Watson v. Spartanburg County Board of Education

139 S.E. 775, 141 S.C. 347, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 7, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 S.E. 775 (Watson v. Spartanburg County Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watson v. Spartanburg County Board of Education, 139 S.E. 775, 141 S.C. 347, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 80 (S.C. 1927).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Stabeer.

ITobbysville School District No. 88 and Cross Anchor School District No. 15 are both located in Cross Anchor township, Spartanburg County. In that township there are three voting places, Hobbysville, Cross Anchor, and Enoree. On or about October 1, 1925, certain residents of the *349 Hobbysville District filed a petition with the County Board of Education for Spartanburg County, requesting the consolidation of that district with the Cross Anchor District. This petition was resisted by the trustees and certain other residents .of the Hobbysville District, who filed a counter petition. A petition was also filed by residents of the Cross Anchor District asking for the consolidation of the two districts. On October 9, 1925, the matter, was heard by the County Board of Education, who ordered the consolidation. On petition, the board granted a rehearing, which was held November 9, 1925. At this hearing the lists of petitioners were revised, and on December 1, 1925, the board passed an order reaffirming its former action, and holding that there was a total of 58 qualified voters in the Hobbysville District; that 22 of that number had signed the petition requesting the consolidation; and that this number, being more than one-third of the qualified voters of the district, was a compliance with the law in that respect for consolidation. An appeal was taken to the State Board of Education, which, August, 1926, affirmed the action of the County Board. The matter now comes before this Court on a writ of certio-rari.

The petitioners to this Court assign error on various grounds, but under our view of the case, we need consider only the error imputed to the State Board of Education, in affirming the findings and holdings of the County Board that there were only 58 qualified voters in Hobbysville School District, and that the 22 qualified voters of the district who signed the petition for consolidation were more than one-third of the qualified voters thereof. The question presented, then, for our consideration is, Who were, at the time of the filing of the petitions, “qualified voters” of the Hobbysville School District, with the right to act as such .for the purposes named in Section 2599, Code 3 of 1922, which provides that—

*350 “No school district shall be consolidated except upon a petition of at least one-third of the qualified voters of the school district proposed to be consolidated.”

The distinction between “qualified electors” and' “qualified voters” is defined in the case of State v. Mittle, 120 S. C., 526; 113 S. E., 335, in which it is pointed out that “a qualified elector is a citizen, male or female, of the State, 21 years of age and upwards, not laboring under the disabilities named in the Constitution and possessing the qualifications required by it,” and who has been duly registered by the County Board of Registration; while a “qualified voter” is a person who is not only a qualified registered elector, but who has met the additional requirement, imposed by the Constitution and the statute law, of the payment of all taxes assessed against him and collectible during the previous year. See, also, Abernathy v. Wolfe, 117 S. C., 545; 109 S. E., 275.

It appears, however, that the County Board of Education, whose findings and holdings were confirmed by the State Board of Education, reached the conclusion that certain citizens residing in the Hobbysville School District, registered at either Cross Anchor or Enoree, outside of the district but within the polling precinct, were not qualified voters of that district, by reason of the fact that they had removed from one part of .the district to another, thus bringing their residences nearer to the Hobbysville voting place within the district than to either of the other voting places at which they w'ere registered, and had failed to secure registration certificates to vote at the Hobbysville voting place. It is not- contended that any one of the 13 residents of Hobbysville District disqualified by the board was not registered at either the Cross Anchor or the Enoree voting place, or had not paid his taxes; the only ground on which disqualification was based being that above indicated.

Article 2, § 4, of the Constitution, in the matter of qualification for suffrage, as to residence, provides:

*351 “(a) Residence in the State for two years, in the County one year, in the polling precinct in which the elector offers to vote four months.” (Italics ours.)

As to what constitutes “polling precincts,” Section 230, Code 3, 1922, provides:

“Each township as now. or hereafter laid out and defined in the several counties of this State, and in those counties where there are no such townships, the parish as formerly known and defined, is declared a polling precinct.”

In that same Section we also find the follo'wing provision :

“The voting places within these polling precincts shall be the same as now or hereafter established by law: Provided, when there are more than one voting place in the polling precincts the electors for that precinct can vote at either polling place, to be designated on his certificate of registration by board of registration or supervisor of registration.”

It is to be noted that (1) the township or parish is the polling precinct, (2) therein may be established a number of voting places, and (3) where there is more than one voting place in a polling precinct the electors of such polling precinct may vote at either voting place, as designated by the board orsupervisor of registration on the voter’s certificate.

Section 219, Code 3, 1922, provides: (1) That every voter shall vote at the polling or voting place in the polling precinct (which may be a township) where his registration certificate entitles him to vote; (2) that in case an elector shall move from one polling precinct to another in the same County, if he desires to vote, he is required to surrender his old certificate and obtain a new one, etc. But it is to be noted that the section provides that where one voting place has been changed to another in the same township or polling precinct, or the name of the voting place has been changed, the registration at the old voting place is effectual for the new. Also, a registered elector has the option to change his voting place within a polling precinct to a voting place *352 therein which may be nearer his residence, although he is not required to do so.

Construing Sections 219 and 230 together, it is clear that qualified voters of Cross Anchor township may vote at any one of its three voting places, as designated by such qualified voter’s registration certificate. The fact that a voting place is located by lawj in Hobbysville School District does not mean that a resident of that district is required_ to register to vote at the Hobbysville voting place in order to become a qualified elector of the polling precinct or a qualified voter of the Hobbysville School District.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Initiative Petition No. 142, State Question No. 205
1936 OK 209 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Mills v. State Board of Education of S.C.
166 S.E. 500 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1932)
State Ex Rel. Harrelson v. Williams
154 S.E. 164 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1930)
Hunter v. Town of West Greenville
144 S.E. 62 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.E. 775, 141 S.C. 347, 1927 S.C. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-spartanburg-county-board-of-education-sc-1927.