before ballots are ready for distribution are checked with the poll list to see that the applicant is a qualified voter. A list thereof is made which is open for public inspection. The applications are filed alphabetically and when the ballots are ready for distribution they are mailed out at one time to all then on the list. Later applications are serviced as they arrive.

If the sixty-day period was a mandatory provision the secretary of the board, as a conscientious official, should have, and presumably would have, notified the applicant that the request for ballots could not be fulfilled because the application was dated a couple of days too early. This would have permitted the applicant to file a new application. We do not feel that it would be within the bounds of reason to require this added detail, and we affirm the finding of the trial court that the ballots issued in response to that application could be validly voted.

The petitioner insists that the last sentence of sec. 11.57, Stats., makes all of the language within the section mandatory. As we have stated above, such construction could make that section inconsistent with sec. 11.55 and deprive voters otherwise qualified, and who have done everything they were directed to do by the statute, of their right to vote. We firmly believe this would be contrary to the legislative intent *536

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Bluebook (online)
107 N.W.2d 496, 12 Wis. 2d 530, 1961 Wisc. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petition-of-anderson-wis-1961.