State Ex Inf. Walker v. Consolidated School District 4C

213 S.W.2d 271, 240 Mo. App. 91, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 272
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 271 (State Ex Inf. Walker v. Consolidated School District 4C) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Inf. Walker v. Consolidated School District 4C, 213 S.W.2d 271, 240 Mo. App. 91, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 272 (Mo. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

*93 BLAIR, J.

This is an action, brought June 9, 1947, on a petition charging certain irregularities in a school election, called and held March 25, 1947, to determine whether or not Common School District No. 9, of Dunklin County, Missouri, should be annexed to Consolidated School District No. 4C, of Dunklin County, Missouri.

This suit was brought in the Circuit • Court of Dunklin County by residents of Common School District No. 9, of Dunklin County, against said Consolidated School District and certain persons, constituting the Board of such Consolidated School District.

A large number of persons, both as plaintiffs and defendants, are named in the pleadings; but we will not undertake to list them. On December 24, 1947, the trial court rendered judgment for plaintiffs. The defendants filed their motion for a new trial, which was overruled on the same day. Thereupon, defendants took an appeal to this Court. Plaintiffs below are respondents here. They will hereafter be referred • to as plaintiffs. The defendants below are appellants here; but will be referred to here as defendants. The case is before us on the briefs of the parties, without oral argument.

The petition is very long and will not be set out, any further than an understanding of the issues requires. The only question raised in the case is as to the regularity of the proceedings in the election itself.

The result of the count of the votes, as announced at the meeting, was 26 votes for annexation and 24 votes against.annexation, and such annexation was immediately accepted .by defendant Consolidated School District No. 4C. Whether or not such annexation proposal, announced as carried at such election, was properly carried presents the only question for our decision.

The petition charged, in substance, that R. L. Pierce and Leona Pierce, husband and wife, Clifford Donica and Kenneth Donica and Jonee Wiley and Clara Wiley, his wife, were unlawfully and fraudulently deprived of their votes at such election.

*94 The record does not show -that Kenneth Donica testified; neither did Mrs. Donica. The testimony of Clifford Donica shows that Kenneth Donica was his son. We assume that the Pierces, mentioned in the petition, are the same as the “Pearces” whose testimony is in the record.

R. L. Pierce (as Pearce) testified that J. H. Polen called the meeting to order and stated that no one, who had not lived in the School District .90 days, could vote at that meeting. The Pierces thereafter did not attempt to vote, and may even have left the meeting before the voting began.

After one refusal, Polen, who apparently was president of the board, without protest, announced one Robert Waltrip as chairman, and Waltrip named Mrs. Ruth Howard as secretary of the meeting.

The evidence shows that Chairman Waltrip appointed three clerks (as he called them) to count the ballots, after they were cast. Waltrip also testified that, before the meeting commenced, he read Section 10420, R. S. 1939, which fixed the qualifications of voters at such election at 30 days residence in the School District, instead of the 90 days, claimed to have been stated by Polen.

Clifford Donica testified that he was denied a ballot, because he arrived after the ballots were collected, and Wiley said that they would not give him a ballot because he lived in New Madrid County, instead of Dunklin County. Donica, Pierce and the Wileys said that they, and their wives, would have voted against annexation, if they had been permitted to vote.

The Circuit Judge, who saw and heard the witnesses, found that Pierce hnd wife and Clifford Donica and his wife, the latter not named in the petition, were qualified voters, and were present to vote at such election and were unlawfully and wrongfully denied the right and privilege of voting thereat, and that all of them would have voted against annexation, if they had been permitted to vote. If only two of them had voted against annexation, the proposition would not have carried. The trial judge said nothing about Wiley and his wife, and their qualifications as voters need not be considered by us.

The trial judge declared that the election was void and that the proposition, voted upon at said meeting, did not legally and lawfully carry, and made further orders, which would necessarily follow, if such finding .was justified; but said orders need not be considered here. He taxed the costs of the proceeding against defendant Com solidated School District No. 4C of Dunklin County, Missouri.

While Mrs. Clifford Donica is not shown to have been a witness, and was not even named in the petition, it was stipulated that Clifford Donica, and 'his wife, had such qualifications as to make them qualified voters at such election. Both Clifford Donica and his wife were present, and Clifford Donica said that both he and his *95 wife would have voted against annexation, if they had been allowed to cast their ballots.

The evidence of Pierce shows that, after Polen said a man had to live in the district 90' days, neither he- nor his wife tried to vote. They left the meeting, just as the chairman was chosen, and did not ask fox a ballot. There was abundance of evidence to support the finding of the trial court that Donica and wife and Pierce and wife were qualified voters, and did not get to vote. The real question in this case is whether or not they had the right to vote, under the circumstances.

We will take the Pierces first: The trial court undoubtedly had the right to find that Polen had said that no one had the right to vote in that election, unless he or she had lived in that School District for 90 days, instead of the 30 days provided by Section 10420, R. S. 1939. But that was not sufficient. Pierce testified that he and his wife left the meeting, just as they were getting ready to vote. No one refused Pierce or his wife a ballot.- Neither of them offered to vote at any time.

In an action, against certain election officials, for damages for refusal to allow plaintiff in that case to vote, it was said that the plaintiff must have alleged and proven “that the plaintiff offered to cast his ballot,” and cites McGowan v. Gardner, et al., 186 Mo. App. 484, 172 S. W. 408, l. c. 410.

Here the Pierces not only did not offer to vote, but left the meeting, just as the balloting commenced. Their right to vote was not challenged by anyone. They were not refused ballots at any time. They did not even ask for ballots.

Even if the trial court had the right to find that the Pierces would have voted against annexation — a question not necessary for us to decide, under the briefs filed — they never offered to vote, and the statement of Polen was not sufficient to show such refusal or to have their votes counted against annexation. We cannot agree with the trial court in finding otherwise. But, if Clifford Donica and his wife, who was not even mentioned in the petition, had the right to vote, and the trial court was authorized to say that their votes would have been cast against annexation, there would only have been a tie vote and the proposition would not have carried.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 271, 240 Mo. App. 91, 1948 Mo. App. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-walker-v-consolidated-school-district-4c-moctapp-1948.