Sparks v. State Election Board

1964 OK 114, 392 P.2d 711, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 335
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 22, 1964
Docket41025
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1964 OK 114 (Sparks v. State Election Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sparks v. State Election Board, 1964 OK 114, 392 P.2d 711, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 335 (Okla. 1964).

Opinion

JACKSON, Justice.

The undisputed facts in this original proceeding show that at about 5 :30 o’clock P.M., on May 5, 1964, the Precinct Election Board in Clayton Township Precinct six, Payne County, Oklahoma, ran out of printed ballot forms for conducting the Primary Election. Whether the Polls would be closed at 6:00 or 7:00 o’clock P.M. *713 is not disclosed. It further appears that thereafter six qualified electors presented themselves for the purpose of casting their ballots. The Precinct Election Officials identified six “sample” ballot forms numbering them from 1 to 6, inclusive, and directed said electors to use them as “official” ballot forms.

When the votes were counted by the County Election Board for the Democratic Party nomination for the office of State Representative, Office No. 1, Payne County, it appears that the vote was very close and both candidates, H. L. Sparks and Art Griffith, filed applications for a recount of the ballots. The State Election Board referred the matter to the Payne County Election Board for recount and at the conclusion thereof it appeared that each of the candidates, Sparks and Griffith, had received 4463 votes for the nomination. After certification of the result to the State Election Board that Board announced the result as a “tie” and entered an order directing that the names of such candidates be placed upon the official ballot at the run-off Primary Election to be held in said County on May 26, 1964.

The facts further show that the “tie vote” on recount results from the fact that the six votes cast on “sample” ballot forms were not counted by the County and State Election Boards. Four of those votes were cast in favor of Sparks and two in favor of Griffith.

This action is brought by H. L. Sparks, as petitioner, wherein he seeks to invoke the original jurisdiction of this court for superintending control over the State Election Board under the provisions of Art. 7, Sec. 2, Okla.Const., and prays that a Writ of Mandamus issue to the State Election Board requiring it to count the six ballots cast in Clayton Township and requiring said board to issue its Certificate of Nomination to him.

The respondents, State Election Board and its members, contend that under the plain provisions of 26 O.S.1961 § 119, that “No sample ballot shall be counted if voted.” Whether the “sample” ballots in this case continued to be sample ballots, or whether they became “official” ballots under the facts here presented is a question of statutory interpretation and is within the realm of judicial inquiry. The purpose of our inquiry is to determine whether these six ballots should have been counted.

The statute, 26 O.S.1961 § 119, supra, does provide that no sample ballot shall be counted if voted. This is a salutary provision and was undoubtedly adopted for the purpose of preventing the “stuffing” of ballot boxes with unauthorized ballots and was not adopted for the purpose of disfranchising qualified electors.

Petitioner argues that 26 O.S. 1961 § 257, authorizes Precinct Election Officials to prepare handwritten ballots where there is a shortage of official ballots. We do not agree that this section reflects a conscious legislative intent to so provide. This section was adopted to provide procedures where there is a complete breakdown in the election process but it does not specify what action shall be taken when there is a partial breakdown resulting from a shortage of official ballots. However, this section does by implication recognize the constitutional right of qualified electors to vote even under the most primitive and adverse conditions.

26 O.S.1961 § 222, provides that Precinct Election Officials shall be supplied with as many ballots as there are registered electors in the Precinct. Provision is made for substituting ballots for spoiled ballots, 26 O.S.1961 § 255, but Precinct Officials are not directed as to their duties when they have run out of official ballots and time will not permit the printing of additional official ballots.

The sovereign power of this state is exercised by its qualified electors who vote. Art. 2, Sec. 1, Okla.Const. The right of a qualified elector to vote is a basic constitutional right, Art. 2, Sec. 4, Okla. Const. To deprive a qualified elector of his right to vote, by law, would be contrary *714 to the spirit of both Federal (15th Amendment U.S.Const.) and State Constitutions (Art. 1, See. 6, Okla.Const.).

In State ex rel. Edwards v. Millar, 21 Okl. 448, 96 P. 747, we quoted with approval from Hirsh v. Wood, 148 N.Y. 142, 143, 42 N.E. 536, 537, as follows:

“We can conceive of no principle which permits the disfranchisement of innocent voters for the mistake or even the willful misconduct of election officers in performing the duty cast upon them. The object of elections is to ascertain the popular will, and not to thwart it. The object of election laws is to secure the rights of duly qualified electors, and not to defeat them. Statutory regulations are enacted to secure freedom of choice and to prevent fraud, and not by technical obstructions to make the right of voting insecure and difficult.”

Undoubtedly Section 119, supra, does not reflect a conscious legislative in-tendment that qualified electors would be deprived of their right to vote because of a shortage of official ballot forms. Since the right to vote is a constitutional right we are of the view that it was the duty of the Precinct Election Officials to provide ballots. They did so by authorizing the use of “sample ballots.” While handwritten ballots would not have been contrary to the provisions of Sec. 119, supra, we are of the view that under the emergency situation here presented that there is no conscious legislative intendment that these ballots should be voided. No fraud or improper motive is charged, and none has resulted. No evil was intended and none has resulted. Under the circumstances presented in this case the . constitutional right to vote outweighs the form of the ballot, and the sample ballots as- used in this case were in fact and in law converted into acceptable and- legal ballots. They reflect the will of the electors to whom they were furnished, and accurately record their votes. We must conclude that they should be counted by the State Election Board and given weight.

In Ruth v. Peshek, 153 Okl. 147, 153, 5 P.2d 108, which involved an initiative petition to amend a city charter, we said:

“Technical rules of construction are not favored either by this court or by the Legislature in passing upon the rights of the people to govern themselves. Rules are not the ultimate end — the main thing is justice itself and the very right of the matter. Rules are only in aid of the main thing — the working tools whereby it is attained. The administration of justice is a practical affair, an invention for the adjustment of the rights of individuals, and is not a technical and accurate science, but an applied science, adjusting itself to work out justice in all the protean shapes the dealings of mankind assume.”
“ * * * If the people are to be self-governed, it is essential that they shall have a right to vote upon questions of public interest and register the public will.”

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Bluebook (online)
1964 OK 114, 392 P.2d 711, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sparks-v-state-election-board-okla-1964.