Snyder v. Glusing

520 A.2d 349, 308 Md. 411, 1987 Md. LEXIS 178
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 29, 1987
Docket107, September Term, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 520 A.2d 349 (Snyder v. Glusing) 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
Snyder v. Glusing, 520 A.2d 349, 308 Md. 411, 1987 Md. LEXIS 178 (Md. 1987).

Opinions

ORDER

For reasons to be stated in an opinion later to be filed, it is this 23rd day of October, 1986.

ORDERED, by the Court of Appeals of Maryland, a majority of the Court concurring, that the October 15, 1986 order of the Circuit Court for Baltimore County entering judgment in favor of the appellees be, and it is hereby, affirmed, costs to be paid by the appellant. Mandate shall issue forthwith.

[413]*413Submitted to MURPHY, C.J., and ELDRIDGE, COLE, R0D0WSKY, COUCH, McAULIFFE and ADKINS, JJ.

RODOWSKY, Judge.

This is a contested election case principally involving the nomination by the Republican Party of a candidate for State Senator from the Eighth Legislative District at the primary elections held September 9,1986. Appellant, the unsuccessful candidate, asked that the election be set aside because a sample ballot distributed by the successful candidate violated the election laws. The trial court held that the appellant had failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence, as required by Md. Code (1957, 1986 Repl.Vol.), Art. 33, § 19-5, that the violation might have changed the outcome of the election. As hereinafter explained we shall hold that the trial court’s factual determination was not clearly erroneous on this record.

This is the second appeal to this Court in this action.1 The prior appeal was from a judgment entered in favor of the appellees on their motion for judgment made under Maryland Rule 2-519 at the end of the appellant’s case. We reversed and remanded. Snyder v. Glusing, 307 Md. 548, 515 A.2d 767 (1986) (per curiam) (Snyder I). To present the issues on this appeal we must, after reviewing the general background, also review Snyder I in more detail than was necessary to explain our earlier decision.

A. General Background

The Eighth Legislative District lies wholly within Baltimore County. It is bounded on the east by District 6 (Essex), on the south by District 7 (Sparrows Point), on the west by Baltimore City and by District 9 (Towson), on the [414]*414northwest by District 10 (Cockeysville), and on the northeast by Harford County. The southernmost point of District 8 is the intersection of Philadelphia Road with the Baltimore City boundary. The district includes the communities of Rosedale, Kenwood, Fullerton, Parkville, Perry Hall, Carney, and Harford Hills. North of Gunpowder Falls it embraces the area northeast of Loch Raven Reservoir, south of Paper Mill and Sweet Air Roads, and west of Long Green Pike. There are eighteen precincts in the district. The polling places for those precincts are set forth on Attachment A hereto where the polling places are presented in generally a south to north order. There were 12,517 registered Republican voters in the Eighth District for the 1986 primary. Of these 3,357 or 26.82% voted. Two candidates vied for the Republican nomination for state senator from the district, the appellant, Gary D. Snyder (Snyder), and one of the appellees, Edward J. Glusing, Jr. (Glusing). Neither was the incumbent state senator, although Snyder was an incumbent member from the Eighth Legislative District of the Republican State Central Committee (the Committee).

Glusing was nominated by a majority of 196 votes, 1,327 to 1,131. Glusing carried the polling places by 1,313 to 1,088 while Snyder prevailed in the absentee ballots, forty-three to fourteen. The other appellee, Michael Kosmas (Kosmas), was elected to one of three seats on the Committee from the Eighth District.2

The sample ballot of which Snyder complains is a flyer printed in black ink on pink paper, eight and one-half inches by fourteen inches (the pink ballot). At the top left, in three-eighths inch high, bold type the pink ballot reads: “Support your official Republican ballot.” (Italics in original). To the right of those words is a stylized figure of an [415]*415elephant with three stars on its back. This figure is very similar to the logo used by the Committee on its stationery. Next to the logo appear the words, “Maryland Republicans,” in the same style of print used by the Committee for those words on its stationery. Below the above-described heading the pink ballot reads:

Endorsed by: [Vi” high, bold type]
Congresswoman Helen Delich Bentley [%” high, bold type]
“Although my name will not be on the ballot today, as I am running unopposed in the Republican Primary, I need everyone’s help in insuring my re-election in November. An important part of our success is having a strong slate of candidates, and I enthusiastically endorse all the candidates on this ballot ...” [Vs” high, regular type.]
/s/ Helen Delich Bentley, M.C.
Helen Delich Bentley,
Member of Congress

The pink ballot then sets out in quarter inch high, bold type certain offices, candidates, and lever numbers followed by the statement:

“Keep our Sitting Judges
MURPHY-NICKERSON-SMITH
PLEASE TAKE THIS BALLOT INTO THE BOOTH WHEN YOU VOTE!!”

On the lower righthand corner of the pink ballot, in hand lettering one-sixteenth inch high, appears: “Authority: Bernice Patterson, Treasurer.” Bernice Patterson (Patterson) was designated with the State Administrative Board of Election Laws as Glusing’s treasurer for his candidacy for state senate, but the pink ballot does not on its face reflect for whom Patterson was treasurer.

So far as the record in this case discloses there was one other sample ballot distributed in connection with the Re[416]*416publican primary in the Eighth Legislative District. This ballot was printed in blue ink on a white card approximately eight and one-half inches high by three and one-half inches wide (the white ballot). The white ballot is headed: “REPUBLICAN BALLOT Tuesday, September 9, 1986.” There follows a list of lever numbers, offices, and candidates. At the bottom righthand side of the white ballot, in print approximately one-sixteenth inch high, appear the words: “By Auth. Diane Cairns, Treas.” Diane Cairns is the treasurer designated for the Snyder candidacy for state senator, but the white ballot does not on its face reflect for whom Cairns was treasurer.

The two sample ballots respectively endorsed the following:

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[417]*417There were five candidates seeking three nominations for the House of Delegates. The nominees were Scott A. Sewell (1,925 votes), Alfred W. Redmer, Jr. (1,661), and Howard C. Harclerode (948).

In the contest for Committee members Marjorie J. Neuman (Neuman) who was endorsed by both the pink and white ballots led the field of eleven with 1,504 votes. Snyder was second (955), Kosmas third (759), and Valerie A. Kuzniarski (Kuzniarski) fourth (734). Neuman was also unopposed to be the Republican nominee for the seat from the Sixth Councilmanic District on the Baltimore County Council. Neuman had included the white ballot in a mailing which she had made to registered Republican voters in the Eighth Legislative District seeking support for her Committee candidacy.

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Bluebook (online)
520 A.2d 349, 308 Md. 411, 1987 Md. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-glusing-md-1987.