31 Minn. 25 | Minn. | 1883
This is a contest for the office of sheriff of Ramsey county. The board of canvassers declared the result of the precinct returns as follows: For O’Gorman, 4,158; for Richter, 4,187, — giving a majority of 29 to Richter, to whom a certificate of election was issued. O’Gorman having appealed to the district court, pursuant to Gen. St. 1878, c. 1, § 32, he was declared elected and entitled to the office, This conclusion was based upon an actual count, in court, of all the ballots in the ballot-boxes, with the following result: For O’Gorman, 4,189; for Richter, 4,101. Majority for O’Gorman, 88. The only question in the ease is the propriety of the action of ’the court in ordering a recount and admitting these ballots in evidence. To this action the appellant raises three objections:
1. That it was not warranted by the notice of contest. We think this objection is not well taken. Section 52 of the chapter referred to provides that the contestant shall serve upon the opposite party “a notice specifying the points on which the election will be contested. ” Among the points specified in the notice in this case are — First, that in canvassing the votes, the judges of election in all the precincts did not read and announce each .ballot for sheriff separately, and proclaim the same to the clerks, but in several precincts failed so to do, and on several different occasions, and at divers times, announced a large number of votes together and in the aggregate, but exactly in what precincts and to what extent this was done the contestant cannot set forth with more particularity, but that he believes and charges that if said errors and mistakes were duly corrected, it would appear that he was duly elected; second, that in each of the precincts, ballots.on which the name of Richter did not appear were announced, counted, and returned as votes for Richter; third, that in each of the precincts, votes were duly cast for the contestant which were not counted or returned for him. We think that, under the circumstances, this was sufficiently specific to warrant a recount, if preceded b.y the proper preliminary evidence.
Appellant contends that, under section 89, the contestant should have had the ballots opened and recounted before he began his contest, so that he could have specified in his notice minutely and in detail in what particular precincts the miscount occurred.
2. The second objection is that this canvass of the ballots should not have been allowed, unless cause therefor was shown by the introduction of some evidence of miscounts by the judges of election, through fraud or mistake. It may admit of doubt whether a court is bound to open the ballot-boxes and make a recount, unless there be some evidence furnishing ground for supposing that a miscount might have been made by the judges. If a party can demand a count by the court without any such showing, it could often be resorted to as a mere fishing expedition. But even if this be so, we think that as to all the precincts, except the country precinets and two of tire city precinets — the second in Fourth ward and the First in Sixth ward — there was evidence tending to show that the votes had not been counted as required by law, and therefore that there was a probability that errors might have been committed. It was proved that the judges did not read off each ballot by itself, but divided the “straight” tickets into lots of 10 or more, and then announced them
3. The third and principal question is whether the ballots were so preserved and kept inviolate, after the canvass by the judges of election, as to entitle them to be received in evidence. As no point is made as to the country precincts, we need only consider the ballots from the precincts of the city of St. Paul. These ballots were not. enveloped and sealed, as required by section 88 of the chapter on-elections, and, for this reason alone, appellant claims that they were not admissible. But we are of opinion that the provisions of this section are merely directory, and that where it is clearly and satisfactorily proved that the ballots have been kept intact and inviolate, in the same condition as when counted by the judges of election, they are admissible in evidence, although not sealed up in envelopes as-required by the statute. The statute does not make the ballots evidence. They are common-law evidence, and, when properly preserved and identified, they furnish the best evidence of the will of the electors. The statute treats of them aS an existing-form of evidence, and.
It is incumbent, however, upon the party offering the evidence to show clearly, and to the satisfaction of the court, that the ballots hare been preserved intact, before they can be admitted. In Newton v. Newell, 26 Minn. 529, this court hqld that it must affirmatively appear that they have been carefully preserved; that they must have been so carefully preserved as to place their identity beyond any reasonable doubt. We have no desire to modify this rule, believing that it is founded on the best of reasons. The returns of the judges of election are made immediately after canvassing the votes, and the votes are canvassed immediately after the close of the polls, in public, and usually in the presence of friends of both parties, and the result publicly announced. True, these returns may be erroneous, either through fraud or mistake, and may, for that reason, be impeached; but, as has been said, “in attempting to remedy one evil, we should be cautious not to open the door for a greater one.” After the result of an election is .announced, it is known just how many votes are required to change it. The ballots have no marks by which they can be identified; hence, if .the ballots are to be resorted to as evidence, it is of the utmost importance that they be kept secure. If they have been preserved intact, they are the highest and best kind of evidence; if not, they are the most unreliable and dangerous.
It would be impossible here to review the evidence on this point, consisting as it does of several hundred folios. An attempt to do so would necessarily be partial and imperfect, and would, therefore, rather tend to mislead than to aid in other cases. It is sufficient to say that it appears that, after the judges of election canvassed the votes, they strung the ballots on thread or twine, and placed them in the box, sealed the slit in the box through which the ballots were deposited, locked the box, and put it and the key in the custody of one or more of the judges, in whose custody it remained until delivered at the office of the city clerk; that the boxes and keys were delivered to the eity clerk or his deputy in person, except in the case of one box, which was left in the city hall, with the city jailer, at a late hour of the same day on which the election was held, and two or three boxes left with him the next morning before the city clerk’s office was opened, and in these cases the testimony of the jailer is satisfactory to the effect that he delivered the boxes intact to the city clerk in the morning; that the boxes and keys were delivered at the office of the city clerk by the judges of election in person, except in one instance, where the judge drove with it to the door of the city hall and sent his brother into the office with it, under circumstances which almost exclude the possibility of its being tampered with during the very few minutes it could have been in his possession. 'Every box was delivered to the city clerk before 2 or 3 o’clock of the afternoon of the day
The only instances in -which what we have said as to the evidence might not fully apply, are those of the boxes from the second precinct in the Second ward, and the second precinct in the Third ward. In the first, Lynch, the judge with whom the box was left during the night after the election, was not called as a witness; in the last, the box was left over night, locked, but not sealed, in the unoccupied room in which the election had been held. By the recount in the former Richter loses eleven votes and O’Gorman gains seven; and in the latter Richter gains two votes and O’Gorman loses three. Hence,
Judgment affirmed.