Powell v. Holman

50 Ark. 85
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 50 Ark. 85 (Powell v. Holman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Holman, 50 Ark. 85 (Ark. 1887).

Opinion

SandbRS, Special Judge.

At the general state election, held on the 6th day of September, 1886, W. P. Powell and H. B. Holman were opposing candidates for the of-ifice of Sheriff of Hempstead county! ■ •

The clerk’s certificate of election was awarded to Powell as a result of the abstract of the vote made in •compliance with law from the authenticated returns of the election officers, and a commission was duly issued to him as sheriff, by the G-overnor of the State.

On the 22d day of September, 1886, the appellee, H. B. Holman, caused a notice of contest to be served on the -appellant, Powell, citing him to appear at the October term, 1886, of the Hempstead county court, to defend his contestation and claim to said office.

The record brought to this court discloses a trial in the county court, which lasted for a week or more and which resulted in a judgment in favor of Holman, the contestant, and by which it was adjudged that the said contestant was duly elected and legally entitled to the office of sheriff of Hempstead county, and the clerk of said court was directed to transmit to the Governor of the state a certified copy of said order and judgment.

From this judgment Powell appealed, in proper form, to the circuit court of Hempstead county, and on a trial anew before that court, judgment was again rendered in favor of the contestant for the office • of sheriff.- Powell moved the court for a new trial, which was refused, saved all proper exceptions of record, presented and filed bis. bill of exceptions and appealed to this court.

The specifications of contest under the statute must set out in detail the grounds of the contest, and when properly served by copy, and the original returned into court, operates as a complaint upon which the trial is had. The specifications of contest as set out in the record, although concise and tersely drawn, are necessarily long and exhibit much subject matter which so far as appears from the bill of exceptions, did not come before the trial court for consideration. It will be sufficiently comprehensive of all the questions involved on appeal, to set out the fifth, sixth and seventh paragraphs of the specifications of contest, which are as follows :

“Fifth, That at the election held at said precinct, No. 2, in said DeRoane township, the majority of the votes cast for said office of sheriff were cast for me, but were counted, computed and returned by the judges and clerks of the election for you.
“ Sixth, That at the election held at said precinct No. 2, in said DeRoane township, a large number of the votes cast for said office of sheriff, to wit: one hundred and fifty votes, which were cast for me, were illegally counted, computed and returned by the judges and clerks of the election for you.
“ Seventh, That at the election held at said precinct No. 2, in DeRoane township, of the five hundred and sixty-one votes cast, three hundred and forty-two thereof were cast for me for said®office of sheriff, but one hundred and fifty of the votes so cast for me were illegally couhted) commuted and returned by the judges and clerks of election as having been cast for you; and. that the county clerk and his associates, constituting the canvassing board of said county to open and compare the election returns and make abstracts of the votes given for the several candidates for each office, did consider and act upon said returns from said precinct No. 2, in De-Roane township, as being true and made in accordance-with law; and that said clerk did deposit the abstracts-of said election in the post office, directed to the Secretary of State, and did issue to you a certificate of election-in accordance with said returns. Whereas, in truth and in fact, said returns from said precinct No. 2 were fraudulent and void, and said certificate of election should have been issued to me, as the duly and legally elected sheriff' of Hempstead county, and not to you.”

The subject matter, set out in these three paragraphs,, constitute the basis of contest, and the vote in DeRoane township No. 2 was evidently conclusive of the rights, and claims of the respective parties to the office. No evidence was taken before the circuit court, or findings of fact, based upon any of the other specifications in the notice of contest. We shall, therefore, confine our considerations to the record facts bearing upon the findings of the court, and the judgment thereon, with reference to the vote in this township.

It is needless to restate, either in detail or in substance, the evidence as shown by the bill of exceptions. The-trial court, after hearing all the testimony detailed by the witnesses in person, made the following finding of facts:

“ The court finds that George W. Meek, P. C. Frederick and John M. Garner were the judges, and that George M. Ellis and B. E. Green were the clerks of the-election held at DeRoane precinct No. 2, in Hempstead county, on the 6th day of September,'1886, ahd 'that the votes were received in the usual way by Meek and were-numbered by Frederick and then placed in the box by Gardner. After the polls were closed, that Meek called most of the time the names from the ballots, and while he called Frederick took from him the ballots so called for examination and then passed, them to Garner, who placed them in a paper sack provided for fhat purpose. Ellis and Green kept the tally sheets. And the court Ends that it frequently occurred that their lists did not agree, and when this was made known they, as clerks, submitted the matter to the judges, as to what should be done, and that the judges decided that the hindmost list should be tallied to correspond with the foremost list, but that these discrepancies did not exist as to the vote for sheriff. And the court finds that at the conclusion of the •count, which was about midnight of the Tuesday following the election, that the clerks counted their tally sheets and announced the result of the votes as to the office of sheriff, and that the bystanders and election officers then dispersed for the night, with the understanding that the election officers were to meet at the polling place next morning and complete the returns. Ellis, the clerk, took the ballots in a sack, unsealed, aud the poll books and tally sheets, and put them in a wardrobe in the Odd Fellows’ Hall, under a combination lock. In this Hall the Knights of Honor, Odd Fellows, Knights of Labor and the Democratic Club held their meetings. No one remained with the election returns, and the next morning Ellis gets the returns from this place and returns them to the polling place, and places them on a shelf. The ■clerks then complete the task of casting the vote and entering the result ascertained in the poll books, the judges attest the poll books, and the ballots, so returned by Ellis, are by Meek and Frederick, two of the judges, placed in a paper sack, sealed, and delivered with the poll book and tally sheet to P. G. Frederick, to be by him delivered to the county clerk. And the court finds that Mr. Erederick so delivered the returns thus made up. And the court further finds that H. J.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Ark. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-holman-ark-1887.