Sweeney v. Hjul

49 P. 169, 23 Nev. 409
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1897
DocketNo. 1493.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 49 P. 169 (Sweeney v. Hjul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sweeney v. Hjul, 49 P. 169, 23 Nev. 409 (Neb. 1897).

Opinions

By the Court,

Massey, J.:

The respondent and appellant were rival candidates for the office of sheriff of .Eureka county, at the general election held therein, on the 3d day of November, 1896; the canvass of the returns of the various election precincts made by the board of county commissioners of said county on the 10th day of November, 1896, gave the respondent 164 votes, and the appellant 168 votes, and an order was thereupon made by said board declaring the appellant duly elected to the said office, and a certificate of election was issued to him as such. On the 11th day of December, 1896, the respondent commenced this action to contest the election of appellant *415 to said office, and in the statement or complaint alleged, as grounds therefor, malconduct on the part of the election officers of precincts numbered 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 10 and 11 in failing to count legal ballots cast for respondent at said election, and in counting illegal and void ballots for the appellant. The appellant answered 'denying the allegations and averred malconduct on the part of the election officers in each and all of the precincts of said county in failing to count therein certain legal ballots cast for the appellant and counting certain illegal and void ballots for the respondent.

Under these issues-trial was commenced on the 23d day of December, 1896, before the court without a jury. During said trial all the ballots cast at said election in the various precincts of said county were offered in evidence, and the appellants objected to the counting of 70 thereof for the contestant upon the ground that each of said ballots had marks and words made and written thereon by which it could be identified. The respondent objected, during said trial, to the admission of 67 or 68 of said ballots, for the same reasons. The cause was then continued for further hearing, until the 11th day of January, 1897, when testimony was offered on the part of the respondent relating to certain votes cast at Beowawe precinct. Thereafter, the court heard the argument of the counsel upon the objections to the admission of the ballots and, after considering the same, overruled the objections of the appellant to all of the ballots for contestant, except 14, to which rulings exceptions were taken; the court also overruled the objections of the respondent to the various ballots for appellant, except 13 thereof, to which rulings exceptions were taken. Thereupon the court announced that the respondent had received 158 votes for said office, and the appellant 156 votes therefor.

The appellant then moved the court for leave to compare the number of votes cast in the Beowawe precinct at said election, as shown by the registry list used by the inspectors and clerks of election at said precinct with the number of ballots returned to the county assessor as having been voted in said precinct, for the purpose of ascertaining whether more ballots were returned than the number of voters who voted in said precinct.

*416 Appellant further moved the court for leave to examine the ballots returned by the election officers of Eureka precinct No. 2 as having been voted at said election, and to examine the registry list used by the election officers of said precinct, and to count the number of voters who voted at said election as shown by said registry list of said precinct for the purpose of ascertaining whether a larger number of ballots were returned than voters who voted at said precinct, and for leave to examine said ballots for the purpose of ascertaining whether any mistake or mistakes had been made by the court in counting said ballots. Objections to said motion were made by the respondent, and on the 16th day of January, 1897, the court overruled said motion, to which ruling the appellant excepted.

Judgment was entered on the 21st day of January, 1897, in favor of the respondent, and from that judgment both parties have appealed.

The contention of the respondent that the statement should not be considered by this court for certain reasons cannot be sustained. This action was argued orally .upon its merits on the 19th day of March, 1897, on which date the respondent filed a brief. No objections were made to the statement during said argument, nor were any objections noted to the same in the brief filed at that time. Permission was granted to respondent to file a further brief in the case, and in that brief the objections to the statement were for the first time made. It has been held by this court that, when counsel ■appear and orally argue a case upon its merits, and after-wards, by leave of the court, file a brief and therein rely upon objections to the statement, that the oral argument upon the merits amounts to a waiver of the objections to the statement. (Truckee Lodge v. Wood, 14 Nev. 293.)

Appellant contends that the court erred in refusing appellant leave to examine and count the ballots returned from Beowawe and to compare them with the poll books used in said precinct, and also to pursue the same course with reference to ballots of Eureka precinct No. 2. The reasons urged upon the court for the granting of said motion were that it appeared in evidence that the ballot box at Beowawe precinct was not sealed when delivered to the county clerk of Eureka *417 county, and the envelope containing the unused ballots returned by the inspectors of said precinct had been partially broken open before a canvass of the returns was -made; that two of the ballots returned by the election officers of said precinct as having been voted and not counted by said officers were perfect ballots containing no word or mark that could possibly render them void; that it appeared from the returns of Eureka precinct No. 2 that 59 votes had been cast for respondent, and that, from the count made by the court of the votes of said precinct, it appeared that 62 votes had been cast for said respondent. It further appears from the testimony of Charles A. Jones and J. H. Murphy, two of the election officers of Beowawo precinct, that there were five ballots regularly voted and polled in said precinct which the inspectors had refused to count for some supposed defect; that these ballots were returned with the other ballots to be counted or not by the board of county commissioners; that all the ballots counted in said precinct were strung, and the five ballots cast but not counted were not strung. It further appears that the ballots in these precincts, together with all the other ballots of the other precincts of the county, had been used and handled by the board of county commissioners of said county on the 5th day of January, 1897, upon a recount upon the application of another candidate for the office of assemblyman. It further appears that during the trial of this action that the registry lists of these precincts had not been offered in evidence, and were not in evidence.

Upon these facts the appellant insists the court erred in denying his motion. We cannot so hold. No showing whatever is made on the part of the appellant that any fraud had been committed by any person or persons in Beowawe precinct. It seems that the ballots from that precinct, including these ballots not counted, had all been presented to the court, carefully examined by court and counsel, and counted. The same is true of the ballots cast in Eureka precinct No. 2.

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Bluebook (online)
49 P. 169, 23 Nev. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweeney-v-hjul-nev-1897.