Russell v. Stevens

106 A. 115, 118 Me. 101, 1919 Me. LEXIS 33
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 8, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 106 A. 115 (Russell v. Stevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Stevens, 106 A. 115, 118 Me. 101, 1919 Me. LEXIS 33 (Me. 1919).

Opinion

Cornish, C. J.

These four petitions were brought under R. S., Chap. 7, Secs. 87-91, the petitioners-claiming that they were respectively elected to the offices of Sheriff, Clerk of Courts, Register of Deeds and County Attorney of Androscoggin County at the State election held on September 9, 1918. The cases involved the same questions and were tried together. After a full hearing, all the petitions were dismissed by the single Justice. They are now before us on appeal. As presented to the single Justice the issues were two: First: As to the legal counting of certain disputed ballots; Second: As to alleged fraudulent practices in Ward 4 in the City of Auburn and the legal effect thereof.

Under the first issue, one hundred and eighty-four disputed ballots were submitted to the single Justice and were passed upon by him. His findings and the reasons therefor are stated at length in his written decision. So far as this appeal is concerned, and the questions argued before us, his determination in all these disputed ballots, except possibly in eleven, is acquiesced in by the parties, and the consideration of these eleven becomes unnecessary under the conclusion arrived at on the other and main issue of the case.

[103]*103The result of the Justice’s 'tabulation in the entire, county, not including the ballots from said Ward 4, is as follows:

For Sheriff:
C. J. Russell. 4779
Ferdinand E. Stevens. 4775
Russell’s plurality. 4
For ClerK of Courts :
Charles P. Lemaire. O OO -cH
John E. Reade. O CO ^
Lemaire’s plurality. 72
For Register of Deeds :
William P. Lambert. 4780
Nathaniel P. Gould. 4726
Lambert’s plurality. 54
For County Attorney:
John D. Clifford, Jr.. CO <M OO
Albert E. Verrill. CO CO t>
Clifford’s plurality. 87

The tabulation of all the votes in Ward 4, by the Justice, is a follows:

Fob. Sheriff:
Ferdinand E. Stevens tO CD OO
C. J. Russell. H-1
Stevens’ plurality. 149
[104]*104For ClerK of Courts:
John L. Reade. CO CD to
Charles P. Lemaire... ! — 1 Cn ^
Reade’s plurality. 138
For Register of Deeds:
Nathaniel P. Gould. r — ( <N
William P. Lambert. Cn r-i
Gould’s plurality. 139
For County Attorney:
Albert E. Verrill. bO 00 00
John D. Clifford, Jr.. H* Cn CO
Verrill’s plurality. 135

Including all the ballots of Ward 4, as above, the net result of the tabulation in the county is as follows:

Stevens’ plurality.149- 4=145
Reade’s ” .138-72= 66
Gould’s ” .139-54= 85
Verrffl’s ” .135-87 = 48

This brings us to a discussion of the legal effect of the illegal ballots and the fraudulent conduct in Ward 4. When the ballot-box was opened at the close of the polls, it was found to contain 456 ballots. The number of names checked on the incoming list was 396, and that represents the number of voters who voted and therefore the legal number of ballots cast. The ballot-box therefore contained these sixty spurious votes. The single Justice found that this result was rendered possible by utter disregard of the election laws on the part of ward officers and election clerks, and that these spurious ballots were fraudulently deposited in the ballot-box with the knowledge and connivance, if not with the active participation of the warden, who did not see fit to testify in the case, although present at the hearing.

[105]*105The petitioners, in their petitions, base their claims to office upon the proposition that because of these irregularities and fraudulent practices in Ward 4, the entire' vote of said ward should be rejected, the legal and illegal votes being so commingled that the exact legal vote cannot be determined.

This was the legal issue as presented to the single Justice at the time of the hearing, and upon this point the Justice held as follows:

“By proof of these fraudulent acts the record and return of' this election in Ward 4 in the City of Auburn have been impeached. Their value as legal evidence of the result in that ward has been destroyed; their probative force is gone. Attorney General v. Newell, 85 Maine, 273, 276; People ex rel. Judson v. Thatcher, 55 N. Y., 525; 14 Amer. Rep., 312; McCrary on Elections, 4th ed., SeA 569, 570. The cases cited on brief of petitioners’ counsel amply sustain this conclusion.

But the case shows that there were 395 voters in that ward who legally cast their votes at that election; at least there is no evidence to show otherwise; only one naipe of the 396 checked on the incoming check lists, has been shown to have been fraudulently checked, and that through impersonation of the voter by another. We do not know what ballots these legal voters cast, or for whom they voted; the fraudulent ballots carry no marks. I cannot assume that they were all cast for the Republican candidates in these cases, although if I were to do so, all the respondents except Mr. Verrill would be shown to be elected. Some of .these fraudulent ballots may have been cast for Democratic candidates, and some may not have been cast for any party to these petitions.

The petitioners contend that the true vote, therefore, cannot be ascertained and that the entire vote of the ward must be rejected. I cannot accede to this contention. The vote cast in that ward becomes a matter of proof by other evidence than the record and return. In a leading and oft cited case, it is said, ‘In election cases, if the return is discredited, so that it is no longer evidence of the right of the party claiming under it, then the question who received the majority of the votes is to be ascertained by other legal proof. The vote of the district or precinct to which the return relates is not to be disregarded. The electors ought not to be disfranchised because no return is made, or because it has been rendered valueless by the fraud or mistakes of others.In this case if the return was [106]*106rejected, the parties were remitted to other proof to ascertain the result of the election in the disputed district.’ People ex rel. Judson v. Thatcher, supra, 14 Amer. Rep., at page 321. So in the instant cases I think that the value of the record and return as evidence having been destroyed, the vote of the entire ward is not to be rejected, but the parties were remitted to other evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
106 A. 115, 118 Me. 101, 1919 Me. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-stevens-me-1919.