115 Wis. 417 | Wis. | 1902
Sec. 799, Stats. 1898, is as follows:
“In the election of town officers and justices of the peace to be chosen by ballot at town meetings each elector shall publicly at the poll deliver to one of the inspectors of such election a single ballot on which shall be written or printed the names of all the persons voted for by such elector, with a pertinent designation of the respective office which each person so voted for may be intended to fill; and no ballot shall contain a greater number of names designated for any office than there are persons to be chosen at such election to fill such office; and such ballots shall be received, deposited in the ballot-box and kept as is required at a general election.”
Early in the history of this state the doctrine was announced :
“That the intention of the elector is generally to control in determining for what person or what proposition a ballot should be counted, and that, when this intention is not mani*420 fest from, a bare inspection of the ballot itself, facts and circumstances of a public character connected with the election are sometimes resorted to for the purpose of ascertaining the intention of the elector; in other words, that the ballot, like a contract, may be read in the light of surrounding circumstances, in order more perfectly to understand the intention and meaning of the voter.” State ex rel. Spaulding v. Elwood, 12 Wis. 551.
The duty of the courts to give effect to the real will of the-voters was further emphasized in the recent case of State ex rel. Schuetz v. Luy, 103 Wis. 524, 19 N. W. 776. The-doctrine of all the cases is that the intention of the voter, as-gathered from the ballot itself, or from surrounding circumstances of a public character, is to control. Ballots which fairly and reasonably indicate the real intention of the elector are to be counted as cast, unless to do so runs counter to-some statutory enactment. McCrary, Elections, § 543, discusses the rule as follows.-
“It very often happens that the printed ticket is changed by the voter by erasing some part of it, or by writing on the face of it, or by both, to make it conform to his wishes. A bal-' lot is to be construed in the same way as any other written or printed document, and the construction must be such as to give effect to the voter’s intention, if that can be ascertained from the face of the ballot, oi-, in some cases, as we have seen, from the ballot as explained by evidence aliunde. If, therefore, a voter has written upon his ballot the name of a particular person in connection with the title of an office, and omits to strike out the name of another person printed upon it in connection with the same office, the writing must prevail, and the vote must be counted for the person whose name is writ ten. This is upon the ground that the writing is the highest evidence of the voter’s intention.”
Sec. 8, tit. IV, ch. 6, 1 R. S. N. Y. 1859 (5th ed.) p. 427, is almost precisely, as to words of prohibition, as our sec. 799. In a case involving the same question as is raised in this case, the court of appeals, in People v. Saxton, 22 N. Y. 309, said:
*421 “Tlie intention of tlie voter is to- be inferred, not from evidence given by him of the mental purpose with which he deposited his ballot, or his notions of the legal effect of what it contained or omitted, but by a reasonable construction of his acts. His writing a name upon a ballot in connection with the title of office is such a designation of the name for that office as to satisfy the statute, although he omits to strike out a name printed upon it in connection with the same office. The writing is to prevail as the highest evidence of his intention.”
- This case was followed in People ex rel. Gregory v. Love, 63 Barb. 535, and somewhat discussed in People ex rel. Thom v. Pangburn (Sup.) 38 N. Y. Supp. 217. The supreme court of Iowa expressly approves the Saxton Case in Brown v. McCollum, 76 Iowa, 479, 41 N. W. 197. In the contested election case of Wallace v. McKinley, before the house of representatives, found in Digest of Contested Elections 1888-89, by Mobley (page 185), the committee investigating the case reported that vdien the name of one candidate is printed on the ballot, and the name of the opposing candidate written under it, the former not being erased, it is clearly the intention of the voter to vote for the latter candidate, and the vote should be so counted.
The theory of these latter cases seems to be that when the intention of the voter is so- clear, and there is no provision of statute declaring that such votes shall not be counted, such intention shall prevail, and the vote shall be counted for the candidate whose name appears in writing. In other words, the voter shall not be disfranchised because of mere mistake, but his intention shall prevail, and the printed name be treated as though it had been erased. We are disposed to follow this line of cases, and therefore hold that the trial court was in error in declining to count the two ballots in question for the relator. The fact that one was written "PL. Blodgett,” and the other merely "Blodgett,” without initials, does not affect the question. The relator was the only candidate of
By the Oourt. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to enter judgment in favor of the relator and ousting defendant from his said office.