State ex rel. Swenson v. Norton

46 Wis. 332
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 46 Wis. 332 (State ex rel. Swenson v. Norton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Swenson v. Norton, 46 Wis. 332 (Wis. 1879).

Opinion

Taylor, J.

This is an action to determine the right to the office of chairman of the board of supervisors of the town of Elambeau, in Chippewa county. The relator and the respondent both claim to have been elected to that office at the town meeting held in that town on the 2d day of April, 1878.

The evidence shows that, according to the canvass made by the inspectors of the election, it was declared by them that the respondent, Norton, had received forty-three votes, the relator, Gilbert Swenson, thirty-one votes, and one William Waite fifteen votes, for the office of chairman of the board of super[334]*334visors of said town, and that said Norton was duly elected to said office; and that he afterwards duly qualified, and has since exercised the duties of such office. The evidence also shows that, according to the poll-lists kept at such election, ninety-one persons voted for chairman of the board; and that, when the votes were counted, only eighty-nine ballots were found in the box for such office.

The relator, in his complaint, amongst other things, sets forth at length the names of fifty-nine persons, who, he claims, voted for him for the office of chairman of the board of supervisors of said town at said town meeting, and charges that the inspectors, or some one of them, or some one with their knowledge or consent, fraudulently, designedly, and with intent to cheat and defraud the relator out of an election to said office of chairman, and to count in and procure the election of said Norton to said office, opened the ballot box and removed therefrom a number of the ballots which had been cast for the relator, and substituted therein, in their place, an equal number of ballots which had not been voted, and containing the name of the respondent for that office, and a sufficient number thereof, to wit, twenty-nine, to make the result as declared by said inspectors at the close of the polls on that day.

The respondent, by his answer, admits that there was an election on said second day of April, 1878, in said town, for the election, among other officers, of chairman of the board of supervisors; and that at noon there was an adjournment for one hour, to enable the clerks and inspectors to get dinner; and then denies each and every other allegation in the complaint. As a separate answer, he alleges that he received a majority of all the legal votes cast at said town meeting for said, office of chairman of the board of supervisors; that he was then and there duly and legally elected to said office; that said votes were duly canvassed by the board of inspectors; that he was by said inspectors duly declared elected to said office; that he duly qualified within the time prescribed by law, and [335]*335entered upon the duties of said office; and that he has ever since been, and is now, in discharge of the duties thereof.

Upon the trial of the action, the relator called forty-five persons, whose names appeared upon the poll-lists of said election, who severally swore that they voted, at such election, for the office of chairman of the board of supervisors of said town, and that they voted for the relator for such office. He also made proof that eight other persons, whose names were on said poll-lists, cast their votes for him at such election, for said office of chairman. The relator also gave evidence for the purpose of showing that the ballot box might have been opened, and ballots voted removed, and others substituted in their place.

The defendant gave no evidence of the fact that any elector voted for him at such election for the office of chairman of the board of supervisors. He did give evidence tending to show that the ballot box had not been opened, or ballots voted removed therefrom, and others substituted in their stead. He rested his right to the office wholly upon the fact that the canvass of the votes found in the ballot box at the close of the election showed that he had received a plurality of the votes cast for that office, and that the inspectors had declared him duly elected to said office; and insisted that the evidence produced by the relator was not sufficient to rebut the presumption arising from such canvass, that he was duly elected to said office.

The relator alleges the following errors • committed on the trial in the court below:

1. That the court erred in permitting the defendant to cross-examine his witnesses for the purpose of showing that they were not legal voters at such election.

. 2. That the court erred in refusing the instructions asked by the relator.

3. That the court erred in the instructions given to the jury.

[336]*3364. That the judgment and verdict are against, and not sustained by, the evidence.

The first ground of error is based upon a rule of court adopted March 3, 1869, relating to proceedings in all actions of mandamus and quo warranto. The rule is as follows, so far as the same is applicable to this case: “In all actions of mandamus or quo warranto, in any of the courts of this state, in which the result of any election shall be in issue, before either party shall be permitted to offer proof, upon the trial, of the illegality of the vote of any person who voted at such election, he shall show to the court that he has, at least twenty days before the commencement of the trial, served upon the opposite party a notice in writing that he claimed the vote of such voter to be illegal, stating the grounds of such illegality.”

.In this case, the relator having set forth at length the names of all the persons who, he claims, voted for him at the election, in controversy, there can be, no doubt that the defendant was called upon, by the provisions of the foregoing rule, to give notice as therein required, before he could be legally permitted to question the legality of any vote cast at such election by any of the persons named in the complaint of the relator. We are of the opinion, however, that, in order to exclude the evidence upon the ground of the want of such notice, it was the duty of the relator to have specified the want of such notice as the ground of his objection, at the time the evidence was offered; and as the only objection made was a general objection to evidence, without a specification of any ground or reason for the same, it cannot avail the party in this court. In this case, the question of the legality of the votes cast by the relator’s witnesses was a question which was clearly triable in the court below upon the issues in the case; the evidence, therefore, of the want of the necessary qualifi-. cations of an elector on the part of the witnesses who testified that they voted for the relator, was neither incompetent nor immaterial; but it was not admissible without first [337]*337showing that the notice required by the rule had been given, had it been objected to for that reason. Had the objection to the evidence been based upon that ground, however, it might have been avoided by proof that the notice had been given; or, if the notice had not been given, it is to be presumed that the court below, having its attention called to the fact that no such notice had been given, would have rejected the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Wis. 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-swenson-v-norton-wis-1879.