State Ex Rel. Owens v. Chaplin

48 S.E.2d 37, 229 N.C. 797, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 438
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 4, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 48 S.E.2d 37 (State Ex Rel. Owens v. Chaplin) 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. Owens v. Chaplin, 48 S.E.2d 37, 229 N.C. 797, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 438 (N.C. 1948).

Opinion

Stacy, C. J., and Seawell, J.,

considering the petition to rehear.

The appeal was originally argued here on the assumption that all differences in the evidence, actual or inferential, were exclusively for the referee and the trial court. The petition to rehear seeks to perpetuate this assumption. They both overlook the basic error in the proceeding.

In the first place, the relator “concedes that each of the voters,” whose vote is here attacked, “was duly registered in Tyrrell County and in the precinct in which he voted in the 1946 election.” (R. 270.) And further, “that each of the affidavits of said voters was on a regular printed form, in the language of the statute and approved on the ballot envelope as required by law; that each affidavit bore the signature of the voter, the signature of the attesting officer, the seal of said attesting officer, the date executed and the County and State where executed in the places indicated on said affidavit form.” (R. 139.)

We start, then, with an admission on the part of the relator that each challenged elector was “duly registered in Tyrrell County” and that his absentee ballot was in proper form. This concession of regularity gives rise to a presumption of correctness. Omnia. praesumuntur rite esse acta. The burden, therefore, was not upon the electors to establish their right to vote, but upon the relator to show the contrary. Perhaps the case might have been allowed to rest just here on respondent’s motion to dismiss as in case of nonsuit. However, the opinion of the Court deals with all the exceptions.

Secondly, the relator called the electors as witnesses to prove their own disqualifications. On the crucial questions, i.e., residence at the time of voting, and being sworn, they testified against the relator, and he is bound by their testimony. S. v. Todd, 222 N. C., 346, 23 S. E. (2d), 47; Sawrey v. Murrell, 3 N. C., 397. They were quite specific as to their residence and in most cases of being sworn when they voted, especially on cross-examination, and there is nothing on the record to overbalance their testimony or to show otherwise. S. v. Cohoon, 206 N. C., 388, 174 S. E., 91. In several instances they were corroborated, and in others supported, by the attesting officer as to their being sworn. The relator was still struggling with the laboring oar at the close of his evidence. The respondent offered none.

The following examples will suffice as typical of those mentioned in the petition to rehear:

*799 1. Mrs. J. M. Bateman, one of tlie challenged electors, testified as follows: “We left this county and -went to Washington (County) and rented a house there about five years ago. Q. Did you register in Plymouth ? A. Yes, sir, I did, about two or three years ago.”

The relator contends that this is some evidence to support the finding of nonresidence and disqualification by the referee, which ivas approved by the trial court.

Note, however, what she says in explanation: “Every time I went up town they were after me to register, and I registered to get clear of them. I never voted in Washington County. My husband was in the Army at that time. (ILe enlisted from Tyrrell County.) I consider this my home. The only reason I was there was because of the shortage of houses in Tyrrell County; he couldn’t find a house here and I went over there.”

This undisputed testimony of the witness who says that she considered Tyrrell County her home, is binding on the relator. She was his witness. He vouched for her veracity and worthiness of belief. S. v. Freeman, 213 N. C., 378, 196 S. E., 308; S. v. Taylor, 88 N. C., 694.

Furthermore, the statutory definition of residence, Gh S., 163-25, subsec. “f,” is not as stringent against the absentee elector as the relator seems to think. This section provides that “If a person remove to another state or county within this state, with the intention of remaining there an indefinite time and making such stale or county his place of residence (italics added), he shall be considered to have lost his place of residence in this state or county from which he has removed (italics added), notwithstanding he may entertain an intention to return at some future time.” To square this with the Constitution, it is necessary that the word “residence,” as here used, should be construed in the sense of domicile, denoting a permanent abode, as distinguished from a temporary dwelling-place. Hannon v. Grizzard, 89 N. C., 115. Indeed, such appears to accord with the legislative intent. Jenkins v. Board of Elections, 180 N. C., 169, 104 S. E., 346, 14 A. L. R., 1247. Where one’s domicile is, there will his voting residence be also. S. v. Williams, 224 N. C., 183, 29 S. E. (2d), 744.

2. J. F. White, another of the challenged electors, testified as follows : “Q. You had not made up your mind definitely about coming back? A. I had in one way and in another I hadn’t. I had thought about coming back. I had thought about not coming back also; depends on whether I could get work. I was considering the possibility of coming back, but had not definitely made up my mind.”

On this evidence the referee found that the elector ivas a nonresident and the trial court affirmed.

Nevertheless, the foregoing was only a part of his testimony, as witness the following: “In November, 1946 (at time of voting), it was my intention to return to Tyrrell County. ... I have always considered it *800 my home here in Tyrrell. ... I voluntarily enlisted in the armed forces. ... I gave Tyrrell County as the county in which I lived. . . . I came home in Tyrrell County to my father and mother upon being discharged. I later registered and voted in the same precinct. ... I have always considered and counted myself a citizen of Tyrrell County. . . . I wouldn’t think there would be any objection to my voting in the county in which I lived after having served my country for four years.”

As this evidence is undisputed and binding on the relator, it unquestionably establishes the elector’s right to vote in Tyrrell County. Certainly it does not prove the opposite. Moreover, the indefiniteness of the elector’s intention to return to Tyrrell County is insufficient to establish loss of voting residence—no other having been acquired or intended, and the relator has rightly been held to have defaulted in the necessary proof. Gower v. Carter, 195 N. C., 697, 143 S. E., 513.

3. J. 0. Everton, the third-challenged elector mentioned in the petition to rehear, testified that he hoped to return to Tyrrell County within the next four or five years. “Q. Can you state to the Commissioner any definite condition on which you intend to go hack? A. Yes, sir. If I am laid off, which is barely possible at some future day, I would go back to Tyrrell County.”

The relator contends that this suffices to support the referee’s finding of loss of voting residence, which was affirmed by the trial court.

Yet observe what the witness further says : “In connection with my engineering work in the War Department, I am sent about the country.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.E.2d 37, 229 N.C. 797, 1948 N.C. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-owens-v-chaplin-nc-1948.