State Ex Rel. Deloatch v. Rogers

86 N.C. 357
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 5, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 86 N.C. 357 (State Ex Rel. Deloatch v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North 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. Deloatch v. Rogers, 86 N.C. 357 (N.C. 1882).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

This action is prosecuted under section 366 of the Code to recover possession of the office of register of deeds, which the defendant is alleged to have usurped and to hold, claiming a right thereto by virtue of an election held on the Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, 1880, and into which he was inducted by the board of county commissioners. The relator asserts that he received the largest number of votes cast at the election for the said office, and has been wrongfully deprived of it by the illegal action of the registrar and judges at certain election precincts, in refusing to count large numbers of ballots cast for him in making up the returns transmitted to the county canvassers. The rejected tickets were adjudged to be illegal because they contained upon their face the name of James D. Boone, and he was voted for, for the- office of superior court clerk, which he then held by appointment of the judge to fill the unexpired term, resulting from the resignation of the preceding incumbent, and there was no *359 vacancy to be supplied under the law by a popular election. The form of the ticket is set out in the case. Several issues were submitted to the jury of which those deemed material in considering the appeal, in condensed form with the responses, are as follows:

1. Was the relator voted for at all the election precincts of the county for the office of register? No.

2. Did he receive at the election a majority of the lawful votes cast ? No.

3. Did the judges of election, at Rich-Square, Occoneechi and Wiccacone election precincts, refuse to count any votes cast for the relator, and if so, how many? Some at Wicea-cone, number not known.

5. How many votes did the relator and defendant respectively receive at these precincts, and how many were returned by the judges of election ? For the relator, 2. For the defendant, 549.

6. How many lawful votes were east in the county for the competing candidates for the said office? For the relator, 1110. For the defendant, 1469.

These findings of the jury were under instructions from the judge, that in passing on the second issue they should exclude from the count all such tickets as contained the name of Boone and were cast for him for the office of clerk, as for the others for their respective officers, which tickets His Honor declared to be void; but that in passing upon the third and fifth issues, all the tickets must be counted inclusive of those rejected in determining the second issue.

At the trial one Hinchen Davis, a witness examined for the relator, stated that there were between 150 and 200 ballots put in the box at Wiccacone bearing the name of Boone for the office of clerk, which were rejected, and that the relator’s name for register was on some of said ballots but he could not tell how many.”

Another witness testified that “as many as 300 ballots at *360 Rich-Square and Occoneechi with Boone’s name for clerk on them and that of the relator for register, were thrown out, but the witness could not state the precise number.”

From this summary review of the facts it will be noticed that if all the rejected ballots are restored and added to those returned for the relator, so far as can be ascertained with accuracy from the evidence, the aggregate is insufficient to overcome the majority of 359 accorded in the returns to the defendant. How many in excess of the three hundred were thrown out in the count of votes at Wicca-cone, which bore the plaintiff’s name, is left wholly uncertain, and there must have been of such at least 59 to neutralize the aggregate vote given to the defendant.

It is a well settled rule in contested elections, scarcely needing a reference to authority for its support, that the result will not be disturbed, nor one in possession of office removed, because of illegal votes received or legal votes refused, unless the number be such that the correction shows the contesting partly entitled thereto. If the obnoxious ballots ought to have been counted for the relator, and yet are insufficient to overcome the majority ascertained by the count actually made, the election will stand and the occupant of the place left in unmolested possession of it.

But the argument before us was directed mainly to a review of the ruling of the court in regard to the rejected ballots, and the rendering of the statutory provision relating thereto. Acts 1876-77, ch. 275, § 20.

As this is a question of frequent recurrence and practical importance, we have deemed it our duty to consider and decide it also. This section is in these words:

“ When the election shall be finished the registrars and judges of election, in presence of such of the electors as may choose to attend, shall open the boxes and count the ballots reading aloud the names of the persons who shall appear on each ticket; and if there shall be two or more tickets *361 rolled up together, or any ticket shall contain the names of more persons 'than said elector has a right to vote for, or shffil have a device upon it, in either of these cases, such ticket shall not be numbered in talcing the ballots, but shall be void, and the said counting of votes shall be continued without adjournment until completed and the result thereof declared.”

The statute enumerates three classes or kinds of ticket which are not to be numbered and are declared to be void, to-wit: tickets rolled up together, tickets with more names than the elector is entitled to vote for, and tickets having some device upon them. It is plain that tickets of either class are not only inoperative as to the person thus improperly voted for, but as to all others for whom the elector may vote. The entire ballot for all is vitiated and must be rejected from the count. The case is not governed by the rule laid down in the cases cited in Judge McGraRy’s work on the American Law of Elections, section 399, which in the absence of a statute limits the vitiating effect of such a ballot to the vote for one not to be elected, or to all who are voted for to fill an office, when the number voted for is greater than the number eligible to the office, and leaves the ballot effective as to such as are to be elected and for whom the elector may vote. The statute is peremptory, and the entire ticket, when its provisions are disregarded, is rendered illegal and void.

The sole inquiry then is as to the meaning of the act in it3 description of that immediate class of tickets, which “ contain the names of more persons than the elector has a right to vote for,” and is the ticket before us within the compass of its intent, as it surely is of its words ?

Upon full consideration we are of opinion that it is one of the prohibited ballots, and we are not at liberty to restrict its comprehensive terms by adding thereto, as suggested in the argument for the relator, the further qualifying words, for the same office, when the general assembly has *362

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.C. 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-deloatch-v-rogers-nc-1882.