State ex rel. Wells v. Hough

91 S.W. 905, 193 Mo. 615, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 26, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 91 S.W. 905 (State ex rel. Wells v. Hough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Wells v. Hough, 91 S.W. 905, 193 Mo. 615, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 141 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

— This is an original proceeding in this court to obtain a writ of prohibition in behalf of the plaintiff Rolla Wells, prohibiting the Honorable Warwick Hough, as judge of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, and the said circuit court, from entertaining further jurisdiction, and from making other or further orders in the election contest brought by defendant Talty against the plaintiff Wells for the office of mayor for the city of St. Louis, and to prohibit the defendant election commissioners from opening the ballot-boxes under the order of said court made in said election contest, and to prohibit the defendant Talty from further prosecuting his said contest.

[624]*624In substance the petition alleges that the plaintiff was elected mayor of the city of St. Louis at the municipal election held in said city on Tuesday, the 4th of April, 1905; that he was the nominee and candidate of the Democratic party, and that defendant Talty was the nominee and candidate of the Republican party, for the said office of mayor; that plaintiff is a citizen of the United States and of the State of Missouri, and is a duly qualified and registered voter in the city of St. Louis in said State and possessed of all of the qualifications prescribed and required by law and the charter of said city, and to entitle him to be elected to the office of mayor of said city, and that the defendant, the Honorable Warwick Hough, is and was at all times mentioned herein, judge of the circuit court of said city of St. Louis, and the defendants, Andrew C. Maroney, Thomas K. Skinker and Benjamin Schnurmacher are election commissioners and comprise the board of election commissioners for said city; that the defendants Andrew C: Maroney, Thomas K. Skinker and Benjamin Schnurmacher as said election commissioners of said city, canvassed the returns made to them by the judges and clerks of the various voting precincts and wards of said city at said election and on the 11th day of April, 1905; that being the date on which said canvass was finished; that said board of election commissioners found and announced that, upon the returns made to a canvass by them, plaintiff had received more votes for the office of mayor of the said city than were cast for the defendant John A. Talty, and found that plaintiff had been elected to, and was entitled to hold said office for a term of four years, and in accordance with said finding caused to be issued to plaintiff a certificate of his said election, and issued to him a commission of office for a term of four years; that plaintiff thereupon took and subscribed the oath of office required by law as mayor for said city, and on the--day of April, 1905, entered into the possession of and [625]*625has ever since and is now discharging and performing the duties of said office.

Plaintiff states that the said defendant Talty has attempted, by and through the procedure hereinafter mentioned, to contest plaintiff’s said election, and caused to be delivered to plaintiff, by a deputy sheriff of the said city of St. Louis, on the 27th day of April, 1905, an alleged notice of contest. This notice is set out in haec verba in the body of the petition. Without repeating it at length, it is sufficient for the purpose of this opinion to say that the contestant Talty notified the plaintiff Wells that, inasmuch as they had been opposing candidates for the office of mayor for the. city of St. Louis, at the election held on the 4th day of April, 1905, and the plaintiff had been duly declared elected by the board of election commissioners to said office on the face of the returns made to them by the.judges and clerks of said election at the official count by said board of election commissioners on the 11th day of April, 1905, and had received a certificate of election, the contestant Talty£ £ shall at the first term of the circuit court of the city of St, Louis, to be held fifteen days after said official counting of said vote and the service of this notice, to-wit, at the term of the circuit court of said city to be begun and held at the court house therein on Monday, the 5th day of June, 1905, contest your election to said office.” The notice further alleged “that the contestant Talty, at the time of said election and at all times hereinafter mentioned, possessed and still possesses all the qualifications necessary to entitle him to hold the office of mayor in and for the city of St. Louis, and was then, and at all times hereinafter mentioned, had been, and is now eligible to hold the same and shall contest plaintiff’s election to said office, upon the following .grounds.” The notice then, in separate paragraphs, proceeds'to charge that a certain number of ballots were in various voting precincts in the city count[626]*626ed by tbe said election commissioners respectively for the contestant or eontestee, bnt alleged that none of the ballots counted for the eontestee Wells were numbered in the order in which they were received, nor was the number recorded by the election officers on the list of voters opposite the name of the voter who presented such ballot, nor were the names or initials of any of the judges of election written on said ballots so counted for the eontestee, and that in none of said precincts was the name or street or number of residence of any voter whose ballot was counted for eontestee entered upon either of the poll-books by the clerks of said election under its proper heading or at all, nor was the number of any such voter whose ballot was counted for the eontestee placed opposite his name in the poll-book in the column headed “number,” and charging that in each of said wards a larger number of ballots were cast, for the contestant Talty for said office. It is further alleged in paragraph 7, that in certain precincts of the Fourth, Sixth, Sixteenth and Twenty-first wards, Democratic judges and clerks of election were allowed to officiate, and did officiate, as judges and clerks of election in said several precincts who did not reside in* the respective precincts in which they officiated, and were not qualified to vote in said, precincts. It is then charged that in certain precincts for the Fourth ward one hundred legal voters were duly registered according to law and entitled to vote in several precincts at said election, appeared at their respective voting places and offered and undertook to cast their votes in favor of contestant for the office aforesaid, all of which said votes, the judges of election, acting at said several voting places refused to receive or accept. And further that the judges and clerks of election acting at the several voting precincts within said city, did not correctly, count the legal ballots cast at said election for the office aforesaid, and did not correctly certify and return to the board of election commissioners a true and prop[627]*627er statement of the actual number of legal votes cast at said election for contestant or contestee, but on the contrary did count in favor of contestee at least five thousand votes above the number of actual legal ballots ■which were cast for contestee. It is further charged that in the Fourth ward of the city of St. Louis, there was a total of two thousand fraudulent votes on the list of registered voters which had been entered upon said registration list with a criminal purpose and intent of having the same voted in favor of contestee, and that all of said fraudulent names were at said election actually voted in favor of said contestee.

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Bluebook (online)
91 S.W. 905, 193 Mo. 615, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wells-v-hough-mo-1906.