Wiedenheft v. Frick

11 N.W.2d 561, 234 Iowa 51
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 16, 1943
DocketNo. 46303.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 N.W.2d 561 (Wiedenheft v. Frick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wiedenheft v. Frick, 11 N.W.2d 561, 234 Iowa 51 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Mulroney, C. J.

On April 24, 1942, appellant (hereinafter called contestant) filed with the city clerk of Davenport, Iowa, a statement of intention to contest election, stating that he and Ed Frick (hereinafter called incumbent):

‘1 * * * were candidates, on the Democratic and Republican tickets respectively, for the office of Mayor of Davenport, Iowa, at the City Election held in the City of Davenport, Iowa, on April 4, 1942. * * *
‘ ‘ That pursuant to law the said election returns were thereafter Oeeioially canvassed by the Mayor and City Council of the City of Davenport, Iowa at their regular Council meeting on April 15, 1942, and thereat the Mayor and City Council officially declared the Incumbent duly elected over the Contestant to the office of Mayor of the City of Davenport, Iowa by a majority of 58 votes out of a total of 6219 votes cast for the Incumbent and 6161 votes cast for the Contestant.”

*53 The filed statement, and amendments thereto, enumerated several alleged irregularities in the election and acts of misconduct on the part of the election officials and the incumbent, which will be discussed later. The contest court held the incumbent “duly elected” and the contestant perfected his appeal to the district court. The statement of intention to contest election and a new amendment filed in the district court seem to have been considered the petition of contestant in the district court, while an answer filed originally with the contest court was the only answer filed by the incumbent. At this point we cannot refrain from pointing out the inadequate election-contest laws found in chapters 47 and 52 of the Code of 1939. Section 986, making the provisions relating to contesting “elections of county officers” applicable “to contested elections for other offices,” well illustrates the vice of a reference statute. We can understand the dilemma of counsel for both parties when faced with the problem of fitting their issues into such inadequate statutory election-contest machinery and we commend them for an excellent presentation of the merits without burdensome formal objections. In the same spirit, we will on this appeal consider all the propositions urged by contestant as a basis for the contest which were listed in his statement of intention to contest election and argued in his brief and argument in this court.

I. Contestant’s first proposition is that the evidence of misconduct and corruption on the part of the election judges-was sufficient to change the election results; There was absolutely no evidence of corruption, and the only evidence of misconduct which we can find in the record, and the only evidence pointed out by counsel for contestant in support of this proposition, is the evidence which relates what occurred at the third precinct of the second ward. The record shows that in this precinct the judges opened twelve absent-voters’ ballots and voted them, during the noon hour, contrary to section 950, Code of 1939, providing that absent-voters’ ballots shall not be voted until after the polls close. The voting place in this precinct was across the hall from a tavern, and one witness testified that, while she and a companion were in the tavern, a relative of incumbent approached them and bought each of *54 them a drink and gave them a card and asked that they vote for incumbent. This witness stated that the tavern was about ten feet from the voting place; that she saw one of the election judges in the tavern at the time; and that she had already voted before going into the tavern. The incumbent carried this precinct by ninety-six votes.

We cannot find in such evidence the misconduct or irregularity sufficient to throw out the vote of the entire precinct. Of course, the voting of the absent-voters’ ballots prior to closing was irregular, but it seems to have been done by one democratic and one republican judge, and no complaint is made that they were not cast correctly. Contestant argues that by voting the absent-voters’ ballots at noon “They got a peek at how the election was going and then the Republican Voters rushed in a ‘worker’ to electioneer in the beer tavern across the hall from the Polls.” We cannot agree with either the surmise or the conclusion in this argument. It is a little absurd to believe anyone could tell from these twelve absent-voters’ ballots “how the election was going” in a precinct where 818 votes were cast. And the only activity of the “worker” who was “rushed in” is the single incident where incumbent’s relative solicited a vote from one who had already voted. Such evidence is wholly insufficient to establish misconduct on the part of the election judges “sufficient to change the result” within the provisions of section 981 (1), Code of 1939. Brooks v. Fay, 206 Iowa 845, 220 N. W. 30.

II. Contestant next argues that the trial court erred in refusing to admit in evidence the tallies on certain voting machines used in the election. Here again we find a reference statute making chapter 43, governing the use of voting machines, applicable to other election-law provisions. (See section 926.) Section 985 gives either party the right “in open session of the court * * * to have the ballots opened, and all errors of the judges in counting or refusing to count ballots corrected * * Adapting the right here granted to a contested election where voting machines are used would, we feel, grant either party the right to open all the machines in court if there was a sufficient-showing that the machines were still locked and sealed and had been preserved in a manner that would preclude reasonable *55 likelihood of tampering therewith. The trial court was of this opinion and it based its ruling excluding the machines upon the ground that there was not a sufficient showing that the machines were properly preserved as required by law. The evidence showed that the machines were owned by Scott county, and, after the election and before the trial in the district court, forty-five of the seventy-seven voting machines which were used in the city election were turned back to the county auditor for use in the June 1942 primary election. These machines were all opened and turned back to zero and, of course, contained no record of the votes east for either contestant or incumbent in the earlier city election. In the case of In re Election Contest v. Gray, 221 Iowa 145, 146, 264 N. W. 919, 920, we stated, with respect to the admissibility of ballots in an election contest:

“There are some fundamentals controlling the questions involved that have been fully'disposed of in this state. First, the burden of proof is upon the contestant to show the proper preservation of the ballots. Davenport v. Olerich, 104 Iowa 194, 73 N. W. 603; Doak v. Briggs, 139 Iowa 520, 116 N. W. 114; Matzdorff v. Thompson, 217 Iowa 961, 251 N. W. 867. Second, the official canvass is controlling except when the ballots themselves are admissible in evidence to overthrow the same. De Long v. Brown, 113 Iowa 370, 85 N. W. 624; Brown v. Crosson, 115 Iowa 256, 88 N. W. 366.

“If the ballots have not been properly preserved they are not admissible in the contest court, nor in the district court. We have pronounced this rule so often in numerous cases that it is necessary only to refer to the first case, Furguson v. Henry, 95 Iowa 439, 64 N. W. 292, and to the last case, Traeger v. Meskel, 217 Iowa 970, 252 N. W.

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