Welch v. Fitzgerald

144 So. 73
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 15, 1932
DocketNo. 1073.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 144 So. 73 (Welch v. Fitzgerald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Welch v. Fitzgerald, 144 So. 73 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LE BLANC, J.

In cases of this nature the appellate court has to hand down its decision within twenty-four hours after submission. As has already been, observed by the appellate courts in this state, twenty-four hours is a short period of time in which to give careful and mature consideration to the several issues which may be and are frequently involved in these generally closely contested cases, and it is almost impossible to prepare such reasons for judgment as the court would -like to do. In view of such a situation and of the positive requirement of the law, we will, for the present, in this case, as has lately been done in the case of McConnell v. Salmon, 174 La. 606, 141 So. 73, content ourselves with assigning oral reasons for the decree herein issued and reserve the right to later file a written opinion in the case. We might mention here, however, that our written reasons will be based largely on the decision of the Supreme Court in the McConnell Case, above cited.

It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment appealed from be and the same is hereby reversed, avoided, and set aside, and it is now ordered that there be judgment herein in favor of the defendant, L. C. Fitzgerald, contestee, and against the plaintiff, Harry H. Welch, rejecting the latter’s demands and dismissing his suit at his costs.

Reasons for Judgment.

This case involves a contest over, an election for member of the Jefferson Davis parish school board for ward 1 of that parish. The parties to the contest were the only two candidates in the Democratic primary election called for and held on September 13, 1932. The Parish Democratic Executive Committee, after canvassing the returns, found that L. C. Fitzgerald, defendant herein, had obtained two votes more than Harry H. Welch, plaintiff herein, and declared him the nominee of the party.

Alleging that there were irregularities in the counting of the ballots at both election booths in the ward, and that there were illegal votes counted which should have been rejected, all of which, if properly done, would have changed the result of the election, Harry H. Welch, the contestant, instituted this proceeding to have himself declared the nominee.

Fitzgerald answered plaintiff’s petition by denying the irregularities therein charged, and averring, to the contrary, that the election was legally held and that the result, as tabulated by the commissioners, should be ordered to stand. He prays for a dismissal of plaintiff’s suit and that he be declared the Democratic nominee. In the alternative he prays that if the court should hold that there were any irregularities and that illegal votes were cast, the election be annulled and another primary election be ordered held in the ward.

Upon the case being taken up for trial, the court required the plaintiff to establish by prima facie proof a reasonable probability of some error, in the count of the ballots, before he would be permitted to introduce the ballots themselves in evidence. Such proof having been adduced to the satisfaction of the court, it was then ordered that the ballot box of precinct 1 of the ward, referred to as the Lake Arthur precinct, be produced so that it could be opened and examined in open court. It may be stated at this point that the contest, as it appears before us, involves the results of the Lake Arthur box only, as the charges of irregularities at the other precinct known as the Thornwell precinct were not supported by the required proof.

Upon the Lake Arthur box being produced in court, counsel for defendant objected to the introduction of the ballots in evidence for the reason that plaintiff had failed to prove that the box had not been tampered with since the election. The court then, to use its own language, ruled that “the plaintiff may proceed with his testimony, to show, if he can, that the ballot box has not been tampered with since it left the hands of the Commissioners.” In this ruling, the court was perhaps a bit more liberal toward the plaintiff than it should have been, as is indicated from the latest decision of the Supreme Court of the state on this point, in the case of McConnell v. Salmon, 174 La. 606, 141 So. 73, 76. In that case, the court held that the question presented was not whether the boxes and the ballots were in fact tampered with, but whether “they .were so exposed as to have afforded an opportunity to be tampered with.” Obviously, the burden of showing that the boxes have not been *75 actually tampered with is far lighter than to show only that they have not been exposed as to have afforded an opportunity of having been tampered with.

After a certain amount of proof had been offered, the court held that the same “established reasonable care by the custodian of the box, and the extreme improbability, if not impossibility, of unwarranted persons tampering with it.” The box was then opened and the ballots were recounted in open court. The result .of the recount showed that there were twenty-two more ballots in the box than had been accounted for by the commissioners. Several of these were questioned by the defendant, but allowing him every one of the questioned ballots, there still remained a difference of seven votes in favor of the plaintiff. Upon this finding judgment was rendered in favor of the latter declaring him the nominee of his party. The defendant appealed.

The prima facia proof which the lower court found sufficient to have established a probability of some error in the count of the votes by the commissioners does not impress us as strongly, perhaps, as it seems to have the trial judge. We pass over the matter .without further comment, however, as our decision of the case rests on the other point involved, which is with regard to the exposure of the Lake Arthur box in such manner as to have afforded an opportunity of being tampered with.

Following what it refers to as the general rule which prevails in this state and elsewhere, the Supreme Court in the case of McConnell v. Salmon, cited supra, places the burden on the one desiring to offer the ballots in an election contest in evidence, of proving, “with reasonable certainty that they had not been tampered with since the election, or that their preservation has been such as to exclude any reasonable opportunity of tampering with them, or that they havé been so kept as to render it improbable that they could have been tampered with.” The court appears to have left- no doubt as to its position with regard to the proper observance of the requirements of the law on the paft of those intrusted with the duty of conducting an election for public officers under our system of government. The provisions of our law in these matters are held to be not merely directory, but mandatory, and, so that the presumptive purity of the election can be given its fullest effect, it must be shown by the one challenging the official count that the ballot boxes, after the count has been completed, have been guarded with that zealous care which the law contemplates before they can be reopened and allowed to overthrow the results as officially announced. The following is quoted with approval by the court, from McCrary on Elections, p. S46:

“The danger that the ballots may be tampered with after the count is made known, especially if the vote is very close, is so great that no opportunity for such tampering can be permitted.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welch-v-fitzgerald-lactapp-1932.