Ramsey v. Howard

36 P.2d 602, 148 Or. 542, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 200
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 P.2d 602 (Ramsey v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramsey v. Howard, 36 P.2d 602, 148 Or. 542, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 200 (Or. 1934).

Opinion

KELLY, J.

At the primary election held on the 18th day of May, 1934, the parties hereto were candidates opposing each other for the Democratic nomination for the office of district attorney for Jefferson county.

Contestee urges that the circuit court erred in finding that contestee was guilty of intimidating voters, soliciting a vote on election day, of paying for loss or damage due to attendance at the polls or in registering; and also in finding that contestant was not guilty of having colonized voters.

Contestee concedes that an appeal such as this, that is, an appeal from a judgment of the trial court in an election contest, is not to be tried de novo, and that the trial court’s findings upon the evidence are conclusive upon the appellate court. It is argued that the trial court erred in its deductions from the facts and that its conclusions of law are erroneous.

Edward Metcalf, an Indian, testified that he was working in an Indian Emergency Conservation camp known as HeHe in Wasco county, Oregon; that his *544 family was with him at said camp; that on the 16th day of April, 1934, he had registered as a Democratic voter in Jefferson connty; that about twenty days before the primary election contestee came to the camp introduced himself to Metcalf, told Metcalf that contestee was the district attorney; that since Metcalf had his family there in camp, it would be the same as living in a different county; that Metcalf would not have a right to vote in Jefferson county, and that if Metcalf voted there his vote would be liable to challenge.

Metcalf further testified:

“Q. Is that all he said about challenge?
“ A. Yes. — Well, no, he said if you voted down in a different county you might be liable to perjury for voting in a different county from where you were. I did not know.
“Q. Did you cast a vote at the primary election on May 18,1934?
“A. No, I did not.
“Q. Prior to this conversation with Mr. Howard, did you intend to cast your vote ?
“A. Yes.
“Q. What effect, if anything, did Mr. Howard’s conversation have upon you with reference to your voting?
“A. It gave me the impression that I was not entitled to vote since I lived in a different county, so I did not think it was worth while to try to vote under those conditions.”

Dowd Franklin, another Indian, testified that he was registered as a Democratic voter in Jefferson county; that he knew that contestee was the district attorney; that between the time of registering and the date of the primary election, he, Franklin, was working at said HeHe camp; and that contestee came to said *545 camp after Franklin had registered and had a talk with him. When asked to relate the substance of the conversation, he said:

“A couple of boys were up there when Howard (contestee) came up to talk to me, and he spoke to me about voting. I told him I was a registered voter and I would not mind voting. And he came up there and stated that he would question the vote, or it could be thrown out at the polls — whatever the heck of it was.”

Upon being again asked to tell exactly what Mr. Howard said, or, as nearly as he could remember, the substance of it, Franklin testified:

“Well, the substance of it was that he could either cancel the vote or throw it out, whatever the heck of it it is. That is all I understood of it. That is all I cared to understand about it.”

Franklin also testified that he did not vote at the election. When asked why he did not vote, he said:

“Well, for the simple reason that I thought it was no use voting.”

When asked why he thought there was no use in voting, he said:

“Well it had me in a way so it would be almost a waste of time, and even could get in trouble about voting. Eather than go 26 miles for nothing, I thought, well, we will just leave it go.”

Herbert Wabno, another Indian, testified that he was a registered Democratic voter in Jefferson county; that he was group foreman at the old Mill camp on the Warm Springs reservation where he was employed from July 8, 1933; that after Wabno had registered, contestee came to said camp and told Wabno that he could not vote, because he was in the wrong county; that because Wabno slept in Wasco county, that county *546 was the place of his residence. Wabno also testified that he voted at said primary election.

Wabno also testified that eontestee told him that eontestee was the district attorney; bnt that did not mean anything to him.

The eontestee testified that he said nothing about perjury to Franklin and that, after being advised that Franklin, Metcalf and Wabno had resided in Jefferson county, he told them that he would not challenge their votes. As stated, however, it is conceded that we are bound by the finding of the trial court upon the facts; and, hence, we are constrained to hold that where the prosecuting officer of a county is a candidate for renomination at a primary election, and solely in the interest of his candidacy for renomination such officer advises two registered voters of the party to which the officer and the voters belong that they have no right to vote where they are registered, and suggests to one of them that a charge of perjury may result if he should vote, such officer thereby makes use of undue influence in order to induce the voters thus treated to refrain from voting the ticket of their political party contrary to the letter and spirit of section 36-2427, Oregon Code 1930.

Contestee cites the case of United States v. Guion, 37 Fed. 263, to the point that the trial court erred in so holding. In that case, the defendant had been in-dieted for intimidation of a voter named Butler. The testimony tended to show that the accused was at the polls for the purpose of scrutinizing the vote cast, and that he believed that Butler was not a qualified voter and that he challenged the vote solely in consequence of such belief. It differs from the case at bar in that the accused was not a prosecuting officer, the chai *547 lenge was made at the proper time and place, and no threat of a charge of perjury accompanied it.

Ben Bellamy, Jr., testified that he was a resident of Meadows; that on primary election day, he was at Warm Springs, working for the I. E. C. W.; that about 10 a. m. of that day at Warm Springs, contestee and Bellamy had a conversation in which contestee said in effect that he would bring to Bellamy a transfer card, which would enable him to vote at Warm Springs. The testimony of Bellamy also is to the effect that contestee said that Bellamy’s father was strongly opposed to contestee and that contestee was wondering if Bellamy, Jr., was also opposed to contestee. Young Bellamy also testified that his father’s attitude did not influence him in his voting.

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Bluebook (online)
36 P.2d 602, 148 Or. 542, 1934 Ore. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-howard-or-1934.