94 Ill. 515 | Ill. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a proceeding by petition under the statute, brought by Joshua Berry, in the county court of Cumberland county, to contest the alleged election of Daniel Kingery to the office of commissioner of highways in the town of Woodbury, in said county, at the annual April election, A. D. 1879.
The canvass of the votes, as made by the judges and clerks of election, upon the closing of the polls gave Kingery 70 and Berry 68 votes, electing Kingery by two majority.
The county court, upon the hearing, found that the petitioner, Berry, received at the election 71 votes, and the defendant, Kingery, 66 votes, and adjudged accordingly that Berry was elected. Kingery appeals to this court.
As the bill of exceptions does not purport to contain all the exddence in the case, it is objected by appellee that there should be no review by this court of the finding of the court below upon the facts, but that it should be held correct, the presumption being that there xvas sufficient evidence to sustain the finding, as has been repeatedly ruled by this court.
We are of opinion that this proceeding, under the statute regulating it, is in the nature of a chancery proceeding, and that the rule in chancery practice should be applied here, that to uphold the decree it must appear from the record that it is supported by the proofs.
It appears in evidence that some twenty days after the election, the town clerk, in whose keeping the ballot-box was entrusted, with eleven other persons, one of xvhom was this petitioner, acting with him, opened the ballot-box and handled the ballots,—that they took the ballots out of the ballot-box, unstrung them from the thread they xvere on, upon a table in a pile, then put them back in the box and counted them out and strung them again. This was done wrongfully, without any authority whatever. Appellant, Kingery, was not present, nor any of the judges or clerks of the election, neither did either of them have any notice of the proceeding.
The statute in regard to the preservation of the ballots at an election is very strict, requiring them to be carefully enveloped, and sealed up by the judges of election and delivered to the officer who is charged to keep them, and that such officer shall carefully preserve the ballots for six months, and at the expiration of that time shall destroy them by burning, without the package being previously opened, provided that if there shall be any contest of election pending they shall not be destroyed till it is determined; and that in cases of such contest the parties contesting shall have the right to have the package of ballots opened and the ballots referred to by witnesses. The opening of the package of ballots was for no such purpose as above provided, and was some time before the commencement of this proceeding.
Six of the persons present at the occasion were examined as witnesses, and testify that they did not know of any change or alteration of the ballots, and think they would have known it had there been; still they admit there might have been such change or alteration. The six others were not witnesses in the case.
All the judges and clerks of the election testified that the canvass made by them was correct, and that the ballots cast and canvassed by them showed the election of appellant by two majority, there being 70 votes for him and 68 for appellee. The poll-books and tally-lists in evidence showed that appellant received 70 votes and appellee 68. There was no distinct evidence what the ballots did show. This, with the examination of the ballots by the court, was substantially all the evidence appearing in the case.
The final order recites: “And the' court, after hearing the evidence and examining the ballots or tickets, poll-books and tally-lists used and kept in said election offered in evidence, doth find that at said election the petitioner received 71 votes and the defendant 66 votes.”
To have warranted such a finding by the court the ballots must have shown, differently from what the poll-books, tally-lists and certificate of the result of the canvass did, that appellee was elected, and the ballots must have been accepted as the best evidence in the matter. Ordinarily they are the best evidence. When we have before us the very ballots that were cast by the» voters, as between the ballots themselves and a canvass of the ballots made by the election officers, the ballots are controlling. But here the court was not sure that it had before it the identical and unaltered ballots which were deposited by the voters. There had been an unlawful inter-meddling by appellee, and others in conjunction with him, with the ballot-box, and a handling of the ballots, affording an opportunity for the change and alteration of ballots. The ballots may have been tampered with. There is not full proof that they were not. There was a motive for such tampering, at least on the part of appellee, if not the others engaged with him. The wrong-doer should not be allowed to profit by his violation of the sanctity of the ballot-box. He might do so were these ballots to be received and accredited as the identical ones cast by the voters.
Upon this subject the Supreme Court of Kansas lay down the following rule: In order to continue the ballots controlling asevidence, it must appear that they have been preserved in the manner and by the officers prescribed in the statute, and that while in such custody they have not been so exposed to the reach of unauthorized persons as to afford a reasonable probability of their having been changed or tampered with. Hudson v. Solomon, 19 Kansas, 177, and see Cooley Const. Lim. 625.
It will be salutaryvto adopt such rule as will not lend encouragement to the repetition of such practice with the ballot-box as this case discloses.
The intermeddling with the ballots here has brought suspicion upon their purity, sufficient, in our view, to discredit their character as the best evidence; and we think, under the circumstances of this case, that as between the ballots examined by the court, and the poll-books, tally-lists and certificate of the result of the canvass by the election officers, entered in the poll-books as required by law, supported as they here are by the testimony of said officers, the latter should be taken as the better evidence of the result of the election, and should control.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.