39 So. 507 | Ala. | 1905
At the general election held in November, 1904, C. C. Montgomery and William E. Henry were opposing candidates for the office of tax collector in St. Clair county. When the return from the various precincts in the county were canvassed by the board of
Montgomery then instituted a contest against Henry before the judge of the probate court in said county. The cause was tried by the judge on an agreed statement of facts, judgment was rendered in favor of the contestee and from that judgment Montgomery prosecuted this appeal.
By the agreed statement of facts- it is shown that the election was in all respects fairly held and the result-in each precinct was correctly ascertained and properly returned by the inspectors. There is no- imputation of fraud, or evil practice against any candidate, voter or election officer. But, in four of the precincts the inspectors neglected to number the ballots and as shown by the agreed statement of facts this irregularity on the part of the inspectors in failing to- number the ballots constitutes the basis for the contest. Or as stated in the agreed statement of facts: “It is agreed that if the court should hold that the unnumbered ballots should not have been counted then the contestant is entitled to judgmnt.” Thus by the- agreed statement of facts all questions except the rightfulness of -the counting of the unnumbered ballots were -eliminated. And so- the record stands before us.
The case involves a construction of sections 34 1-2 and 78 of the act- of the legislature, approved October the 9th, 1903, entitled “An Act to further regulate elections in the State of Alabama.”- — General Acts, 1903, p. 438.
Those sections of the Act -are in the following language : “Sec. 34 1-2. Each ballot shall be numbered by one of the inspectors 'to correspond to- the number of' the voter voting the same on the poll list. A voter may write his name on his ballot. The number corresponding with the voter’s name on the poll list must be plainly entered in ink on the back of the ballot of the voter. Any person who compares the number on the ballot with the poll list shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars; provided, this shall not apply on the trial of any contested election case.”
The acute question is, are the requirements of the sections mandatory or directory?
We deem the exigencies of the case do. not call for a discussion of the .origin and purpose of the enactment, any one who may desire to- prosecute that inquiry may be greatly aided by consulting the cases cited in the briefs of counsel, wherein similar statutes were discussed and'construed and some of which will be hereinafter cited. In the discussion we shall endeavor to be as brief as we possibly may be, considering the importance of the question.
As has already been disclosed, the case does not involve the act of any candidate or voter, but the acts of the inspectors of the election in the four precincts mentioned in the agreed statement of facts, and the acts of the inspectors assailed are untainted with fraud or dishonesty.
Section 190 of the Constitution authorized the legislature to enact laws not inconsistent with that instrument, to regulate and govern elections, (a) And the legislature shall provide by law for the manner of holding elections and of ascertaining the result of the same, and of registration, etc. “Such laws will necessarily sometimes have the effect of preventing the elector from voting or of having his vote counted. For instance, a law for the registration of voters, to be effectual, must provide that one not registered shall not vote, and may require of the elector other conditions. But in all these matters the voter had the privilege of voting by a compliance with the law, and his failure to do so is somewhat owing to his negligence or misfortune. * *
* The right to vote and have the vote counted should not be taken away by any doubtful construction of a statute, and before the voter should be shorn of the privilege it must be clear that, under the circumstances then existing the legislature intended such to' be the case.”
The courts in order to give effect to the will of the majority, and to prevent the disfranchisement of legal voters have uniformity held those provisions to be formal and directory merely, which are not essential to a fair election, unless such provisions are declared to be essential by' the statute itself. In McCary on elections, § 190, the rule is stated as follows: “If the statute expressly declares any particular act to be essential to the validity of the election, or that its omission shall render the election void, all courts whose duty it is to enforce such- statutes must so hold, whether the particular act in question goes to the merits, or affects the result of the election, or not. Such a statute is imperative, and considerations touching its policy or impolicy must be addressed to the legislature. But if as in most cases, the statute simply provides that certain acts or things shall be done within a particular manner, and does not declare that their performance is essential to the validity of the election, then they will be regarded as mandatory if they do, and directory if they do not, affect the actual merits of the election.” — § 225 and citations is note 2.
Paine in his work on elections, (§ 498) expresses the same view in the following language: “In general those statutory provisions which fix the day and the place of the election and the qualifications of the voters are substantial and mandatory, while those which relate to the mode of the procedure in the election, and to the record and the return of the results, are formal and directory. Statutory provisions relating to elections are not rendered mandatory, as to the people, by the circumstances that the officers of the election are subjected to criminal liability for their violation. The rules prescribed by the law for conducting an election are designated chiefly to
As to whether language should be construed as mandatory, or directory, the doctrine is thus stated in Wheeler v. Chicago, 24 Ill. 105; 76 Am. Dec. 736: “The word may is construed to mean shall whenever the right of the public or third per sc ns depend upon the exercise of the power or performance of the duty to which it refers. And so, on the other hand, the Word shall may be held to be merely directory when no advantage is lost, when no right is destroyed, when no- benefit is sacrificed, either to the public or the individual, by giving it that construction. But, if any right to any one depends upon giving the word an imperative construction, the presumption is that the word was used, in reference to such right or benefit. But, where no right or benefit to any one depends upon the imperative use of the word, it may he held to be directory merely.” — Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes, (1888) §§ 433, 436, 437.
Mr. Wigmore, in an appendix to the second edition of his treatise on the Australian Ballot System (page 193),
In the case of Lee v. State, 49 Ala. pp. 54-5, which was a case that involved irregularities on the part of a manager of an election, this court said: “Did the irregularities in the conduct of the election, as stated in the record, render the election invalid, in the absence of airy fraud, or intended fraud, on the part of persons who actually performed the duties of inspectors of election in conducting it, it not appearing that there was any misconduct on their part calculated to prevent a free, fair and full exercise of the elective franchise? We think this question ought to- be answered in the negative. Statutes directing the. mode of proceeding by public officers are directory, and a strict compliance with their provisions is not essential to the validity of their proceedings, unless it is so declared by the statute; and the courts say this rule should have a liberal application in respect to the duties of inspectors of elections, when we consider the character and the duties of the men who are necessarily selected to fill these offices.” — Lee v. State, 49 Ala. 43; People v. James M. Cook, 14 Barbour’s S. C. R. 259; and the same case on error, 4 Selden, 67. In those jurisdictions where the law requires the inspectors to number the ballots but does not provide that unnumbered bal
The law of Nevada directs that the number of each ballot shall be the same as that of the corresponding stub, and that the number of the ballot shall be written 'upon the registry list, opposite the name of the voter receiving it.
After preparing the ballot it must be delivered to the inspector, who shall separate the strip bearing the number from the ballot, and deposit the ballot in 'the ballot-box. At one of the precincts the inspector, through ignorance of the law, and not willfully, neglected to separate the strip bearing 'the number from the ballot. The entire vote of the precinct was cast in this way. The law further provided that ho ballot should be deposited in the ballot-box unless the slip containing the number of the ballot had been removed therefrom by the inspector. It was held by the supreme court of that state in the case of Buckner v. Lynip, 41 Pac. 762, 30 L. R. A. 354, that the ballots should not be rejected. The court among other things remarked, that “it was to be observed that the voters of the precinct were themselves in no wise in fault. They possessed every qualification for voting, and had complied with every requirement of the law as to registration, marking their ballots, etc.”
The law of Missouri requires the ballots to be numbered, and provides that any ballot not numbered shall not be counted.” The judge of election through inadvertence, neglected to number any of the ballots; but the court held that the statute was mandatory and all of the ballots were rejected.” — West v. Ross, 53 Mo. 350.
The precedents referred to seem to- support the correctness of the rule heretofore referred to as stated by th Supreme Court of Kansas.
In the case in -hand, no fault Avhatever has been ascribed to the voters nor to the candidates, but the trouble arose from Avhat must have been ignorance of the law or inattention to it on the part of the inspectors. The ballots were voted by the voters Avithout any challenge and Avere counted by the inspectors, as they were cast, without a protest from any source. No one questions that the votes Avere the expression of the will of the voters and that Avlien given to the- contestee entitled him to be declared the successful candidate. The court below held that the votes Avere properly counted for the contestee and AAre are by this appeal asked to hold that the requirement of the statute Avith reference to the numbering of the ballots is mandatory and that the unnumbered ballots- should not be counted. Sec. 34 1-2, while it provides that the ballots shall be numbered by one of the inspectors, does not direct that the ballots shall not be counted if not numbered. Neither does section 78 contain any prohibition against counting an unnumbered ballot. Section 87 is the only section in the act, that has- a requirement Avith reference to the rejection of votes, it is in this language: “Sec. 87. In counting, the returning officer or one of the inspectors, must take the ballots, one by one, from the box in Avhieli they have been deposited at tíre same time reading aloud the names of the persons voted for, and the office for which such person is voted for; they must separately keep a calculation of the number of 'the votes each person receives and for what office
It is true that section 50 of the act makes it a misdemeanor punishable by fine for any officer without lawful excuse to neglect, fail or refuse to' perform any official duty required by the act. But we have seen that provisions in statutes relating to elections are not rendered mandatory, as to the people, by the circumstances that the officers of the election are subject to criminal liability for their violation. — Paine on Elections, § 498; Lindstrom v. Board of Canvassers, (Mich.) 19 L. R. A. 171, 54 N. W. 280.
In the case of Lindstrom v. Board of Canvassers, supra, ii was said by the supreme court of Michigan, that, “It may be stated as a general rule, that the provisions, of law relating to the manner of conducting elections will not be held so far mandatory as that a departure from the rule will result in the disfranchisement of a district or a class of voters, or the defeat of a candidate, himself free from fraud, except in cases where the legislative intent that such departure from the prescribed rule shall have such effect is clearly and unequivocally expressed.” To the same effect is the ruling by the supreme court of Kansas, in the case of Boyd v. Mills, 25 L. R. A. 486, 37 Pac. 16.
The legislature by section 87 of the act under consideration safe-guards the elector against the loss of his vote on account of technical errors committed by himself which do not make it impossible to determine his choice. But in tlie case at bar, we repeat, no complaint is made with reference to the conduct of any elector, but it is on account of the inadvertence of the inspectors that the contestant would have votes of four precincts in the
The judgment appealed from will be affirmed.