State Ex Rel. Bloker v. Byrd

237 S.W. 166, 208 Mo. App. 514, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 125
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 1921
StatusPublished

This text of 237 S.W. 166 (State Ex Rel. Bloker v. Byrd) 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 Rel. Bloker v. Byrd, 237 S.W. 166, 208 Mo. App. 514, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 125 (Mo. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

DAUES, J.

— This is an original proceeding in prohibition against the Honorable Peter Hnck, of the 27th Judicial Circuit, as Judge of the circuit court of Ste. Genevieve county, Missouri, with whom William Dyer Byrd is made respondent. The object of the proceeding is to prohibit Judge Huck from sustaining a motion to quash the return of the city clerk of the City of Caruthersville in an election contest pending in the circuit court of Ste. Genevieve county. On relator’s application we heretofore issued our preliminary rule in prohibition. Respondents filed separate returns, to each of which relator pleaded by a motion to quash, challenging the sufficiency of the returns as an answer or defense to the preliminary rule made herein by this court.

The material facts are as follows: An election contest was instituted in the circuit court of Pemiscot county by Carl F. Bloker, as contestant, against William Dyer Byrd, respondent, as contestee, involving the office of Mayor of the City of Caruthersville. A change of venue was granted to the circuit court of Ste. Genevieve county, where the cause is now pending.

Contestant Bloker, in June, .1920, applied to the circuit clerk of Ste. Genevieve county for a writ of recount, the court then being in vacation. The application prayed for an order directing the clerk of the City of Caruthersville to open, count and examine the ballots that were cast in Wards 2 and 3 in the election for the office of Mayor of that city, held in April, 1920, and to compare such ballots with the list of the voters in his office which were cast at said election in said Wards and to certify *519 tlie result of such count, comparison and examination, so far as the same related to the office which is in dispute.

The circuit clerk in May, 1920, issued the order, directing said city clerk to open, count and examine the ballots cast in Wards 2 and 3 in said city election, and to compare the same with the list of voters, and to proceed fully to examine said ballots in the presence of contestant and contestee and their attorneys, and to permit them to. fully examine the ballots, and after making such examination, count and comparison, to make return to said order and writ of the result of such examination, count and comparison. Contestant in his amended notice of contest alleged that the judges and clerks in Ward 3 changed the ballots of legal voters who voted for him and refused to count such votes, and set forth in detail the names of said voters whom contestant claimed the judges and clerks in said Ward changed. The same allegation was made as to Ward 2, and it was set forth.in detail the names of the voters whose ballots contestant claims were there changed against him. In the third Ward contestant claimed that many legal votes were cast for him but were not counted by the judges and clerks of election, also that many illegal votes were cast and counted for contestee in Ward 3, but the names of such illegal voters were not given. And it is alleged, further, that in both Wards 2 and 3 legal votes were cast for contestant but were not counted by the judges and clerks, and that many votes were east in these Wards for contestee by parties not entitled to vote at said election without specifying the names of such illegal voters.

It is further charged by contestant that in Ward 3 the election law was violated by the judges and clerks in secretly preparing ballots of illiterate voters, making them out for contestee when they were requested by the voter to make them out for contestant. Neither the names nor the numbers of such illiterate voters are given.

The city clerk in the so-called return gave the name of each and every voter in said Wards, the number of his ballot and for whom he voted. It is contended by contes *520 tee that no such certification of voters is requested in the application for writ of recount, nor that such certification is directed by the circuit clerk in the writ of recount itself; and that the action of the city clerk in certifying such names as were not questioned by the contestant in his notice of contest, nor in the application for the writ of recount and not included in the writ of recount itself, unnecessarily exposed the secrecy of the ballots of such voters, because the validity or legality of the ballots of such voters were not made an issue in any way by the pleadings in the cause. Contestee insisted that the action of said clerk in so certifying to such names was contrary to the provisions of Article VIII, Section 3 of the Constitution of the State of Missouri protecting the secrecy of the ballot.

Accordingly, on December 16, 1920, the contestee (respondent Byrd), filed a motion in the circuit court to quash the return of the city clerk upon the ground that such return, among other things, violated the Constitution of the State of Missouri in relation to the secrecy of the ballots, in that it' set out and named' hundreds of voters and stated for whom they voted when such voters had not been named or mentioned in the notice of contest, or alleged to have been fraudulently cast or counted at said city election. So much of said motion as becomes pertinent here is as follows:

“Said certificate and return of said city clerk violates the Constitution and laws of the State of Missouri in relation to the secrecy of the ballot and is in violation of the said Constitution and laws and in violation of the order and writ of the recount so made and issued by the clerk of this court, sets out and names hundreds of voters and states for whom they voted, which said numerous voters are not mentioned or named in the notice of contest in this cause or alleged to have been fraudulently cast or counted at the said City Election.
“Because said return and certificate violates the order made in the writ of recount heretofore issued by the clerk of this court in vacation and is in excess of the *521 order made in said writ in that it sets ont hundreds of names of voters giving the names of the voters, the numbers of their ballots and for whom they voted not mentioned or named in the said writ of recount and because said writ of recount does not provide for 'the certification of how any voter voted or to destroy the secrecy of the ballot of any voter voting' at the election in contest.”

Contestant thereupon filed his motion to strike out contestee’s motion to quash the return of the city clerk, alleging that the secrecy of the ballots was not violated by said return; that such exposition could have been avoided by contestee objecting at the time the recount was made and certified to, which, it is alleged, contestee did not do, and that the contestee and his attorney being present at the time the ballots were being examined, etc., made no objection to the method of the recount; and, further,

“Because the return of the city clerk filed in this cause is no part of the proceedings now before the court but is a matter which may become prima-facie evidence during the trial of this cause as provided by section 5594, Revised Statutes 1909, and subject to objections in whole or in part, when offered in evidence and by this motion contestee is endeavoring to have the court rule evidence not before the court. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W. 166, 208 Mo. App. 514, 1921 Mo. App. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-bloker-v-byrd-moctapp-1921.