58 Cal. 521 | Cal. | 1881
At the election held November 2d, 1880, in the City and and County of San Francisco, for Judge of the Superior Court, James V. Coffey, the contestant, and M. A. Edmonds, the respondent, were voted for. The Board of Election Commissioners declared and certified the result of the election to be that M. A. Edmonds received 20,476 votes, and James V. Coffey 20,474 votes, and declared Edmonds to be elected. Thereupon Coffey contested the election of Edmonds, and after due proceedings had thereto, a recount was had in the Court below. Upon such recount the Court below held that Edmonds had received 20,491 votes, and Coffey 20,483 votes, showing a majority of eight votes for Edmonds, and adjudged that Edmonds was duly elected. From that judgment and the order denying his motion for a new trial, Coffey, the contestant, appealed to this Court.
1. Among the ballots were five, reading thus: “For Judge of the Superior Court, M. A. Edwards.” Evidence was offered and received that there was no person by the name of Edwards who was a candidate for any office at the election; that there was no attorney residing in the City and County of San Francisco of the name of M. A. Edwards; and that Edmonds had by some persons been known as and called Edwards, on account of the similarity of pronunciation, and had paid bills of personal expenditure made out and presented to him as M. A. Edwards. The court below, against the objection of Coffey, ordered these ballots to be counted for Edmonds.
2. One ballot was composed of a half of each of two tickets, thus: The vignette of a ticket of the Democratic party was taken, and attached to it, with paste or mucilage, was an entire ticket of the Republican party, except the vignette. Each of the political parties had filed a vignette, according to the provisions of-the act of March 7th, 1878, Stat. 1877-8, p. 180. No name of any of the Democratic candidates was upon the ballot in question, nor was the vignette of the Republican party upon it. Coffey was a candidate of the Dem
3. A ballot had the words, “ For President—Hancock and English,” written in lead pencil, upon its face, under the words, at the top of the names, “ Eleventh Senatorial District.” This ballot had also on its face, “ For Judge of the Superior Court —M. A. Edmonds,” and was, by order of the Court below, counted for Edmonds.
4. A ballot had on its face the words, “ For Judge of the Superior Court—M. A. Edmonds.” The contestant claimed that the name, M. A. Edmonds, had been erased by a pencil line drawn through it; the respondent claimed that it appeared from the ballot that the pencil line had been rubbed off so as to cancel the erasure. This ballot also was counted for Edmonds.
5. Objection was made by the contestant to the counting of the ballots coming from the sixth precinct of the Eleventh Ward. When the package came to the Court, it was properly sealed. Many days had been occupied by the Court in counting the ballots from the various precincts; and during that time the packages not in use on a particular day were kept in the safe of the clerk of the Court. It was the custom of the Judge of the Court below, upon adjourning for the day, to go to the safe with the packages, see them placed therein, and put upon the safe his private seal, and in the morning to go and break his seal and direct the package to be used that day to be taken to the court-room. When this package was brought by the deputy clerk to be examined and counted in its turn, the seal was found broken and the strings loose. There was no evidence that any ballot had been tampered with. The Judge held that the breaking of the seal on the package and the loosening of the string had occurred accidentally in the handling, while the same was in the custody of the Court and its officers, and ordered the ballots to be counted. By this count Edmonds gained five votes.
6. The National Greenback Labor Party had a ticket and vignette. Objection was made to forty-two ballots of that party, on the ground that each of said ballots differed from the regular ticket of the party, in the following particulars: The word “ Senatorial” was omitted from the designation of
7. From one ballot of the Democratic party, as originally printed, a name was erased, and the name of “ Edmundson” written in its stead. This ballot was, by order of the Court below, counted for respondent.
According to the recount in the Court below, and the judgment of the Court thereon, the respondent, Edmonds, had a majority of eight votes; therefore it must appear that errors were committed by the Court below affecting eight ballots, or the judgment must stand. We, therefore, consider the points made by the contestant in the order as above stated:
1. As to the five votes cast for “ M. A. Edwards.” We are not fully in accord as to the legality of counting these ballots for M. A. Edmonds; therefore, as our judgment in the case would not be affected thereby, we express no opinion in regard to it.
2. As to the ballot with the names of the candidates of the Republican party pasted to the vignette of the Democratic party. For the reason above given as to No. 1 we express no opinion.
8. The words, “For President—Hancock and English,” written on the ballot did not vitiate it. It had no “ mark or thing thereon by or from which it could be ascertained what persons or what class of persons used or voted it.” (Pol. Code, § 1197.)
4. Whether or not the attempted erasure.had been canceled, so as to let the ballot stand and be intended as a vote for Edmonds, was a question for the Court below to find, and with the finding upon that subject this Court is not inclined to interfere. We can also add, from an inspection of the ballot we can not say that there is an erasure of the*527 name “M. A. Edmonds.” If it were so intended by the voter, it was so obscurely done that we feel bound to solve the doubt by holding the vote to be good for the name so plainly written.
5. In regard to the package of ballots, coming from the sixth precinct of the Eleventh Ward, we think the ruling of the Court below was correct. When the package came to the Court, properly sealed, the object of the law requiring it to be sealed was accomplished. After that time it was under the direction of the Court, in the custody of its officers—and in the absence of any proof, the law will not presume an act of bad faith on their part. It is not contended that there was any such act of bad faith; the contestant contended merely that the package should have remained unbroken, even by accident, until called for to be counted. This is going too far. We think the cause of the breaking of the seal was accounted for; the Court committed no error in directing the ballots to be counted.
6. The objection to the counting of the forty-two ballots of the National Greenback Labor party is untenable. What we have said, above, as to objection No. 3, will apply here.
7. As to the vote for “ Edmundson,” we say the same as above said in regard to the votes for “ M. A. Edwards.”
These views leave the result as giving at least one majority for M. A. Edmonds. The judgment and order of the Court below are therefore affirmed.