Richardson v. Gregg

1930 OK 327, 290 P. 190, 144 Okla. 102, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 671
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 1, 1930
Docket19258
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1930 OK 327 (Richardson v. Gregg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Gregg, 1930 OK 327, 290 P. 190, 144 Okla. 102, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 671 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

EAGLETON, C.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Garvin county in a suit filed by defendants in error, as tax-paying voters of district No. 32, declaring void and illegal an election held for the purpose of issuing bonds to build a sehoolhouse in said district and permanently enjoining the issuance of bonds pursuant to said election. At said election 119 votes' were cast, 72 of which were for the bonds and 47 against. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Unless two persons, W. A. Hargis and Lillie Hargis, his wife, who offered but were refused the right to vote, were entitled to vote, the bond election was carried ■by a three-fifths majority as required by law. (Constitution, art. 10, sec. 26.) A school district election is void where qualified electors are corruptly and fraudulently deprived of an opportunity to vote sufficient in number, had they been counted for the losing side, to have changed the result of the election. Martin v. McGarr, 27 Okla. 653, 117 Pac. 323. This case was cited with approval in Jackson v. Orendorff, 139 Okla. 82, 281 Pac. 147. It is contended by plaintiffs in error that Hargis and his wife were not qualified electors and had no right to vote in said election, and in the second place that even if they were qualified electors, their vote was challenged and they waived their right to vote by refusing to make an affidavit as to their qualifications as required by the school board, who under the law were acting as election officials in holding said election.

Mr. and Mrs. Hargis had lived in Oklahoma for many years, though their immediate place of residence seems to have changed frequently. According to their own testimony, which is unrefuted, Garvin county had been their home for at least four or five years preceding this election. They had lived within this school district since April 23rd preceding this election held on July 14, 1927. The defendants insist that these parties were not residents of the school district, but were in fact transients. It is true these parties did not own property in Garvin county, but they had lived there. Mr. Hargis was a laborer, working sometimes on farms, sometimes in town; he went where he could gain employment. The year before this election he spent some three months in Texas picking cotton, and had his family with 'him. He had, however, some of his household things stored in Garvin county during that period, and returned to Garvin county thereafter. The year this election was held he rented a farm in the school district and farmed it. It . seems that he sold his crop and was again returning to Texas to pick cotton before this trial was had, which caused the taking of his deposition, but the fact that his employment took him from place to place does not destroy his residence. '20 O. J. page 69, states the general rule.

“While there is no absolute criterion by which to determine one’s place of residence, ■but each ease must depend upon its particular facts and circumstances, yet three rules seem to be reasonably established: (1) That a man must have a residence somewhere; (2) that when once established it is presumed to continue until a new one is established: and (3) that a man can have but one domicile of citizenship at a time.”

To the same effect is Stevens v. Union Graded School Dist. No. 2, 136 Okla. 10, 275 Pac. 1056. This court in a recent decision, Jones v. School Dist. No. 96 et al., 144 Okla. 10, 289 Pac. 268, determined the qualifications of voters in school bond elections, saying:

*104 “Under the Constitution, art. 10, sec. 20, and art. 3, sec. 1, a voter or elector qualified to' vote at a school district bond election is one who possesses all the qualifications enumerated in the Constitution, and who is a bona fide resident of the school district.”

That is, that he must have resided in the state one year, in the county six months', and in the precinct 30 days. The fact-that Mr. and Mrs. Hargis were in Texas for a few months during the cotton picking season did not change their domicile and did not cause them to lose their residence so as to defeat their right to vote. Were the election officials permitted to pass on the qualifications of those offering themselves to vote, as they did in this case, they might endeavor to make an intelligence test qualification and find that no one is qualified to vote who differs with them, the election officials, on how they should vote. The Constitution saves the election officials from this burdensome task, from assuming this responsibility, and if they see that the constitutional requirements are met, they may feel satisfied in mind and conscience that they have fully performed their duty to their state or municipality. Thomas v. Reid, 142 Okla. 38, 285 Pac. 92. These parties in offering to vote apparently were fully qualified to vote, and no reason appears for refusing to permit them to exercise that right which is theirs under our Constitution, and the denial of this privilege to Hargis and his wife was fraudulent.

We next come to the claim of the defendants that Mr. and Mrs. Hargis waived their demand to vote by refusing to make affidavit as to their qualifications. The duty of the election board in case a voter is chal-' lenged is prescribed in section 10341, C. O. S. 1921, which reads:

“If any person offering to vote at a school district meeting shall be challenged as unqualified by any legal voter, the chairman presiding shall declare to the person challenged the qualifications of a voter, and if such challenge he not withdrawn, the chairman, who is hereby authorized, shall tender to the person offering to vote the following oath or affirmation: ‘You do solemnly swear (or affirm) that you are an actual resident of this school district and that you are qualified by law to vote at this meeting.’ Any person taking such oath or affirmation shall be entitled to vote on all questions voted upon at such meeting.”

Mr. Richardson, who seemed to be in charge of the election when these parties presented themselves to vote, testified that he told them that he was advised thát they were not qualified voters and that he must challenge their vote, and that he told them, further, to be qualified that they must have been within the state for the preceding year, Garvin county the preceding six months, and in the precinct the preceding 30 days, and that if they had not been there for that period, they were not qualified, but that if they would make affidavit that they had been in Oklahoma a year, Garvin county the preceding six months, and in the precinct there 30 days, he would let them vote, and that he advised them that he did not think they were entitled to vote. He did not offer them the affidavit prescribed by statute, excusing himself by saying that they left before he had a chance to prepare the affidavit. He did state that he offered to prepare an affidavit for them. On the other hand, Mr. and Mrs. Hargis each testified that he told them that if they had been out of the state within a year they were not qualified voters and that he would advise them not to vote. They further testified that he told them that they must have lived in the state for at least twelve months.

Mr. Hargis testified with reference to this challenge:

“He said if I would sign an affidavit that I had not been out of the state for the last 12 months, I could vote.”

Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 327, 290 P. 190, 144 Okla. 102, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-gregg-okla-1930.