State Ex Rel. Wolff v. Geurkink

109 P.2d 1094, 111 Mont. 417, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 5
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1941
DocketNo. 8,175.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 109 P.2d 1094 (State Ex Rel. Wolff v. Geurkink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Wolff v. Geurkink, 109 P.2d 1094, 111 Mont. 417, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 5 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought originally in this court by application for a writ of mandate to compel the board of county commissioners of Treasure county to reconvene as a board of canvassers of election returns and to issue a certificate of election to the relator, Harold S. Wolff, as elected to the office of clerk of the district court of said county at the general election held on November 5, 1940. An alternative writ was issued and the board of county commissioners filed their return and answer thereto, and the county clerk answered separately. By petition in intervention 166 electors of Treasure county appeared and joined as respondents in resisting the application for the writ. The cause was heard upon the pleadings and papers so filed, and, *420 with briefs of counsel and after oral argument, was so submitted. The exigencies of the case required prompt action, and to avoid delay the mandate of the court sustaining the relator’s claim of election was issued and filed in advance of the written opinion.

After the issuance of the peremptory writ and before the completion and filing of the written opinion, the respondents filed a motion for leave to amend their answer and return to the alternative writ and asking the court to modify its order granting the writ. The amendments proposed were considered and found to contain nothing that would change the conclusion already reached by the court, and the motion to modify the order granting the writ is denied.

There is no dispute over the material facts. J. P. Gallagher was nominated as the Democratic candidate for the office of clerk of the district court of Treasure county at the primary election held on July 16, 1940. There was no other nomination made for the same office. On October 12 following, Gallagher died. The official ballots for the ensuing general election were printed on October 20, and Gallagher’s name was printed on all such ballots as the Democratic candidate for clerk of court. J. P. Gallagher was the clerk of the court at the time of his death, and his widow, Marguerite Gallagher, was appointed by the county commissioners to fill the vacancy.

At the general election held on November 5, 400 votes were cast for J. P. Gallagher for the office of clerk of court. The relator, Harold S. Wolff, received 97 votes for the same office; Marguerite Gallagher received 26 votes, Clyde Miller received one vote, J. C. Shaeffer received one vote and J. O. Crandall received two votes — the names of all so voted for, other than the name of J. P. Gallagher, being written in on the ballots by the electors. The votes so cast were certified from the various voting precincts by the judges of election. The respondents, the county commissioners, acting as the county canvassing board, canvassed the election returns, on November 8, 1940, and found and reported the votes cast for the office of clerk of court as stated.' No certificate of election was issued, and the canvassing board, in *421 explanation thereof, adopted the following resolution, which was entered in the minutes of their proceedings:

“Whereas, J. P. Gallagher received the highest number of legal votes for the office of Clerk of the District Court of Treasure County, Montana, at the general election held in said County on November 5th, 1940, and
“Whereas, the said J. P. Gallagher died prior to the date of said election,
“Now, therefore, be it resolved, that the election of the said J. P. Gallagher as Clerk of the District Court, as aforesaid, be declared, and it is hereby declared, to be a nullity, and that the vacancy created by said void election shall be filled by an appointment to be made by this Board. ’ ’

The relator claims his election to the office of clerk of court by reason of having received the highest number of votes cast for any living person for that office, and prays that a writ issue commanding the respondents, the county commissioners, to reconvene as a canvassing board and to recanvass the votes cast for the office of clerk of court, and that if they find that the relator, Harold S. Wolff, received the highest number of votes cast for a living person for that office at the said election, they then issue a certificate of election to him.

The relator in his affidavit in support of the application for the writ, in addition to the facts above as to the votes cast and what was done officially in the conduct of the election and the canvassing of the returns, sets out facts to show that there was a concerted effort on the part of the surviving widow of J. P. Gallagher and her friends and the officials having to do with the conduct of the election, to influence the voters and so conduct the election as to leave a vacancy in the office, with no one legally elected thereto, and which could then be filled by her appointment, and that the action of the canvassing board in declaring the result of the election as set forth in its resolution adopted and above referred to was part of such scheme and conspiracy.

As proof of the general dissemination of information of the death of J. P. Gallagher and knowledge thereof by the electors *422 of the county, and as evidence of the general scheme to make the surviving widow the clerk of court without an election, a printed page from an issue of the Midland Empire Farmer, a weekly newspaper published at the county seat and having a general circulation in the county, is attached to the application. On this page of the paper the death of J. P. Gallagher, the clerk of the court, is reported and an account of the funeral is given. In the biographical sketch in this report the following paragraph appears: “He was elected as clerk of the district court for Treasure county in 1932 and took office the first of the year in 1933. He served in that capacity until his death Saturday morning. He would have been up for re-election in the November 5th general election. His name has been placed on the ballot.”

In another column of the same paper appears an article reporting the appointment of Mrs. Gallagher as clerk of court and calling attention further to the selection of a successor in the office. This article is as follows:

“At a special meeting of the board of county commissioners Wednesday morning, announcement was made that Mrs. Marguerite Gallagher was named to fill the unexpired term of clerk of the district court, following the death of her husband, J. P. Gallagher, early Saturday morning. Mr. Gallagher had served for eight years as clerk of the court.
“Board members in session Wednesday were Albert Geurkink, chairman, and M. I. Draper and George A. Feeley, members.
“Mr. Gallagher’s name will appear on the general election ballots November 5th, and providing he receives the majority of votes for that office, the board of county commissioners will have the right to name a successor to fill that office for the next four years.”

On the same page of the newspaper is printed a complete copy of the official ballot to be used at the coming general election, with the name of J. P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P.2d 1094, 111 Mont. 417, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wolff-v-geurkink-mont-1941.