State Ex Rel. Davis v. State Board of Canvassers

68 S.E. 676, 86 S.C. 451, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 30, 1910
Docket7643
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 676 (State Ex Rel. Davis v. State Board of Canvassers) 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
State Ex Rel. Davis v. State Board of Canvassers, 68 S.E. 676, 86 S.C. 451, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 74 (S.C. 1910).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

On the 17th August, 1909, an election was held in Aiken county on the question whether alcoholic liquors should be sold therein. When the county board of canvassers met, on August 24th, to- canvass the vote and declare the result, the relators-, Davis and Craig, *453 filed notice and grounds of contest of certain precincts at which the majority of the votes, as certified by the managers, was “for sale;” and two other citizens, Johnson and Powell, filed notice and grounds of contest of certain precincts at which the majority was “against sale.” The board adjourned to meet August 30th, to hear these contests. On that day the attorneys for Johnson and Powell demurred • to the grounds of contest filed by relators for insufficiency, in failing to allege that the irregularities and illegalities of which they complained affected the result of the election. The demurrer was sustained, and a motion to amend, by making the allegation, was refused and the contest dismissed. The result declared was “for sale” by a majority of 167 votes. On appeal, heard on September 3d, the State board recommitted the entire record with instructions to the county board “to recanvass the vote for Aiken county * * * and hear and consider the ground of protest filed by C. E. Sawyer, attorney for protestants, and to take such testimony and evidence as may be competent offered in support and rebuttal of the same, and to determine the result, and, having done so, to transmit to this board the result of said canvass, together with its conclusions and findings upon the ground of protest, as well as all testimony and other records and papers connected with -the same, required to be transmitted to this board by section 217 of Code 1902, the same to be returned to this board not later than Thursday, September 9, 1909.”

On September 6th -two of the county board, which was composed of three members, issued a notice of a meeting of that board to be held on September 7th, at 11 o’clock, to proceed with the hearing. This notice was served on the attorneys for all parties and the chairman of the board between 10 and 11 o’clock on the 6th. Later, on the.same day, the chairman issued -a notice for a meeting of the board on the 8th, at 10' o’clock. Pursuant to their notice, two of the board met on the 7th. The regular chairman having *454 sent word that he could not attend, they organized by electing one of their number chairman, and announced their determination to proceed with the hearing.

The attorneys for the relators demurred to the jurisdiction of the board, as thus organized, contending that the meeting was illegal because it had not been called by the regular chairman. They also moved for a continuance until the next day, on the ground that they had not had time, since receipt of notice of the meeting, to summon their witnesses, some of whom they stated lived more than twenty miles from the courthouse.

The demurrer and motion was overruled, and the board limited the time for the taking of testimony to three hours and a half to each side, and for argument to one hour to each side. Four witnesses were examined that day, and the record shows that, at the conclusion of the testimony on the next day, relators had consumed only two hours and twenty-one minutes of the time allowed them.

After hearing the evidence and arguments, the board dismissed both contests and certified the result as before. Both sides appealed. The State board heard the appeal September 10th. As the time within which the board is allowed to perform its duties is limited by statute (Code 1902, vol. I, sec. 229), the State board, finding that it was necessary for them to dispose of the matter on the 10th, as after that date they would be functus ofñcio (Ex parte Mackey, 15 S. C., 329; Ex parte Elliott, 33 S. C., 603, 12 S. E., 423), limited the time for the hearing to two hours and a half to each side. The testimony had been taken stenographically, and had not been transcribed, and hence had to be read to the board by the stenographer. The board reserved the right to have such parts of the testimony read by the stenographer as they, or either of them, desired. After hearing so much of the testimony as the respective sides caused to be read, and the arguments, the board sustained the contest of both sides as to certain precincts, and *455 overruled them as to all others; but, finding that the result was not thereby changed, they dismissed both contests.

Thereupon the relators sued out a writ of certiorari in the original jurisdiction of this Court to review the action of said board.

1 In reviewing the action of an inferior tribunal, on writ of certiorari, this Court will correct errors of law, but will not review the findings of fact. Ex parte Riggs 52 S. C., 298, 29 S. E., 645; Welsh v. Board, 79 S. C., 246, 60 S. E., 699. The relators contended, however, that the findings of fact of the State board relative to the grounds of their contest are not binding upon the Court, because they are not judicial findings based upon consideration of the testimony, as the board heard only a part of it. The record shows that all of the testimony was not read to the board, but it does not show what parts were read and what were not. We must assume, therefore, that the findings of the board were based upon a consideration of the testimony bearing upon the facts found. But findings of fact, which are contrary to any reasonable conclusion or inference from the evidence, or which have no evidence at all to support them, may be corrected as errors of law.

2 Construing the Constitution and statutes of this State, this Court has held that the production of a registration certificate and proof of the payment of all taxes, including poll tax, assessed against an elector and collectible during the previous year, are conditions prerequisite ■to his right to vote; and that every vote cast without compliance with these conditions is illegal; and that when it appears that enough illegal votes were cast in an election to change the result or make it doubtful, it will be declared void. Wright v. Board, 76 S. C., 574, 57 S. E., 536; Gunter v. Gayden, 84 S. C., 48.

The only reasonable inference that can be drawn from the testimony is that one or the other of the above mentioned *456 conditions — and in some instances both — were not complied with at the following precinct's: Banks Mill, Bloomingdale, Kitchings Mill, Otts, Wagener and Windsor. At some of them the managers agreed that they would not require the production of registration certificates or proof of the payment of taxes; At some they required one, but not the other.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 676, 86 S.C. 451, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-davis-v-state-board-of-canvassers-sc-1910.