Douglas Greene (“Greene”) appeals the decision of the State Board of Canvassers upholding the election results in the race for Aiken County Council seat for District 3. We affirm.
FACTS
Greene was the unsuccessful Libertarian candidate for the Aiken County Council, District 3 seat. The official total vote was 628 votes to 623 votes. Greene lost the election by five votes.
Greene challenged the election results. A hearing was held before the Aiken County Board of Canvassers. At the hearing, eleven affidavits of registered voters were entered into evidence. All of the affidavits stated that the voters presented themselves at the poll but the poll manager did not allow them to vote in the District 3 County Council election. All of the voters were listed on the official voter registration roll as eligible to vote in District 2. None of the voters were listed as eligible to vote in the District 3 election. Several days after the election, the Aiken County Registration and Election Commission determined that at least six of the voters listed as eligible to vote in District 2 actually lived in District 3.
The Aiken County Board of Canvassers, finding no error in the conduct of the election, voted to sustain the result. Greene appealed to the South Carolina Board of Canvassers. The South Carolina Board of Canvassers found Greene failed to
LAW/ANALYSIS
The scope of appellate review of the State Board’s order “is limited to corrections of errors of law; findings of fact will not be overturned unless wholly unsupported by the evidence.”
Knight v. State Board of Canvassers,
The facts are not in dispute. At least six qualified voters presented themselves at the precinct to vote. Each of these voters was listed on the official voter registration roll as living in District 2. These voters were allowed to vote in the precinct elections, but they were not allowed to vote in the District 3 County Council election. None of the affidavits upon which Greene relies claim that any of these voters requested a challenge ballot and were refused. Greene claims, however, that S.C. Code Ann. § 7-13-810 (Supp. 1993) requires the poll manager to issue a challenge ballot when the voter questions the district to which the voter is assigned on the precinct voter registration roll.
S.C. Code Ann. § 7-13-810 (Supp. 1993) provides in pertinent part as follows:
The managers of election shall prevent any person from voting when they have good reason to believe the person has already voted. They should refuse to allow any person to vote who is not a registered elector or who has become disqualified for any cause to vote in such voting precinct.... Any elector or qualified watcher may, and it is the duty of the manager of the election to challenge the vote of any person who may be known or suspected not to be a qualified voter. . . The manager shall then presentthe challenge to the voter and act in accordance with the provisions provided for in this section. All challenges must be made before the time a voter receives a paper ballot or enters into a voting machine and no challenge may be considered after that time.
Id. [Emphasis added.]
The South Carolina Election Commission contends something more is required before the poll manager must issue a challenge ballot. We agree. S.C. Code Ann. § 7-13-830 (Supp. 1993) provides in pertinent part as follows:
When any person is so challenged, the manager shall explain to him the qualifications of an elector and may examine his [sic] as to the same. If the person insists that he is qualified and the challenge is not withdrawn, his vote must be received and placed in an envelope on which must be written the name of the voter and that of the challenger.
“The elementary and cardinal rule of statutory construction is that the Court ‘ascertain and effectuate actual intent of the legislature.’ ”
Horn v. Davis Elec. Constructors, Inc.,
“The making of a challenge is essential to the preservation of an adequate record upon which appellate review can be had.”
Fielding v. South Carolina Election Commission,
Affirmed.
