White v. Laird

96 A. 318, 127 Md. 120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 5, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 96 A. 318 (White v. Laird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Laird, 96 A. 318, 127 Md. 120 (Md. 1915).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant and the appellee, Philip D. Laird, were candidates for nomination for the House of Delegates from Montgomery County on the, Democratic ticket at the primary election held in that county on the 14th of September, 1915. The Board of Canvassers certified that the appellant received 1946 votes and Mr. Laird 1955 votes — three other candidates having more votes than they, and the contest being between them for the fourth place, as that county was entitled to four delegates. The appellant filed a petition with the Supervisors of Elections, asking that the ballots cast be recounted and recanvassed, and on September 24, 1915, the Supervisors, sitting for the purpose of recounting and reviewing said ballots and acting under section 199-B of Article 33 of the Code, proceeded to recount and recanvass the ballots cast at said primary election for the appellant and the appellee, Laird, and they determined that Mr. Laird had a majority of three votes. The appellant filed a petition for a mandamus to compel the Supervisors of Elections to reject 120 ballots which they counted and to count four which they rejected and to declare the result of the election accordingly.

A demurrer was filed to the answer of the Supervisors, and a motion to quash part, and a demurrer to the. other parts of the answer of Philip D. Laird were filed. In the answer of Mr. Laird there was a demurrer to' the petition, qiiestioning the authority of the Court to grant a mandamus upon the case stated in the petition. The lower Court passed an order sustaining the demurrer of Mr. Laird and dismissing the petition. Erom that order this appeal was taken.

*122 In the case of Foxwell v. Beck, 117 Md. 1, it was decided that the primary election law did not provide for a contest over a nomination. That case was decided November 22nd, 1911, and by an Act approved January 10th, 1912, provision was made for an appeal to the Supervisors of Elections, and for a recanvass and recount of the ballots cast. Section 160-Y, Chapter 2 of Laws of 1912, being 199-B of Article 33 of Code (Vol. 3).

The two acts of the Supervisors relied on in the petition as the ground for the mandamus are: 1st. That the Supervisors counted 12Ó ballots (64 of which were marked for Laird and 56 for White) which were not marked with a black lead pencil, but with an indelible pencil; and 2nd. That they rejected four ballots not defective upon their face, three being for petitioner and the other blank as to them.

The lower Court based its order on the ground that “the authority conferred by the law upon the Board of Supervisors for conducting and determining such appeals as the one instituted by the present petitioner clearly involves the exercise of judgment and is consequently not a proper subject for revision or regulation in a mandamus proceeding.” The statute (sec. 199-B of Art. 33) gives the right of “appeal from and review of the action and decision of the judges of election in counting ballots and for a recanvass and recount of the ballots cast,” etc., and the Supervisors are “given jurisdiction and power to hear and determine said appeals; to review and correct the action of the judges of election in their respective jurisdiction and to recanvas's, recount and certify said result of said primary election. And for all the purposes of said review, recount, recanvass, etc., the said Supervisors of Elections shall act and be judges of election for counting said ballots, acting as such in the premises within their respective geographical jurisdictions.” It further provides that the Supervisors shall “produce before them the ballot-boxes, returns, tally sheets and paraphernalia of said election and shall proceed forthwith in a summary way without answer, pleading or technicality, and without *123 requiring any evidence to be taken or proof submitted, to review the actions of the judges of elections and recount the ballots in the precincts named in said petition,” etc., and “said review, recount and recanvass shall be had with all possible expedition and dispatch and in preference to all other business under such mode of procedure as the Supervisors of Elections shall prescribe by means of tellers appointed by them on the recommendation of and with equal representation to the opposing candidates. The said Supervisors to pass upon and decide whether any ballot contested by the tellers for either side shall be rejected or counted.”

In section 185 of Article 33 there are provisions governing the judges of elections in reference to the count, and it is provided amongst other things, that “the intention, so far as the same may be ascertained from each ballot itself, shall, in the absence of any unlawful or fraudulent mark or device-thereon or enclosed therewith or on the envelope containing-the same, prevail.”

There would seem to be no room to doubt that the Supervisors are called upon and required to exercise judgment and discretion in the discharge of their duties and act in at least what is called a. quasi judicial capacity. Anyone who has had experience in contested elections in Courts knows how difficult it often is to determine whether a particular ballot shall or shall not be counted under existing statutes — sometimes requiring the closest scrutiny of the ballots and marks, and demanding the very best judgment the Court is capable of exercising. Other references to statutes might be made to- show that the duties of the Supervisors are far from being merely ministerial. In order to grant the mandamus the-Court would have been compelled to substitute its judgment for that of the Supervisors, as to whether the 120 ballots should be rejected, or the four ballots counted. The Supervisors saw and examined them, in the presence of the tellers- and counsel of the parties, and they were required by the-statute “to pass upon and decide whether any ballot con *124 tested, by the tellers for either side shall be rejected or .■counted.”

It may be well to more specifically state the questions the Supervisors were called upon to decide, as shown by the pleadings. We will first consider the 120 ballots. The petition alleges: “That at said session and during all of said recount and recanvass, your petitioner, by counsel, objected to certain ballots being counted to the number of one hundred .and twenty (120), sixty-four (64) of which were marked for the said Laird, and fifty-six (56) of which were marked for your petitioner, upon the ground that said ballots so protested were not marked as required by law with a black lead pencil, said ballots being marked otherwise legally for the said Laird or for your petitioner with a pencil other than a black lead pencil, as required by law, namely, with indelible ■pencil.”

The respondent Laird, in his answer, states that, “there were a number of ballots protested by the tellers both for the ■contestant and this respondent, for various reasons, and that in each case the protest was heard and determined by the Board of Election Supervisors, as by law they were required to do, and said ballots so contested were counted or rejected in accordance with the findings of said board in each particular case.

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Bluebook (online)
96 A. 318, 127 Md. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-laird-md-1915.