Webre v. Wilton

29 La. Ann. 610
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1877
DocketNo. 769
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 La. Ann. 610 (Webre v. Wilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webre v. Wilton, 29 La. Ann. 610 (La. 1877).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Egan, J.

This is a contest for office. The plaintiff claims to have received a majority of the votes cast for the office of sheriff of the parish [611]*611of Lafourche at the general election in November last, and that he was legally elected sheriff at'said election; but that, notwithstanding, his opponent, the present defendant, who was defeated at the polls, he fears and alleges will be returned elected and put in possession and enjoyment of the office and its emoluments through fraud and other ill-practices on the part of the supervisor of registration, the commissioners of election, and other officers and persons. There are numerous other allegations, and these frauds and irregularities are set out in numerous specifications, some of which are general and some more minute and particular. Among them are that the supervisor, a Republican, opposed in politics to petitioner and his party, failed to give public and general notice of the polling-places and the names of commissioners; that he failed to appoint Democratic commissioners at any of the voting-places as required by law, although professing to so intend and to have done so; that he informed the Republicans of the location of the polling-places several days before the election, and concealed them from the Democrats until twenty-four hours before the election, too late to notify the people in the country in a parish ninety miles long and many parts of which are otherwise accessible slowly and with difficulty; that he issued false and fraudulefit certificates of registration, upon which persons voted at the election; that he repeatedly promised and as often failed to strike from the registration list, when called upon to do so, the names of voters who had died, who had removed from the parish, who were convicts, minors, or otherwise not qualified'to vote; that votes were polled under the names and numbers of such dead or removed voters by other persons1 in sufficient numbers, together with the other frauds and illegalities charged, to change the count of votes to his prejudice; that the supervisor did not provide tally-sheets, sealing-wax, writing-material, etc., necessary for the use of the’commissioners at Democratic polls, and did not even send ballot-boxes to some of them; of which failure and fault he attempted to and did subsequently take advantage, to the prejudice of the petitioner; that he failed to appoint any polling-place in one of the justice’s wards, as required by law, where there were at least forty or fifty Democratic votes, of which petitioner was deprived in the election thereby; that one poll (seventeen) was not held at the place fixed by law and the supervisor, but at a place one and a half or two miles distant, in a private place, a negro quarter, remote from the public road, and without notice to the Democrats, or even to those of them residing on the plantation, or even to the proprietor; that the election at that poll, seventeen, was begun before daylight in the morning, was conducted exclusively by Republican commissioners and against the protest of the United States supervisor of registration, and of Democratic voters, who, after the election had been going on for some time, discovered by accident [612]*612where it was being conducted, but refused to vote at an illegal voting-place for fear of losing their votes; that said poll seventeen as returned was exclusively Republican, and was returned and counted as such and in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff to the number of eighty-six votes; that a large number of colored voters, who desired to vote and would have voted for petitioner and the Democratic ticket, were prevented from doing so by intimidation and fraud; that there were many other acts of fraud and illegality on the part of the supervisor, the commissioners of election,-..and other Republicans, whereby it was attempted to defeat the will: of the people and the election of the petitioner and to declare his opponent elected, whpn not so in fact; that the supervisor illegally and fraudulently rejected and refused to compile or count the votes from two polling-places (Nos. 2 and 10), at both of which the election was conducted fairly and peacefully, and at which petitioner and the Democratic ticket received a large majority of the votes polled, sufficient, if counted, to have given the return of the election in his favor and against the defendant; and, finally, that by means of the several frauds, illegalities, and ill-practices charged petitioner and the Democratic ticket generally will be illegally deprived of a majority in the count, compilation, and return of the votes of the parish of Lafourche, which, as he alleges, was, and always had been a Democratic parish, by a large majority, and was so at the late election.

It is proved that, after conference with Republican leaders, at which he was asked if he could carry the parish for the Republicans, and he replied that he would do what he could, one Ledet, a Republican, was appointed supervisor of registration in the place of Panalle, an honest colored Republican, who was called upon to resign under pretexts the falsity of which is shown. From the moment of his appointment Ledet lent himself to the fraudulent purposes of his party and those to whom he owed his appointment, and in every way possible epdeavored to prevent a fair election in the parish, .and the polling of the full Democratic vote, instead of discharging his duty under the law as a public officer.

The record is full of details of the most unblushing usurpations, frauds, deceits, and other ill-practices and illegal acts resorted to by the Republican supervisor and his associates and advisers in order to carry the parish in favor of the Republican ticket and against the Democratic ticket and the plaintiff, and to make count and compilation and return of the votes in the same way.

These things had grown so common and were habitually practiced with such immunity under the recent rule in Louisiana that they excite. no surprise in the mind of any one familiar with the history and conduct of elections in this State for the last few years. Such practices on the part of those charged with the conduct of elections has latterly been [613]*613a. stepping-stone to preferment and fortune, instead of consigning their authors to a just punishment. Under pretext of preserving the purity and freedom, of elections, the whole machinery for their management had become converted into a means of defeating the popular will, instead of carrying it out, and as a means of keeping in place and power a set of corrupt men whose sole object was personal advancement by any and all means, however vile, and not the public good.

The district judge has exhibited his learning and research to show the enormity of the offenses committed by those who sought to guard •against these frauds and ill-practices and to detect and expose them when committed. The acts themselves which provoked this espionage, as he terms it, and their authors have been passed over by him in silence. They seem to have provoked from him neither censure nor remark. It may be very true, as remarked by him, that the ballot should be kept sacred and secret.

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

Related

Beard v. Henry
199 So. 468 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)
Hastings v. Wilson
182 S.E. 375 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1935)
Pope v. Howle
149 So. 222 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1933)
Briscoe v. Between Consolidated School District
156 S.E. 654 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1931)
Garrett v. Cuninghame
100 So. 845 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)
Andrews v. Blackman
59 So. 769 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1912)
Lower Terrebonne Refining & Manufacturing Co. v. Police Jury
40 So. 443 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1906)
Ragan v. Falgout
1 Mann. Unrep. Cas. 143 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1880)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 La. Ann. 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webre-v-wilton-la-1877.