Woolsey v. Carney

378 P.2d 658, 141 Mont. 476, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 157
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1963
Docket10439
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 378 P.2d 658 (Woolsey v. Carney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolsey v. Carney, 378 P.2d 658, 141 Mont. 476, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 157 (Mo. 1963).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE JOHN C. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a summary judgment in the above entitled cause in favor of the defendants, in the district court of the sixth judicial district of the State of Montana.

We are not here concerned with procedural matters, but rather whether the district judge properly ruled on facts presented to the court. Prior to Judge McKinnon’s finding for the defendants, in this matter, District Judge George Allen had held a hearing on an order to show cause at which hearing evidence was taken. Due to the fact that he had a jury term he was unable to hear the motion for summary judgment and had to call in another district judge, Judge McKinnon, who had not had the benefit of the hearing of the facts. These facts are fairly well agreed upon. The voters of two adjoining rural school districts, 23 and 29, located in the southern part of Sweet Grass County held an election on August 7, 1961, to determine whether or not they should consolidate their school districts. This was the second election held, there having been a previous election on the same issue, on July 1, 1961, at which time the consolidation had failed to carry. All of the necessary statutory procedures were followed up to the day of election. The notice of the election was published and posted showing the date and the hours of the election, and judges were properly appointed. All went well until the day of the election when a series of events occurred, which could serve as the basis for a Gilbert-Sullivan operetta. Due to an oversight the ballots failed to arrive at the two school election *478 houses where the elections were held, so the election judges made up their own ballots placing on each a box marked “FOE” and “AGAINST”. There was, however, no explanation of FOE what or AGAINST what, even though the statute requires the ballots be marked FOE consolidation and AGAINST consolidation. It was in the election judges’ opinion unnecessary to put the word consolidation due to the fact they thought everybody knew what they were voting for. It is undenied that over five ballots were cast by people who were never present at the election. This was explained by the election judges by saying that they let some persons vote before the polls opened at the legal hour of 2:00 o’clock on the 7th due to the inconvenience to these persons having to come to the voting place during the hours of the said election. The hours of election were from 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. Too, one judge cast a vote of her husband who she said was busy on the ranch, though when examined she could only explain that she was certain, as only a wife can be, that her husband was FOE consolidation. In school district 29, after the judges had closed the polls and due to an objection to the system of voting absentee, the election judges withdrew five FOE votes, leaving a total of fifty votes, there having been prior to withdrawal fifty-five votes cast. This left a total vote of fifty with twenty-six FOE and twenty-four AGAINST. It would appear that in this district there were more than five absentee voters, probably eight, and it is unknown how the other three would have voted, but had three more FOE vote ballots been withdrawn the election there would have failed. To further complicate the voting in district 29 it is alleged that two voters who said that they were against consolidation appeared at the polls and were refused the right to vote even though they said they had arrived before 6:00 p.m. by their watches. The judges explained this by saying they opened and closed the polls “by their time.”

To further complicate the picture in the adjoining district *479 23, the voting was sixteen FOR and fifteen AGAINST, but at the time of the hearing on the order to show cause one lady-testified she thought she was voting "For keeping the school, not FOR CONSOLIDATION.” So had her vote been cast as she thought it was her vote would have changed the election, making sixteen AGAINST consolidation and fifteen FOR consolidation.

Several Montana Statutes are involved here and we must determine whether having failed to follow the statutes on consolidated school districts the defendants may still prevail due to the failure on the part of the plaintiff to pursue thereafter an appeal through administrative proceedings rather than going to the court.

Section 75-1813, R.C.M.1947, covers consolidated districts, procedure in the event of consolidation, and amount of debt. Subsection 2 states as follows:

‘1 (2) The votes at such election shall be by ballot, which shall read ‘For consolidation’ and ‘Against consolidation.’ The presiding officer at such election shall, within ten (10) days thereafter, certify the result of the vote to the county superintendent of the county in which the district lies.”

There can be no question, based on the facts above set forth, that the ballots prepared by the judges at the time of the election failed to comply with the statute, and that therefore any election held was on its face null and void. The testimony presented at the time of the order to show cause clearly showed that in at least one instance a lady who voted thought she was voting for keeping her schoolhouse rather than for consolidation, and that this vote in district 23 changed the outcome of the election in that district.

Concerning the withdrawal by the judges of the five votes in question section 75-1612, R.C.M.1947, is controlling. It is in part:

“Poll and tally list, certificate of judges and canvass of the votes. At every election held under this act, a noil list shall be *480 kept by the judges and the clerk at each polling place, and immediately after the close of the polls the judges shall count the ballots, and if there be more ballots than votes cast the judges must draw by lot from the ballots, without seeing them, sufficient number of ballots to make the ballots remaining correspond with the number of votes cast.”

All of the testimony was to the effect that there was never a drawing by lot of the five ballots in question to make the number of ballots cast tally with the number of votes contained in the poll list as required by the above statute.

■This court in its most recent pronouncement on school election matters in a case of Hehn v. Olson, 138 Mont. 576, 358 P.2d 431, said this in quoting from Thompson v. Chapin, 64 Mont. 376, 209 P.1060:

“* * * [w]hile it is true that irregularities invite a concealed fraud, yet, where the fault lies with the election officials rather than the elector, they should be disregarded, unless the statute expressly declares that the same is fatal to the election, or unless they are such as to themselves change or render doubtful the result of the election.”

It should be noted here that failure on the part of the election officials to follow the provisions of section 75-1612, would not be fatal to the election unless the failure to follow the statute would “change or render doubtful the result of the election”

Here, clearly, the testimony is that in district 23 one woman would have voted AGAINST rather than FOR had the word “consolidation” been on the ballot.

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Bischoff v. High School District No. 4
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Bluebook (online)
378 P.2d 658, 141 Mont. 476, 1963 Mont. LEXIS 157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolsey-v-carney-mont-1963.