Williams v. State ex rel. Vasmer

6 S.W. 845, 69 Tex. 368, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 835
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 25, 1887
DocketNo. 2398
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 S.W. 845 (Williams v. State ex rel. Vasmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. State ex rel. Vasmer, 6 S.W. 845, 69 Tex. 368, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 835 (Tex. 1887).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

This was an information in the nature of a quo warranto instituted by the State upon the relation of E. H. Vasmer, its object being to oust the appellant frorr. the office of district clerk of Harris county, and to place the re • lator therein. That this is the appropriate proceeding in such a, case has been settled by this court; and, like any other proceeding in the nature of a quo warranto, it is governed in every respect by the statute on that subject. It is, therefore, properly return ■ able to the Supreme Court now in session at Tyler, having been tried in the court below on the seventeenth of November, 1887. (State v. Owens, 63 Texas, 261; Owens v. State, 64 Texas, 500 Fowler v. State, 68 Texas, 30.)

The appellant and the relator were opposing candidates for the office of district clerk of Harris county at an election held on the second day of November, 1886, and according to the result as announced by the officers who counted the returns of the votes cast in the election, the appellant received three thousand and seventy-eight and the relator three thousand and seventy-six votes, whereupon the certificate of election was given to the appellant, and he qualified, gave bond, and has since been in possession of the office. It was, however, alleged in the information that at precinct No. 5 of Harris county eighty-six legal votes cast for the relator were not counted for him by the officers in charge of the election, and did not enter into the general estimate of the vote of the county. It was further alleged that the box of precinct [370]*370Ho. 22, at which the relator received five majority, did not enter into said estimate. The relator also impeached the returns of precincts Hos. 3 and 4, claiming that he received at these precincts three hundred votes more than the count allowed him.

The appellant pleaded a general denial; denied the statements of the information as to the count in the third and fourth wards, and asserted that the eighty-six ballots claimed to have been rejected in the fifth precinct were illegal. He also pleaded that there were one hundred or more illegal ballots cast for the relator at said election by persons who did not live in Harris county and specified by name nine or ten of such ballots. The case was tried by the court without a jury and a judgment rendered ousting the appellant from the office and placing the defendant therein. From this judgment Williams has appealed to this court.

When the case was called for trial the appellant moved for a continuance, his affidavit being in compliance with the statute regulating motions for a second continuance, on account of the absence of material witnesses. The affidavit stated that the affiant expected to prove by the absent witnesses that eight illegal voters, giving their names, had cast their ballots for the relator. It further stated that he expected to prove by one of the absent witnesses that the character of tickets rejected in the fifth precinct were gotten up to deceive voters into believing that it was a democratic ticket, and that it did deceive many of the ignorant and heedless voters, and that the witness saw a colored man vote one ¿f the tickets, believing that he was voting the opposite ticket, which was the democratic ticket; and that the witness procured the vote of a colored man for Yasmer who desired to vote for the appellant by exhibiting to him at the head of said ticket the words ‘1 Democratic Ticket;” and that said voter voted the said ballot, believing that he had voted for Williams. In answer to this motion the appellee admitted all the facts stated in it except that the character of ticket rejected in the fifth precinct was gotten up to deceive voters into believing that it was a democratic ticket, and that it did deceive many of the ignorant and heedless voters; and that the witness saw a colored man vote one of those tickets, believing that he was voting the democratic ticket. The court thereupon overruled the motion to continue, and a bill of exceptions to the ruling was saved and error is assigned thereon.

Upon the trial the relator, after properly identifying the [371]*371-eighty-six ballots east in his favor at precinct 6, which were rejected by the managers of the election, offered them in evidence. They were objected to by the appellant because the words “Democratic Ticket” were printed in bold type at the head of these tickets to indicate the name of the polical party whose candidates were on the ticket, while about its center were printed in smaller type the words “People’s Ticket,” followed by names of candidates for county officers. It was claimed that this was in violation of the statute which required that the ballot, to be a legal one, must contain the name of the one political party whose candidates are on the ticket, and was a device and mark on the ticket tending to deceive and mislead voters, and especially marking it in a way prohibited by statute. The objection was overruled and the ticket admitted. Upon the correctness of this ruling depends the question as to whether the action of the court upon the motion to continue can be sustained, and the two rulings will therefore be considered together.

Our statute provides that “all ballots shall be written or printed on plain white paper without any picture, sign, vignette, device or stamp mark, except the writing or printing in black ink or black pencil, of the names of the candidates and the several offices to be filled, and except the name of the political party whose candidates are on the ticket.” It then provides that tickets not in conformity with these and others of its requirement shall not be counted. This provision has twice undergone adjudication in this court. In one case the device claimed was the peculiar shape given to the ticket, by which it could be distinguished from all others. It was then said that the exceptions which exclude the ballot must be restricted rather than extended, and that it must be admitted if the spirit and intention of the law is not violated, though a literal construction would vitiate it, and that the will of the people as expressed at the ballot box must be respected and the result must not be set aside except for causes plainly within the purview of the law. We held in that case that the statute not having prescribed the shape of the ballot, the fact that these were not in the usual shape did not render them illegal. (State v. Phillips, 63 Texas, 390.)

In the other case, the words “election ticket” were printed at the head of the ballot; and the names of the candidates for President and "Vice President, though not voted for, were placed [372]*372on the ticket; as also the counties where the electors resided. Then it was again held that, unless within the letter of the prohibition, the ticket must be counted. That the printed words were not, properly speaking, a device. The statute intended to secure the secrecy of the ballot, and to exclude from the voter’s ticket every mark by which it could be distinguished from others, and we would not extend the meaning of the word device beyond its literal signification; and further, that it would be within the strict letter of the law to place the words “Democratic ticket” or “Republican ticket” upon the ballots, and the mere change of one word in the heading could not be in violation of its provisions. (Owens v.

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.W. 845, 69 Tex. 368, 1887 Tex. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-state-ex-rel-vasmer-tex-1887.