OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
This appeal arises out of a dispute over the results of a recount in the District 37 Democratic primary election. The incumbent representative, Carl Moses, requested a recount after the official election results showed Bryce Edgmon as the winner by one vote, with 765 votes for Edgmon and 764 votes for Moses. The State Division of Elections conducted a recount which showed Moses as the winner by one vote. Edgmon appealed the recount results, alleging that the Division had improperly failed to count six ballots.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Bryce Edgmon ran against incumbent Carl Moses in the Democratic Party primary election held on August 22, 2006 for the District 37 State House of Representatives seat. On September 12, 2006, the State Division of Elections certified the election results shоwing Edgmon with 765 votes as the winner over Moses, who received 764 votes. Moses requested a recount, which the Division conducted and which showed Moses as the winner by one vote, with 765 votes to Edgmon's 764. At the recount, Division Director Whitney Brewster determined that six ballots could not be counted.
Both candidates challenged the Division's determination that three ballots could nоt be counted because they were "overvoted." An "overvoted" ballot is when a voter "marks more names than there are persons to be elected to the office," in which case "the votes for candidates for that office may not be counted.
The candidates also challenged the Division's decision not to count two special needs ballots.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
No disputes of material fact exist in this case.
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Ballots Excluded as Should Be Counted. "Overvotes"
Edgmon argues that the Division should have counted three ballots that Brewster excluded as overvoted. The Division argues that all threе ballots were overvoted in that they contained marks for both candidates. Proper disposition of the ballots requires that we carefully examine AS 15.15.360, which governs the counting of ballots.
Subsection .360(a)(1) limits the ways a voter may "mark" a ballot to " 'X" marks, diagonal, horizontal, or vertical marks, solid marks, stars, circles, asterisks, checks, or plus signs that are clearly spaced in the оval opposite the name of the candidate." Subsection .8360(a)(5) further clarifies which marks meeting the requirements of (a)(1) should be counted as votes, providing that "Tthe mark specified in (1) of this subsection shall be counted only if it is substantially inside the oval provided, or touching the oval so as to indicate clearly that the voter intended the particular ovаl to be designated."
Moses argues in favor of a bright line rule that would consider the ballots overvoted without examining voters' intent. But the terms of the statute itself make voter intent paramount. The statute requires that befоre a mark is counted as a vote, it must comply with the requirements under subsection .860(a)(1) and clearly indicate voter intent as required by subsection .360(a)(5). These terms are mandatory and require strict compliance.
Moreover, we have consistently emphasized the importance of voter intent in ballot disputes. In Willis v. Thomas, we noted that ballots should be сounted where they "present clear evidence of the voters' intent."
The voters' intent on the three ballots excluded as "overvoted" is clearly to vote for only one candidate. The second marks are improper marks-not votes. At oral argument, the Division cited Willis v. Thomas
In the case of the two ballots with a completely shaded oval next to Edgmon's name and a trace touching the edge of the oval next to Moses's name, the voter completely shaded the oval for all other races on the ballot.
The third allegedly overvoted ballot has an "X" in the oval next to Mоses's name and a line striking through Edgmon's name and the oval next to it. This ballot is not overvoted and should be counted. In all other races, the voter indicated a vote with a single "X" in the oval next to one candidate's name. The line extending through Edg-mon's name cannot be said to indicate an intent to cast a vote for Edgmon. Instead, a marking crossing or striking out a cаndidate's name accompanied by a vote for the other candidate suggests an emphatic vote against a candidate. Where accompanied by an "X" in the oval next to the other candidate's name in the same manner as all other votes on the ballot, the line through Edg-mon's name and the oval next to it is a stray marking. The ballot is not overvoted and should be counted as a vote for Moses.
B. Special Needs Ballots Should Be Counted by the Division.
Edgmon challenges the Division's determination that two special needs ballots should not be counted where the personal representative completed the section for residence address, but did not separately fill out the blank for a mailing address. The Division argues that the representativеs thus failed to set out their mailing addresses as required by statute.
Alaska Statute 15.20.072(c)(2) requires that personal representatives provide both residence and mailing addresses.
In this case, it is fair to infer that the personal representatives' mailing and residence addresses are the same. Both personal representatives reside in Anchorage. We take judicial notice that unlike some communities in the state, Anchorage is a community with home delivery for a significant portion of its residents. In each сase, the representative listed a street name and number, along
Not only do the addresses appear on their face to be both mailing and residence addresses, but an elections clerk reviewed the personal representatives' forms before issuing a ballot to them. Issuance of the ballot after receipt and review of the form suggests that Division staff found the form to meet statutory requirements at the time the ballot was issued. Given the importance of the "opportunity to freely cast [one's] ballot,"
Absent any specific statutory or regulatory requirement that addresses be listed separately, where there is a reasonable inference that the addresses are the same and the Division has failed to produce any evidence to suggest that the addresses are not the same, the ballots at issue must be counted.
v. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we ordered that the Division count the five contested ballots. Of the three ballots not counted as overvoted, two were to be counted as votes for Edgmon and one was to be counted as a vote for Moses. The two speciаl needs ballots were returned to the Division to be opened and counted in accordance with Division procedures for counting special needs ballots.
Notes
. Although Edgmon originally appealed the Division's determination that six ballots could not be counted, all parties stipulated that one ballot was properly not counted because thе voter was not registered.
. AS 15.15.360(a)(4).
. Edgmon also challenged one ballot disputing voter registration status. The parties later stipulated that Brewster properly determined that the ballot should not be counted.
. AS 15.20.072.
. In our order of September 20, 2006, we ordered the parties to submit a list of any disputed material facts prior to oral argument on September 21. The partiеs submitted no list, confirming that no material facts were in dispute.
. N.W. CruiseShip Ass'n of Alaska v. State, Office of Lieutenant Governor, Div. of Elections,
. Guin v. Ha,
. The relevant subsections of AS 15.15.360 provide:
(a) The election board shall count ballots according to the following rules:
(1) A voter may mark a ballot only by filling in, making "X" marks, diagonal, horizontal, or vertical marks, solid marks, stars, circles, asterisks, checks, or plus signs that are cleаrly spaced in the oval opposite the name of the candidate, proposition, or question that the voter desires to designate.
(2) A failure to properly mark a ballot as to one or more candidates does not itself invalidate the entire ballot.
(3) If a voter marks fewer names than there are persons to be elected to the office, a vote shall be counted for each candidate properly marked.
(4) If a voter marks more names than there are persons to be elected to the office, the votes for candidates for that office may not be counted.
(5) The mark specified in (1) of this subsection shall be counted only if it is substantially inside the oval provided, оr touching the oval so as to indicate clearly that the voter intended the particular oval to be designated.
(6) Improper marks on the ballot may not be counted and do not invalidate marks for candidates properly made.
(7) An erasure or correction invalidates only that section of the ballot in which it appears.
. If not, they are "imрroper marks" that do not "invalidate marks for candidates properly made." AS 15.15.360(a)(6).
. AS 15.15.360(a)(5) (emphasis added).
. Given the comma before the words "or touching the oval," the intent clause could be read to apply only to marks touching the oval. But we do not read the clause in such a limited manner. First, we can discern no reason for the legislature to mandate that voter intent apply only to one type of ambiguous mark. Second, the legislative history suggests the clause should apply to both circumstances. The original statute, enacted in 1960, contained a list of three circumstances where marks should count as votes: ''The mark shall be counted only if it is substantially within the square provided, or touching the square and no other, or placed near the square so as to indicate clearly that the voter intended the particular square to be designated." Ch. 83, § 3.36(5), SLA 1960. A 1963 amendment deleted the last item in the list of three ("or placed near the square") but left the modifying intent clause. Ch. 80, § 8, SLA 1963. The presence of the comma is likely therefore explained by the fact that it originally separated a list оf three. Based on this history and the importance of voter intent in election case law as detailed later in this opinion, we read the intent clause to apply to both types of ambiguous marks.
. AS 15.15.360(b) provides that "[t]he rules set out in this section are mandatory and there are no exceptions to them."
.
.
. In re Primary Election Ballot Disputes 2004,
. Id.
. Roth v. LaFarge Sch. Dist., Bd. of Canvassers,
.
. Id.
. See, eg., In re Primary Election Ballot Disputes 2004, 857 AZ2d at 504 (reasoning that "[gliven the voter's demonstrated ability to comply with the instructions and fully darken ovals when voting, we cannot reasonably interpret this mark as anything other than a stray marking").
. AS 15.20.072. The relevant portion of subsection (c) requires that
[i]f the request for a special needs ballot is made through a representative, the representativе shall sign a register provided by an election official. The register must include the following information:
(1) the representative's name;
(2) the representative's residence and mailing address....
. Nowhere does the form specify that both address sections must be completed, even if the addresses are the same.
. Indeed, one of the personal representatives provided a nine-digit postal zip code.
. See Fischer,
. See id. at 221.
. Finkelstein,
. The Division expressed concern at oral argument about the administrability of requiring the Division to determine whether an address is both a residence and a mailing address. However, the Division could resolve this by revising its form to specify that representatives must complete the mailing address section if different from the residence address.
. Carr v. Thomas,
