54 Ark. 409 | Ark. | 1891
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court of Cleveland county that, at an election held on the 17th day of August, 1889, to determine whether the county seat of that county should be located at the town of Rison or the town of Kingsland in said county, Rison had received a majority of the legal votes cast at said election, and that the county seat be removed to said town of Rison from the former county seat location at Toledo, and that Rison should thereafter be the county seat of said county. The case was brought to the circuit court on appeal from the judgment of the county court, in which court, upon the canvass of votes cast at the election by the clerk of the county courts and the filing of his certificate in said court showing that Rison had received 1009 votes and Kingsland X002 votes, the appellants and others gave notice that they would contest the election, and afterwards filed a written notice of contest setting out the ground upon which they relied, upon which the county court made orders for the taking of depositions, and set the cause for hearing. This was before the court had proceeded to judgment, and thus appellants became parties to the record, and made the appellees parties, the former representing Kingsland and the latter Rison. The judgment of the county court was for Kingsland, from which appellees have appealed to the circuit court, where a trial de novo was had, resulting in a judgment for Rison from which this appeal was taken.
The adjudicated cases on this question are not numerous, and are divided. The principal cases that hold such declarations admissible are, People v. Pease, 27 N. Y., 59; State v. Olin, 23 Wis., 319; People v. Cicott, 16 Mich., 283. Among those which hold such evidence inadmissible, are Gilleland v. Schuyler, 9 Kansas, 582, by Judge Brewer; Davis v. State, 12 S. W., 960 (Tex.); Beardstown v. Virginia, 81 Ill., 542, where it is held that: “The declarations of a person made sometime after having voted at an election, admitting or stating facts showing he was not a legal voter, are inadmissible to show his disqualification to vote.” The declarations of a voter as to his qualifications may be so contemporaneous with his voting as to be part of the res gestes, and as such competent evidence. Patton v. Coates, 41 Ark., 117. Judge McCrary, in his work on Elections, sec. 448, says: “ The English authorities, though not entirely uniform, are generally in favor of admitting such declarations, and perhaps the weight of authority in this country is the same way, though it cannot be denied that the tendency in the more recent, and we think also the better considered cases, is to exclude this evidence as hearsay.” The case of People v. Pease, 29 N. Y., supra, was decided by five judges against three dissenting. The case of People v. Cicott, in 16 Mich., supra, was decided by an equal division of the judges. Judge Cooley says: “ If votes were taken viva voce, so that it could .always be determined with absolute certainty how every person had voted, the objection to this species of scrutiny after an election had been held would not be very formidable. But when secret balloting is the policy of the law, and no one is at liberty to inquire how any elector has voted, except as he may voluntarily have waived his privilege, and when consequently the avenues to correct information concerning the votes cast are carefully guarded against judicial exploration, it seems exceedingly dangerous to permit any question to be raised upon this subject.” Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations (6th ed.), p. 789.
Such declarations of a voter are not admissible on the ground that they are in derogation of • an existing right of the voter, and against his interest. They are hearsay, and their admission would violate a sound rule of law and also a sound public policy. There was no error in the circuit court’s declaration of the law in this behalf.
Of the minors who are said to have voted for Kingsland, we find no evidence showing for what place four of them voted. Of those who are said to have voted in the wrong township for Kingsland, there is one as to whom there is no evidence how he voted. All of the above have been ex-eluded in the estimate we make of the vote, under the rule laid down above. We have estimated that the following illegal votes were cast for Rison at the election: Two by-persons under 21 years of age, nine by persons voting in the wrong townships, three by persons not long enough in the State, three by persons who were non-residents of the county—in all, seventeen. And that the following illegal votes were cast at the election for Kingsland : Four by persons under age, ten by persons voting in the wrong townships, three by persons convicted of infamous crimes, four by persons who did not reside in the county, eight by persons who had not resided in the county long enough to. become qualified voters—total twenty-nine. Deducting from "the 1009 votes returned for Rison 17 illegal votes cast for Rison, we have 992 legal votes for Rison. Deducting from the 1002 votes returned for Kingsland the 29 illegal votes cast for Kingsland, we have 973 legal votes for Kingsland. It thus appears that there was a majority of nineteen legal votes for Rison. In this estimate two votes are counted about whose identity there might have been some contest, but the exclusion of these could not change the result.
In the view we have taken of the case, it is unnecessary to consider the exclusion of certain depositions offered at the trial in behalf of Rison, or to consider the offer by citizens of Kingsland, made before the election, to pay $675 for the purpose of building a high school for colored people at Kingsland, if the county seat should be located at Kings-land.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.