Young v. Sapp

166 S.E. 354, 167 S.C. 364, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 2, 1932
Docket13502
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 166 S.E. 354 (Young v. Sapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Sapp, 166 S.E. 354, 167 S.C. 364, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 204 (S.C. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice BeEase.

At the instance of the petitioner, John A. Young, this Court, by writ of certiorari, in its original jurisdiction, has ■been called upon to review the action of the State Democratic Executive Committee in declaring C. C. Pate the Democratic nominee for the office of magistrate in the eastern district of Buffalo township, Kershaw County, in the Democratic primary election held August 30, 1932.

In obedience to the writ, Honorable Claud N. Sapp, Chairman of the State Democratic Executive Committee, has certified to the Court the record upon which the State Democratic Committee acted and the proceedings before that committee. Mr. Pate, declared the nominee by the state committee, made return in this Court, and was represented by counsel.

In 1924, the General Assembly enacted a law relating to magisterial districts in Buffalo township of Kershaw County (see 33 Stats. 1721). That act is contained in Section 3772 of the Code of 1932. The provisions are as follows:

*366 “There shall be two magisterial districts in Buffalo Township, of Kershaw County. The office now held by B. F. Roberts in said township is hereby abolished, to take effect at the expiration of his present term of office. The division of Buffalo Township into the two magisterial districts herein provided for shall be as follows:
“(a) One magisterial district to be known as the eastern district of Buffalo Township, to embrace the territory included in the following voting precincts, Raleys Mill, Shamrock, Bethune and Sandy Grove. The voters voting at these precincts to elect a magistrate for the said eastern district.
“(b) A second magisterial district to be known as the western district of Buffalo Township, to embrace the territory not herein specifically allocated to the eastern district, the voters voting at the precincts in Buffalo Township other than those named as being in the eastern district shall elect the magistrate for the western district of Buffalo Township. Each magistrate and each constable for each of these two districts of Buffalo Township, Kershaw County shall receive a salary of Four Hundred ($400.00) Dollars per annum. The magistrate for each of the two districts herein designated shall reside in his respective district.”

In the Democratic primary election of 1932, the petitioner, Young, and the respondent Pate were the only candidates for the Democratic nomination “for magistrate in the eastern district o.f Buffalo township.

The primary election for the office of magistrate of the eastern district of Buffalo township was held at the following primary precincts or clubs: Raleys Mill, Shamrock, Bethune, Sandy Grove, Lockhart, and Cassatt. The last two, Lockhart and. Cassatt, it will be noted, were not mentioned in the statute. Lockhart precinct is located within the eastern district of Buffalo township, but some of the voters there do not live in the said district. Cassatt is a precinct near the line of eastern Buffalo district and De Kalb township, and voters there live in both Buffalo and De Kalb *367 townships. The holding of the election for magistrate in the Democratic primary at the six precincts named has been the custom for several elections, and has had the approval and the sanction of the County Democratic Executive Committee. In the newspaper notice as to the holding of the election, the committee published the following instructions: “At Precincts where Voters from more than one Township cast their ballot the Voters will give the Managers the name of the Township in which they reside and the Managers will write the name of such Township on the poll list next to the Voter’s name.”

Raleys Mill, Shamrock, and Bethune, mentioned in the statute, are both general election precincts and primary precincts. Cassatt, not mentioned in the statute, is also a general election and a primary precinct. Sandy Grove, mentioned in the statute, is a primary precinct, but not a general election voting place. Lockhart, not mentioned in the statute, is a primary precinct, but not a general election voting place.

The return of the county committee to the state committee shows that the result in all six precincts was a vote of 356 for Pate and 351 for Young. The figures submitted by the petitioner for these six precincts, which seem not to be controverted by the respondent, show a vote of 352 for Pate and 351 for Young. Regardless of the difference, however, it appears conceded that in the six precincts, Pate received a majority either of one or five.

According to the figures submitted by the petitioner, and apparently not controverted by the respondent, at the two precincts of Lockhart and Cassatt, Pate' received 49 votes and Young received 22 votes. The total vote cast at these two precincts was 71.

At the other four precincts, Bethune, Raleys Mill, Sandy Grove, and Shamrock, the vote was 303 for Pate and 329 for Young.

If the election should have been confined to the four precincts named in the statute,. Raleys Mill, Shamrock, Beth *368 une, and Sandy Grove, then clearly Young was the victor, since his majority in those four precincts was 26. If it was proper that the votes cast in the magistrate’s race at Lock-hart and Cassatt precincts be counted, then Pate was the winner by either a majority of one or five.

When the County Executive Committee met to declare the result of the primary election, the results for the six precincts were tabulated, showing Pate’s election. The attention of the committee was called to the Act of 1924 (Section 3772 of the Code), and thereupon the committee decided not to include in the official count the vote recived by Young and Pate at Cassatt and Lockhart precincts, and, accordingly, declared Young the nominee of the Democratic party for magistrate.

Pate protested the declaration in favor of Young, and the matter was carried to the State Democratic Executive Committee. That committee set aside the action of the county committee and declared Pate the nominee. The reasons for the action of the state committee were not given in the return filed in this Court.

The respondent Pate, in his return, submits to the Court .that the action of the State Democratic Executive Committee should be sustained for the reasons that the primary election was conducted in accordance with the long recognized customary method of voting, under the sanction of the County Executive Committee, with which the petitioner, the respondent, the county committee, and the voters were thoroughly familiar, in which the petitioner acquiesced and participated; that there was no protest or challenge of any of the votes cast at Lockhart and Cassatt precincts; that there has been no charge of fraud, unfairness, or bad faith; that the voters at Lockhart and Cassatt, who cast their votes for magistrate in the race between Young and Pate, were residents of the magisterial district and entitled to vote in the election, under the rules of the Democratic party; that the petitioner is estopped from now questioning the *369

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 354, 167 S.C. 364, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-sapp-sc-1932.