Skelton v. Ulen

117 S.W. 32, 217 Mo. 383, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 283
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 32 (Skelton v. Ulen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skelton v. Ulen, 117 S.W. 32, 217 Mo. 383, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 283 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

BURGESS, J.

This is an action, begun in the circuit court of Stoddard county, to contest the election of Samuel Ulen to the office of collector of the revenue of said county at the general election held on November 8, 1904.

At said general election the .contestants, R. A, Skelton and F. A. Brannock, were the nominees respectively of the Socialist and Democratic parties, and the contestee, Samuel Ulen, the nominee of the Republican party, for said office. According to the returns from said county, Brannock received 2,115' votes; Skelton, 133 votes, and Ulen, 2,271 votes. Upon these. returns, the certificate of election was issued to Ulen, who qualified and assumed charge of the office.

[386]*386In dne time after the election, Skelton and Brannock jointly instituted this proceeding, and at the September term, 1906, of said court, the matter was heard, and judgment rendered in favor of the contestee, from which judgment, after an ineffectual motion for a new trial, the contestants appealed.

The election of Ulen is contested on the ground of alleged irregularities at Dexter precinct, in Liberty township, said county, where 252 votes were cast and counted for Brannock, 36 for Skelton, and 446 for Ulen, a total of. 734; and the effort is made to have the entire vote of this precinct rejected, in which event Brannock would be entitled to the office as being the recipient of the largest number of legal votes cast in said county for said office.

The grounds of contest as set up by the contestants are, in substance, as follows:

1. That the election judges at Dexter precinct wilfully and fraudulently admitted persons other than the. judges and clerks of election into the room where the ballots were being .counted, at the time the count was in progress, in violation of section 6996, Revised Statutes 1899', which provides: “No person or persons shall be admitted' into the room or office where such ballots are being counted, except the judges and clerks of election. Provided, that any political party may select a representative man who may be admitted as a witness-of such counting.”

2. That the election judges fraudulently refused to allow O. D. Bailey, who had been selected by the Socialist party to witness the count of the ballots, to remain in the polling place to watch the counting of the ballots, and that said Bailey was, “with the knowledge and consent of the election judges,” forcibly ejected from the room, in violation of the proviso contained in said section 6996.

3. That said judges fraudulently suffered voters [387]*387whom they knew were not entitled to vote at Dexter precinct, to vote at that place.

4. That the judges of election “fraudulently failed and refused to furnish the electors who presented themselves to vote for said office of collector of the revenue of said county, and for other offices to he filled at said election, with ballots as provided and required by section 7104 of said Eevised Statutes,” and furnished said electors with one ballot only, instead of one ballot for each political party voted for at said election, unless express demand was made by the elector for said ballots.

5. That no screens were provided for the booths at said polling place, nor guard rails to prevent persons having no authority from coming nearer than five feet of the ballot boxes and booths, and that “divers persons, having no right or authority whatsoever, were in and about the ballot boxes and the booths or compartments, and within less than five feet thereof, while the electors were preparing their ballots, and while the ballots were being exposed for counting by said judges.”

6. That the election judges, in violation of the statute, “electioneered” with the electors who came into said voting place to cast their ballots.

7.. That said judges absented themselves from the polls of said precinct, so that at times less than a majority thereof was present.

8. That the ballots were not taken out of the ballot boxes one at a time to be counted, as provided by section 6996, Eevised Statutes 1899, but were “by said counting judges taken from said ballot boxes in bulk, and by them sorted out and arranged in piles or lots of ten cast for each political party voted for, and in such piles or lots pretendingly counted ten at a time, and thus entered upon the poll books.”

The evidence shows that the polling place was in a large room, eighty feet long and twenty-five feet [388]*388wide, and which had been used for the same purpose at previous elections. The table of the distributing judges was in front, near the door; the table of the receiving- judges near the center of the room, and that of the counting judges at the further end, some twenty feet back of the voting booths, which were arranged on both sides of the room, near the center. The voters were admitted at the front door, and after voting retired from the room by the same door. There were seven or eight booths, some of which were without screens, and there was no guard-rail provided, as required by section 7103, Revised Statutes 1899.

The only person in the polling place other than the judges and clerks of election, and the voters who came in, voted and retired from the room, was Noah Fields, constable, who kept the door at the. solicitation of the judges. He was not at the counting table till after the polls were closed and the ballots nearly all counted, and he learned nothing about the ballot then. There was no evidence whatever that any of the judges of election electioneered with the voters, or attempted to influence any voter in any way; nor was there any evidence that any person, other than the judges and clerks of election, overheard the count or obtained any information as to the state of the vote until the same was formally announced; nor was it shown that there was less than a majority of the judges present at the polling place at any time that day. The evidence also shows that the distributing judges tried to get the electors who presented. themselves for voting to take one ballot of each political party voted for, but that in some instances the voter asked for or selected one ticket only, which he prepared and voted as he chose; but it is not of record that any elector was refused any or all of the ballots to which he was entitled.

The record shows that G. D. Bailey was appointed as a watcher for the Socialist party at Dexter pre[389]*389cinct. He first appeared at the polls in the morning of the day of election, and voted, and then, after electioneering outside of the polls for the Socialist ticket, he left. He did not again appear at the polling place until after the polls were closed, when he presented himself in the capacity of a watcher, and was admitted. After he had witnessed the counting of the ballots for some time, some of the judges objected to his remaining longer for the reason that he had not been sworn. He then left, went to the office of a justice of the peace, who administered the oath, but he did not return to the polling place until the ballots were nearly all counted, -when he tried to get in, and was refused admittance by the constable who kept the door inside. According to Bailey’s own evidence, he did not give his name at that time or state what he was there for. He did not state that he had been sworn as a watcher, but tried to force the door. It was then about nine o’clock, and quite dark.

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Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 32, 217 Mo. 383, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skelton-v-ulen-mo-1909.