State ex rel. Metcalf v. Garesché

3 Mo. App. 526, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 43
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 24, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 Mo. App. 526 (State ex rel. Metcalf v. Garesché) 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. Metcalf v. Garesché, 3 Mo. App. 526, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 43 (Mo. Ct. App. 1877).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an application for a mandamus to compel appellants, as canvassers of election returns, to issue to the relator a certificate of election as representative for Congress, in the Third Congressional District. An alternative writ issued, and was served upon defendant Garesché, clerk of the County Court of St. Louis County, and upon defendants Finney and Shultz, justices of the County Court.

The petition alleges that, at a general election in St. Louis County, held on November 7, 1876, relator and R. Graham Frost were candidates for Congress, in the district named; and that the poll-books of said election, duly returned to defendant Garesché, showed that relator received 8,097 votes, and Frost 8,072 ; that the poll-books of Precinct 57, when received by Garesché, on November 8th, showed, certified to relator, 318 votes, and, to Frost, 272 votes, and were so read and called off by Garesché, to many persons, on that day; that on November 9th this return was fraudulently altered by some person unknown to relator, the figure “7” being changed into a “'9,” so as [529]*529to make the votes for Frost read “ 292; ” that Garesché, after investigation, on November 14th, pronounced himself satisfied that this change was made after the returns were delivered to his official custody; that on November 16, 1876, Garesché called to his assistance the other defendants to aid him in casting up the returns at said election; and that Garesché, by law, is required to certify the- result of such canvass to the secretary of state, who thereupon issues to the candidate having the highest number of votes a certificate of election, which is the evidence of title to the office ; that defendants, knowing that said returns have been fraudulently altered, as aforesaid, in the office of the county clerk, illegally and oppressively refuse to count Frost’s vote at Precinct 57 at “ 272,” and have counted his vote as “ 292,” thus giving him a majority of votes ; that defendant Garesché, whilst defendants were canvassing these votes, informed the other defendants that he was satisfied that the number of votes on the poll-book of Precinct 57, when received in his office, was 272, and not 292, for Frost, and that the same had been fraudulently altered, and proposed that said vote should be counted 272, but the other defendants decided to count said vote as 292 ; whereupon, Garesché announced that he would adopt their decision, and would so certify to the secretary of state; that defendants, against relator’s objections, will so certify, and that the efFect will be to deprive relator of his certificate of election, contrary to truth and right, unless prevented by the court; that defendants have not finished the canvass, and are still in session as canvassers of said election; and that relator has no other adequate legal remedy, and prays a mandamus to command defendants to count the vote of Frost in Precinct 57 as 272.

Defendants Shultz and Finney, in their joint return to the writ, deny all fraud and oppression, and knowledge of any alteration of the poll-book, and say that, as canvassers, [530]*530they counted the vote of Precinct 57 as 292 for Frost, according to the face of the poll-book presented to them, as was their duty. They say that Garesché told them that there were circumstances from which he was led to believe the poll-book had been changed as alleged iii petition ; but said he had no personal or official knowledge of the fact, and furnished the poll-book to these respondents showing a return and certificate of 292 votes for Frost in Precinct 57, which they counted accordingly, as they were bound by law to do. The answer further says that they had completed the canvass of returns before the writ was served.

The separate answer of Garesché denies all charges of fraud and oppression; denies that he ever read off or called the number “ 272 from the poll-book as the vote for Frost in Precinct 57 ; admits that he investigated a public charge that the vote had been fraudulently altered from “ 272 ” to “ 292 ” on the poll-book of that precinct; and says that he stated, and still believes, that the change was made, as stated, in his office, and after he had footed up said returns from a tally-sheet in his office, in which he had counted the figures in question as “ 272 ; ” says that he was advised by counsel that he could not change the figures to “ 292 ” unless he knew of the fact of the alteration of his own knowledge, but that he should, if he believed from circumstances which have come to his knowledge since the alleged alteration that the “ 7 ” had been changed to a “ 9,” state on his return his belief in the alteration. He denies that he ever said that he would adopt the count of 292 except accompanied with this statement of his belief. He denies that he ever directed, or assented to, the making of a tally-sheet of the vote with these figures set down as 292.

The answer further alleges' that he has no personal or official knowlédge of any change in the figures ; that, from circumstantial evidence elicited by him, he believes the change was made as alleged; that it was not made by his [531]*531consent or authority, or with , his knowledge, and, as he believes, not by any of his subordinates, and that it was not made by him.

A motion for judgment on the return was overruled. The cause was then tried by the court, a jury being waived.

The evidence is extremely voluminous, and its perusal leaves no doubt upon the. mind that the poll-books as returned to the office of the county clerk at nine o’clock on November 8th, the morning after the election, showed the vote for Frost at Precinct 57 to be 272, and that for Met-calf, 318; and that afterwards the vote for Frost was changed to 292. Everybody who had any official connection with the poll-books was examined as a witness.

Garesché testified that he had examined the “ 9 ” in the poll-book with a magnifying-glass, and believed it was changed from a ‘ ‘ 7 ; ” that, on the day the poll-book was returned to his office, he had made various calculations which appeared on a tally-sheet introduced in evidence, made in his office from the poll-books, which were all correct if this figure was then written on that sheet “7,” and all wrong if it was written £ ‘ 9 ; ” that this tally-sheet was not seen by him again until November 13th, when he found it under a blotter on his desk, and was at once struck with the fact that, in the Frost vote in Precinct 57, the <£ 7” seemed changed to a ££ 9 ” by a pen which had been once used for red ink, and then dipped in black; that he then went over the calculations again, and found them all right if this figure was “7,” and all wi’ong if it was ££ 9 ; ” and he was then convinced that the tally-sheet and poll-book had both been changed.

Young, a deputy in Garesché’s office, swore that he had entered the figures “ 272,” and not ££ 292,” on this tally-sheet, on the day after election, from the numbers as called to him by Brewer, another deputy, and that Brewer, on that day, called out the numbers of Precinct 57 to the newspaper reporters from the poll-book.

[532]*532Brewer’s testimony as to these facts corroborated that of Young.

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Related

Barnes v. Plessner
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64 Mo. App. 28 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1895)
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9 Mo. App. 148 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Mo. App. 526, 1877 Mo. App. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-metcalf-v-garesche-moctapp-1877.