Sailor v. Rankin

189 S.W. 357, 125 Ark. 557, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 207
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 23, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 189 S.W. 357 (Sailor v. Rankin) 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
Sailor v. Rankin, 189 S.W. 357, 125 Ark. 557, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 207 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Perry County in a proceeding instituted to contest the result of an election held for the purpose of voting on the proposed removal of the county seat of that county from Perryville. There were two towns to which a removal was proposed, Perry and Bigelow, and each of those places received a very substantial number of votes. The county election commissioners rejected the returns from four precincts and omitted them from their return to the county court. On- the hearing of this contest in the circuit court on appeal from the county court, it was conceded by both sides to the contest that the elections held in those four townships, and two others, were void, and that the returns from the six townships should be entirely excluded, which the circuit court accordingly, did.

The face of the returns, with those six townships excluded, showed the following result: Total vote, 1869; for removal, 1,264; against removal, 594; for Bigelow-, 1,175; for Perry, 635. The clerk’s certified list of persons who had paid poll tax for the preceding year showed a total of 2,004 qualified electors. It thus appeared from the face of the returns that a majority of the votes cast at the election and also a majority of the total vote according to the number óf poll taxes paid, was in favor of the proposal to remove the county seat and to establish the same at the town of Bigelow. Certain citizens thereupon instituted a contest in the county court on behalf of the town of Perry over the question of removal to Bigelow, and subsequently the appellees instituted a like proceeding on behalf of the town of Perryville contesting the vote on said removal, and the vote in favor of Bigelow.

Appellants filed their response on behalf of' the town of Bigelow, and also a counter contest asking for the exclusion of the returns from the six townships already referred to. Each of the contests was based on alleged irregularities and frauds in four townships, constituting separate voting precincts, viz.: Casa, Roland, Houston and Perry, the last named township being the one in which the town of Bigelow is situated.-

When the case was called for trial in the circuit court, the contestants on behalf of the town of Perry, withdrew their contest, and the cause proceeded to trial upon the contest of appellees on behalf of the town of Perryville. The court sustained the returns as made by the election officers in Houston and Perry townships, but excluded the vote from the other two townships, holding that the charges of fraud had been sustained. The circuit court decided, however, that the contestees had established the validity of 30 votes east in Roland Township in favor of removal and in favor .of Bigelow, and also had established the validity of 13 votes in Casa Township. It was therefore adjudged that the proposal to remove the county seat from Perryville, and the votes in favor of Bigelow, did not constitute a majority of the electors, and that both propositions had been lost. The contestees thereupon prosecuted the appeal to this court.

It is only necessary for us to review the decision of the court with respect to the election in Casa and Roland Townships, for in all other respects the decisions of the trial court were in favor of appellants.

It is contended, in the first place, that neither the pleadings nor the testimony warranted the judgment of the court excluding the returns from Casa and Roland townships. It is argued that the petitions for contest only attack the validity of specifically mentioned ballots in those two townships, and did not question the integrity of the returns as a whole. We find, however, on examination of the petition, that it is charged therein that the judges “committed such fraud and misconduct in the holding of said election in each of said predincts as to render the election therein void,” and that the fraud and misconduct consisted of permitting a large number of persons to vote who were not qualified electors, some of whom did not reside in the precinct or county; that the election officers in said township electioneered with voters in the polling places, and that they fraudulently registered as voting certain persons who did not appear at all at the polls, and that they fraudulently changed the ballots of voters who cast their ballots against removal, so as to show that the same had been cast in favor of removal.

While the rule is that pleadings in a special statutory proceeding of this kind should be construed with some strictness, that does not mean that there should be such a technical construction of the pleadings as would defeat the obvious meaning and intention of the pleader. It was obviously the intention of the contestants to attack the validity of the whole return in each of the four townships mentioned, and it would be a very narrow interpretation of the language used in the petition to say that it was only intended to exclude certain votes. This intention is very plain when considered in connection with the fact that substantially all of the votes in those four townships were in favor of removal,- and in favor of the town of Bigelow, and the effort of contestants was to sbow fraud of a general nature which would destroy the integrity of the returns of the election officers.

(1-2) In support of the contention that the proof is insufficient to show such fraud as would warrant an exclusion of the whole poll of the two townships mentioned, learned counsel rely upon the rule which the authorities cited in their brief show to be well established, to the effect that the power to reject an entire poll being a dangerous power, “it should be exercised only in extreme eases, that is to say, in a case where it is impossible to ascertain with reasonable certainty the true vote.” McCrary on Elections, section 523; Patton v. Coats, 41 Ark. 111; Webb v. Bowden, 124 Ark. 244. On the other hand, it is equally well settled that where, in a given voting precinct, it is shown that fraud was promiscuously committed by the elección officers which affected the result to an extent, the exact limits of which it is impossible from the testimony to ascertain, and which fairly draws in question the integrity of the whole returns, the same should be thrown out entirely and omitted from the count, leaving each party the opportunity to prove by other evidence the number of legal ballots actually cast. Rhodes v. Driver, 69 Ark. 501.

(3) We have here a finding of the trial judge to the effect that the fraud was sufficiently proved to justify the exclusion of the whole of the returns from Casa and Roland townships, and our sole inquiry here is directed to the question whether or not the testimony is legally sufficient to support the findings of the trial court. Schuman v. Sanderson, 73 Ark. 187.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 S.W. 357, 125 Ark. 557, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sailor-v-rankin-ark-1916.