Smoak v. Rhodes

22 S.E.2d 685, 201 S.C. 237, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 5, 1942
Docket15460
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 S.E.2d 685 (Smoak v. Rhodes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smoak v. Rhodes, 22 S.E.2d 685, 201 S.C. 237, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 113 (S.C. 1942).

Opinion

Circuit Judge E. H. Henderson,

Acting Associate Justice, delivered the opinion of the Court:

*239 A primary election of the Democratic party was held in Colleton County on August 25, 1942, for the purpose, among other things, of choosing a nominee for the office of Judge of Probate. This officer also acts as Master. Of the three candidates for this nomination, S. N. Plaws was eliminated, and the petitioner, I. A. Smoak, and the respondent, Osborne H. Rhodes, were the contestants in the second primary which was held on September 8, 1942. In that primary, counting all of the ballots cast in the county, Rhodes received eighteen hundred one (1,801) votes and Smoak'received seventeen hundred eighty-one (1,781).

One of the precincts was located at the town of Jacksonboro and at that box fifty-two (52) ballots were cast, of which Rhodes received fifty (50) and Smoak two (2).

The ballots used at this polling place in the second primary were those left over from the first primary election. At the close of the meeting held by the County Executive Committee on August 27, 1942, for the purpose of declaring the result of the first primary, the club executive committeemen were instructed to take the boxes back with them, in order to save the expense of another trip to Walterboro. The Jacksonboro committeeman did take the box of his precinct with him, and in it there were quite a number of unused first primary ballots. There is uncertainty as to whether the committeeman was expected to come back to Walterboro to get the second primary ballots, or whether it was understood that when they were printed they would be mailed to him by the secretary of the county committee. At any rate no second primary ballots were sent to Jacksonboro, or placed in the hands of the club officials, and the only ones which were at any time received from the county committee at this precinct were the first primary ballots.

Before the County Executive Committee, Mr. Smoak protested the counting of the Jacksonboro ballots.

There were cast in the voting in various county boxes one hundred eighty-two (182) absentee ballots which were *240 challenged by Mr. Rhodes and kept separate. These consisted of one hundred seventy-two (172) votes for Smoak and ten (10) for Rhodes. The respondent, Rhodes, objected before the county committee to the counting of these ballots.

After a hearing that committee held that the Jacksonboro box should be thrown out, and that the absentee ballots should be counted. As a result Mr. Smoak was declared to be the nominee of the party by a vote of seventeen hundred seventy-nine (1,779) to seventeen hundred fifty-one (1,751). '

An appeal was thereupon taken by Rhodes to the State Democratic Executive Committee. Upon hearing the appeal, the state committee decided that the Jacksonboro votes should be counted, and that the absentee ballots should be excluded. The action of the county committee was reversed and Mr. Rhodes was declared to be the nominee of the party for Judge of Probate by a vote of seventeen hundred ninety-one (1,791) to sixteen hundred nine (1,609).

This is a proceeding in the original jurisdiction of the Court, under a writ of certiorari, to review the action and decision of the State Executive Committee. The contention of the petitioner, Mr. Smoak, is that the Jacksonboro votes should have been excluded on the grounds that the ballots used were not those^ prescribed by statute and by the rules of the party, that the ballots were not folded, and that the names of the voters were not checked off the club roll to indicate who had voted and who had not voted at the polls; and on the ground that the- absentee ballots should have been counted.

Legal principles governing primary elections are well settled and have been announced in many opinions of this Court.

“Errors which do not appear to have affected the result will not be allowed to overturn an election, and every reasonable presumption will be indulged to sustain it.” Hyde v. Logan, 113 S. C., 64, 101 S. E., 41, 44.

*241 In the same case it is said that the right to vote is a substantial right.

“The rules of the primary elections (part in the rules of the party and part in the statutes) are elaborate and minute in detail, and comprise regulations for the size of the booths, the length of.the curtain that screens the booth, the distance of the rail from the ballot box, etc. It will not be contended that a few inches one way or the other in these matters would vitiate an election. If these rules and regulations are held to be mandatory, and a variation from any one of them fatal to an election, it would be almost impossible to hold a valid election. They must be held to be directory, and in order for a failure to comply with them to be fatal it must be shown that the error was prejudicial or liable to produce prejudice. We have seen that there is nothing in the record .to show that the secrecy of the ballot was impaired.

“There is in this case no question of want of good faith or fraud. The objection is to what, in this case, is a mere technical violation of the law.” Killingsworth v. State Committee, 125 S. C., 487, 118 S. E., 822, 824.

See also, Brockman v. Barry, 195 S. C., 199, 11 S. E. (2d), 137.

Taking up, first, the question of the use of the first primary ballots, we find that Section 2365 of the Code, later amended in other particulars, provides in part: “Each voter shall deposit in the appropriate box a ballot on which shall be printed the names of the candidates for the office to be filled, with the titles of the respective offices. The tickets shall be furnished by the state committee for all except county officers, congressmen and solicitors, for which the county committee shall furnish the tickets. Each ticket shall contain the names of all candidates for the respective offices and no other tickets shall be used.”

*242 This is also included in Rule 33 of the Democratic party.

In the present case there is no suggestion whatsoever of fraud at the Jacksonboro box. It was, of course, an irregularity for the managers to use the first primary ballots rather than ballots of the second primary, but in our opinion it was not such an irregularity as would invalidate the Jacksonboro votes. The fact that the first primary ballots were used in no way prejudiced the rights of any voter for the office of Judge of Probate, or interfered with a free expression of the will of those desiring to cast their ballots at this precinct. All of the ballots were exactly alike except for the numbers on the coupons. They were all of the same size and shape, and the same color; and had identically the same printed matter on them. There was no distinction whatever between one ballot and another. None of the ballots had any markings or mutilations whatsoever, they were official party tickets, and were in fact the only ballots furnished this precinct by the county committee. Each voter was informed that Mr. Haws had been eliminated, and the fact that he received no votes makes it very clear that the presence <?f his name on the ticket was in no way confusing.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.E.2d 685, 201 S.C. 237, 1942 S.C. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smoak-v-rhodes-sc-1942.