Smith v. Hackett

98 A. 140, 129 Md. 73, 1916 Md. LEXIS 116
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 31, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 98 A. 140 (Smith v. Hackett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Hackett, 98 A. 140, 129 Md. 73, 1916 Md. LEXIS 116 (Md. 1916).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant and appellee were candidates of the democratic and republican parties, respectively, for the office of county commissioner of Dorchester County at the last general election. Upon the certified returns the appellee was. elected by a, plurality of twenty-seven votes. In this proceeding the appellant disputes the declared result and asserts that he in fact received a larger number of valid votes than the appellee, and was therefore duly elected.

The principal ground of the contest is that the polling place provided by the Supervisors of Election, for the second precinct of the seventh election district of the county, was located in the first precinct of that district, where the vote of the second precinct, which was largely in favor of the’ appellee, is said to have been cast and counted without legal right. The record shows that the second precinct of the seventh district includes a portion of the City of Cambridge and *75 a considerable section of outlying, territory. The greater part, of the voting population of the precinct resides in the city. It has, been customary to hold the elections for' the second precinct at some available place within its limits on or near Race street, a much traveled thoroughfare, whose center line forms one of the precinct, boundaries. The polling place secured by the Supervisors for the use of the second precinct voters at the last election was a vacant storeroom on Race street, in the general locality where the, elections had been previously held, hut on the side of the street lying beyond the second and within the first precinct. This room was selected by the Board of Supervisors upon the recommendation of its republican president and his democratic associate, who made a joint investigation and were unable, as they testified, to find a convenient, place in a suitable neighborhood on the second precinct side of Race street. The storeroom secured on the opposite side of the street was used for the accommodation of the precinct voters not only at the general election, but also on the occasions of the registration and primary election in the same year. Ho effort was made by any candidate or voter to prevent, the, use of the room for any of the purposes just mentioned, and it is not, proven that the extent or result of the voting was affected by the fact that it was conducted a few yards, beyond the, precinct line-.

The law, of course,, intends that the, polling place for each precinct shall be within its limits. By section 12 of Article 33 of the Code it is made the duty of the various boards, of supervisors ‘To appoint the place, of registration and also the polling place in each precinct of their county or city and to canse the same to be fitted up> warmed, lighted and cleaned. The places for registration and polling shall in all cases be upon the ground floor of a building, the, entrance to which is, from a, highway or a public street * * * and shall be as near the center of the voting population of the precinct and as convenient to the greatest number of voters as, is practicable. * * * If no suitable place is found, the supervisors *76 shall provide one.” Ho discretion or authority is vested in the boards of supervisors to go beyond the outlines of a precinct to secure a polling room for its voters. Their plain and unqualified duty is to find and provide a suitable place for the purpose within the precinct area. The performance of this duty could undoubtedly be enforced by judicial process upon allegation and proof that it was about to be disregarded. This, however, is not the issue now presented. The election has actually been held and the returns duly certified. The voters of the second precinct in fact resorted to the only voting place provided for them, and the question now raised is whether their votes should be rejected as illegal because' they were cast in a polling room located slightly within the lines of another precinct of the same election district.

It has been earnestly argued that such a result is unavoidable in view of the limitations imposed by the State Constitution upon the elective franchise. The constitutional qualifications of the right of suffrage are said to restrict its exercise to the precinct in which the voter is registered. Upon this theory it is urged that the votes cast at the late election by the voters of the second precinct, at the place provided outside its limits, were unlawful and nugatory.

The 'Constitution provides that every male citizen of the United States having the prescribed qualifications of age and residence in the State and county or city “shall be entitled to vote in the ward or election district in which he resides.” Art. 1, sec. 1. The General Assembly is directed by section 5 of Article 1 to “provide by law for a uniform registration of the names of all the voters in this State who possess the qualifications prescribed in this article, which registration shall be conclusive evidence to the judges of election-of the right of every person thus' registered to vote at any election thereafter held in this 'State,” and it is declared that “no person shall vote at any election * * * unless his name appears in the list of registered voters.” The only condition imposed by the Constitution as to the place where the right *77 to vote shall be exercised is that it must be in the election district of which the voter is a resident. The right is not further restricted by any requirement in the organic law that it shall be availed of only in the precinct in which the voter’s domicile may be located, if the district should be thus subdivided. This Court has had occasion to emphasize the fact that the Constitution has conferred upon citizens of the State, otherwise qualified, the right to vote in the election district of their residence. Kemp v. Owens, 76 Md. 235; Langhammer v. Munter, 80 Md. 527.

As the right to vote can only bo exercised by citizens who have become duly registered, and as, the statute enacted by the General Assembly on the subject provides for registration by precincts, it necessarily follows, that a voter has no opportunity to cast his ballot except at the polling place where the registry containing his name, is being used for election purposes. While it is the intent of the satute, as already noted, that the voting place for a precinct shall be located within its own territory, the provisions to that effect are in the, form of directions to the supervisors, and have no reference to the voting qualifications of the individual citizen. The act of the- supervisors, in locating the polling room in this instance beyond the precinct division line was contrary to the purpose of the law, but the act of the voters of the second precinct in voting at the only place thus provided for them in the district of their residence was wholly within the right conferred upon them by the Constitution. The disputed ballots therefore were: cast by voters who were fully qualified to participate in the election at the place selected for them by the supervisors.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 A. 140, 129 Md. 73, 1916 Md. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-hackett-md-1916.