This case concerns a contest of the May 3, 1994 municipal election held in the Town of Edgefield. Appellant Town appeals the circuit court’s order that the election results for the Ward 3 council seat be vacated and Respondent Eddie Butler be afforded a new election. We reverse the circuit court’s holding аnd vacate its order.
Factual/Procedural Background
On May 3, 1994, Town conducted municipal elections for mayor and council seats for Wards 1, 3, and 5. Butler was a candidate in the election and received votes for mayor and councilman in Ward 3. The official results for the Ward 3 council seat were as follows:
*243 William B. Jackson, 34 votes
Eddie Butler, 33 votes
Jerry Butler, 1 vote
Eddie Butler, Jr., 1 vote
No persons with the name Jerry Butler or Eddie Butler, Jr. werе candidates in-the election. Additionally, one vote for Respondent Eddie Butler was disqualified due to an error indicated by the voting machine.
The votes were counted by the Edgefield Election Commission (“Election Commission”) in the office of the Town Clerk, Charlotte Cheatham, in Edgefield’s Town Hall. After counting the votes once, Election Commission conducted a recount. During the recount of the votes for Ward 3, the door to Cheatham’s office was closed for approximately ten minutes. At trial, Cheatham testified that the door was closed due to noise in an adjoining hall. Butler testified that he attempted to enter the room during the recount, but was denied entrance.
On May 5, 1994, Butlеr delivered a hand-written letter to Election Commission. The letter protested the results of the election and demanded a recount. That same day, Election Commission notified Butler that a recount of the May 3 election would be held on May 6, 1994, at 12:00 p.m. A recount subsequently occurred on this date. Election Commission did not conduct a hеaring. The recount verified the results of the May 3 election.
On May 13, 1994, Butler filed an appeal in circuit court pursuant to S.C.Code Ann. § 5-15-140 (1977). He argued that Election Commission violated S.C.Code Ann. § 5-15-130 (1977) by not affording him a hearing on his election contest. Butler also asserted a claim under the Federal Voting Rights Act and alleged that Election Commission secrеtly counted votes in violation of S.C.Code Ann. § 5-15-120 (1977). Finally, Butler argues to this Court that he properly amended his complaint in circuit court to include a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
The' circuit court made three conclusions of law: (1) Town violated section 5-15-130 by not affording Butler a hearing; (2) Town violated section 5-15-120 by not publicly counting *244 the votes; and (3) the defendants were acting in their official capacities and under color of state law. The trial judge allowed voter Alice Miles to testify that the Eddie Butler, Jr. vote was hers, and that she intended to cast it for Eddie Butler. As a result, the circuit court found that Election Commission improperly declined to count the Eddie Butler, Jr. vote as a vote for Eddie Butler. It аlso observed that a vote cast for Eddie Butler was disqualified due to an error indicated by the voting machine. Consequently, the circuit court vacated the results of the May 3 election for the Ward 3 council seat and ordered a new election to be held in compliance with the law.
Town appeals, raising the following questions:
(A) Should Butler have been afforded a hearing on his election contest pursuant to section 5-15-130?
(B) Did Election Commission secretly count votes in violation of section 5-15-120?
(C) Should the disqualified vote and the vote for Eddie A. Butler, Jr., have been counted for Butler?
(D) Should the circuit court have considered the testimony of Alice Miles concerning her vote for Eddie A. Butler, Jr.?
(E) Did Butler properly amend his complaint to include a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983?
Law/Analysis
A. Statutory Hearing Requirement
Town argues that the circuit court erred in finding that Butler properly gave written notice of his election contest pursuant to section 5-15-130, thereby invoking his right to a hearing. We agree.
S.C.Code Ann. § 5-15-130 provides:
Within forty-eight hours after the closing of the polls, any candidate may contest the result of the election as reрorted by the managers by filing a written notice of such contest together with a concise statement of the grounds therefor with the Municipal Election Commission. Within forty-eight hours after the filing of such notice, the Municipal Election Commission shall, after due notice to the parties *245 concerned, conduct a hearing on the contest, decide the issues raised, file its report together with all recorded testimony and exhibits with the clerk of court of the county in which the municipality is situated, notify the parties concerned of the decisions made, and when the decision invalidates the election the council shall order a new election as to the parties concerned.
(emphasis added). Butler delivered his written contеst notice to Edgefield’s Town Hall on May 5, 1994. The notice stated:
I was a write-in candidate in the Edgefield May City Council election. I am protesting and requesting a recount of the votes cast. I am also requesting a poll watcher during the recount.
The first time I noticed the election advertisement was in the Edgefield County Citizen News on April 7, 1997. The wards [siс] numbers were reversed.
I am asking the United States Justice Department, the Attorney General, Janet Reno, the F.B.I. Director Louis Freeth [sic] and the NAACP to look into the reasons why it would take several hours to count votes for an election.
Mayor 155 votes
Ward 117 votes
Ward III 67 votes
Ward II17 votes
I am also asking for the sign-in signature sheet of the poll list and a total of votes received by the Mayor in each ward.
Town contends that Butler did not properly follow the procedure provided in section 5-15-130 because he failed to provide a “concise statement of the grounds” for his contest. In
Taylor v. Roche,
Butler argues that he provided two concise grounds in his May 5 protest letter: (1) the misleading election advertisement; and (2) the amount of time it took to count the votes. First, with regard to eleсtion notices, S.C.Code Ann. § 5-15-50 (1977) requires that “public notice of the elections [within the municipality] shall be given at least sixty days prior to such elections.” In this case, official notice of the Edgefield elections appeared in the Edgefield newspaper, the Citizen News, on March 3 and April 28, 1994. The election was held on May 3, 1994. Thus, the March 3 nоtice satisfied section 5-15-50 by appearing in the local newspaper sixty-one days before the election. More importantly, Butler did not challenge these official notices in his May 5 protest letter. Instead, Butler challenged an article written by a Citizen News reporter about the election. This article appeared in the Citizen News in April 1994. Butler nevertheless argues that this was an adequate ground for his contest, thereby triggering the hearing requirements in section 5-15-130.
There are two prerequisites to maintaining an election contest in South Carolina: (1) the contest notice must allege irregularities or illegalities; and (2) the alleged irregularities or illegalities must havе changed or rendered doubtful the result of the election in the absence of fraud, a constitutional violation, and a statute providing that such irregularity or illegality shall invalidate the election.
See Yonce v. Lybrand,
Butler contends that while the challenge to the article may have been without merit, Election Commission should have conducted a formal hearing to properly inform him of that determination. The ability to contest eleсtions is a privilege bestowed by state law. There is no common law or federal constitutional right to be afforded a hearing in an election contest. Consequently, we do not believe an election commission should have to initiate the time consuming formalities of a hearing when the contestant has failed, at the threshold, to allege an election irregularity or illegality.
The other point raised in Butler’s May 5 letter was the time it took to count the votes. Butler simply asked, “why it would take several hours to count votes for the election?” Butler did not specify what he believed may have occurred during those several hours. At best, his question implied generally that fraud had bеen committed. A general allegation of fraud is insufficient to notify the contestee as to the cause for the contest.
See McClendon v. McKeown,
*248 The circuit court concluded that the vote recount was an improper substitution for the hearing requirement under section 5-15-180. However, since Butler did not provide concise grounds in his May 5 protest letter, a heаring was not required, and the recount was proper. We therefore reverse the circuit court on this point.
B. Secret Vote Count
Town argues that the circuit court erred in holding that the vote count was conducted in secret thereby violating section 5-15-120. It is not necessary to reach the merits of this claim because it was not timely raised to Election Cоmmission.
The only issue Butler could have raised on appeal to the circuit court was whether Election Commission should have afforded him a hearing based on his May 5 letter. Butler did not include the secret vote count claim in his protest letter. Section 5-15-140 does not provide the circuit court with express or implied authority to conduсt a full hearing when one is denied by the municipal election commission. The circuit court, in this situation, is by statute an appellate court. It is axiomatic that “one cannot present and try his case on one theory and thereafter advocate another theory on appeal.”
White v. Livingston,
C. Eddie Butler, Jr. Vote & Disqualified Vote
Butler also failed to challenge the Eddie Butler, Jr. vote and the disqualified vote in his May 5 letter. Consequently, for the same reasons discussed above, Butler could not subsequently raise these issues in his appeal to the circuit court.
*249 D. Voter Alice Miles
As noted above, the Eddie Butler, Jr. vote was improperly before the circuit court because it was not timely raised to Election Commission. For this reason alone, the testimony of voter Alice Miles concerning her vote for Eddie Butler, Jr. was not properly taken. However, even if this issue was timely raised to Election Commission, it would never be appropriate for the circuit court, functioning as an appellate court, to consider testimony de novo.
Moreover, voter testimony of this kind would not even be admissible before an election commission. It is well settled that “the ballots themselves constitute the highest and best evidence of the will of the electors.”
Redfearn v. Board of State Canvassers,
E. Federal Claims
Town argues that Butler did not properly amend his complaint at trial to include a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We find that none of Butler’s federal claims were properly before the circuit court.
Butler raised the following federal causes of aсtion for the first time on appeal to the circuit court: (1) violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution; and (2) violation of Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973 et seq. In addition to these claims, Butler argues that he properly amended his complaint in circuit court to include a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
As discussed above, the circuit court serves an appellate function for municipal election contests pursuant to section 5-15-140. Consequently, it was improper for the circuit court to have considered Butler’s federal claims. However, even assuming Butler’s claims were properly before the circuit court, we find that no federal laws were violated in this case.
*250 1. Voting Rights Claim
Undеr 42 U.S.C. § 1973(a), “No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color.... ” In
Roberts v. Warnser,
2. Section 1983 & 14th Amendment Claims
The prerequisites to an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 are that there be a deprivatiоn of a right, privilege, or immunity secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States and that such act of deprivation occur under color of state law. We hold that Butler was not deprived of any federally protected right, privilege, or immunity.
Butler argues that Election Commission’s refusal to provide a hearing violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. In
Snowden v. Hughes,
*251
Snowden
is also determinative of Butler’s claim that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment was -violated. In
Snowden,
the Court held, “The unlawful administration by state officers of a state [electiоn] statute fair on its face, resulting in its unequal application to those who are entitled to be treated alike, is not a denial of equal protection unless there is shown to be present in it an element of intentional or purposeful discrimination.”
Snowden,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the circuit court is REVERSED and its order VACATED.
Notes
. The article was false because it stated that Councilman Jackson came from Ward 2. Councilman Jackson actually came from Ward 3.
