134 S.E. 597 | W. Va. | 1926
At a general primary election, held August 3, 1926, the relator W. P. Mullins was a candidate on the Republican ticket for the office of president of the board of education of Sand River District, McDowell County. He was opposed on the same ticket by the respondent George W. Jewell. A canvass of the vote from the seven precincts in the district *268 showed Mullins to have received 480 votes and Jewell 451, a majority of 29 votes for Mullins. A recount demanded by Jewell gave him 455 votes and Mullins 453, a majority of 2 votes in favor of Jewell. By this proceeding the relator Mullins seeks a peremptory writ of mandamus commanding the board of canvassers to reassemble and reject the ballots cast in precinct number four of said district on the ground that the evidence shows said ballots to have been tampered with and altered, and to issue him a certificate of election.
The recount as to six of the precincts in the district showed a change of but two votes, but as to precinct number four there was a change of 57 votes in favor of Jewell, counting all the ballots cast and returned to the clerk of the county court by the election officials. After ascertaining the result as just stated, the board of canvassers, as a part of the same recount, rejected 26 ballots, which they found to have been tampered with and altered, 21 of which they had at first counted for Jewell, and five of which they had counted for Mullins. The canvass of the returns made by the election officers gave Jewell 64 votes in precinct number four, and Mullins 57 votes, and the recount, after rejecting the 26 ballots found to have been altered, gave Jewell 71 votes, and Mullins 30.
The petition charges that by an inspection of the ballots the board of canvassers ascertained that a number of them had been tampered with and altered; that it was apparent that these ballots had originally been cast for Mullins, but had been altered so as to make it appear they were cast for Jewell; and that in addition to the 26 ballots rejected, a number of altered ballots were counted for the respondent Jewell, with the result that he was declared elected.
The return of the board of canvassers admits that upon the recount twenty-five ballots were rejected, "for the reason that opposite the name of Jewell there was a heavy cross mark on twenty-one ballots, and opposite the name of Mullins there was evidence of a very dim mark, and on five ballots a heavy cross mark was opposite Mullins' name and a dim mark opposite Jewell's name, as will fully appear from an examination *269 of the original ballots, with the marks thereon as aforesaid." The return further recites that when the polls at precinct number four were closed, the election officers counted the ballots, made up their certificates, and placed the ballots in envelopes and sealed the same; that thereupon the envelopes so sealed were delivered to one of the election commissioners, who took them to his home, where, noticing that the inside flap used to cover the opening where ballots are inserted in the ballot box was open, he unlocked the box and closed the opening; that the said commissioner testified that he did not in any way molest or change the ballots; that on the day following the election said commissioner delivered the ballot box and ballots to the clerk of the county court; that said envelopes were examined when delivered and found to be properly sealed, with the signatures of the election officers across the flaps thereof; that there was no evidence whatever of said envelopes having been tampered with; and that after the delivery of the ballots to the county clerk, they were placed in the vault in his office, and that no one had an opportunity to tamper with them.
An examination of the 21 ballots now marked as voted for Jewell, and rejected on the recount, shows beyond doubt that pencil marks have been erased from the squares opposite Mullins' name. The five ballots now marked for Mullins, rejected on the recount, do not bear evidence of erasures opposite Jewell's name, but only indentures in the paper, which might have been, and apparently were, made by pressure of a pencil in marking ballots for Jewell lying directly on top of the five ballots in question.
Six of the election officers of precinct number four testified before the board of canvassers that "one or not more than two" ballots were found by them to have been changed at the time they canvassed the vote at the close of the election, and that they could not account for the erasures and changes found by the canvassing board on the recount.
There can be no doubt that the 21 ballots above referred to were changed by erasures and remarking, and that the changes were made after the count by the election officers. *270 It is not at all probable that 21 voters out of a total of 127 would make the same mistake in marking their ballots and correct it by means of erasures and remarking. Then we have the testimony of the election officers, that they found not more than two such changes. As the ballots now appear these officers could not have failed to see the evidence of erasures. And in a number of instances the cross mark opposite Jewell's name is entirely different in appearance from all the other marks on the same ballot, in some cases heavier, in others lighter, and other distinguishing features appear, though on some of the ballots it appears that an attempt was made to counterfeit or copy the marks made by the voter, in size and appearance. Another fact is noted, that the precinct returns made by the election officers show a total of 121 votes cast for the two contestants, out of a total of 127 ballots, while on the recount, before the rejection of the 26 ballots in question, each of the 127 ballots was found to have been marked for one or the other of the candidates.
Respondents have made no appearance except to file their return to the alternative writ; and no brief has been filed in their behalf. The return in effect alleges that there was no evidence of tampering except the fact, as they found, that some of the ballots had been changed by erasures and remarking. We have already alluded to the manner in which the ballots were handled and cared for from the time they left the voting place until they were turned over to the custody of the clerk of the county court. The original envelope in which the ballots were sealed by the election officers is before us in evidence. It has been opened by breaking the wax seals placed over the edge of the flap and tearing the flap away from the body of the envelope. The flap and the remnants of the seals are now so badly mutilated, that it is impossible to say whether it was opened more than once before the canvass. From all present appearances it has been roughly dealt with at some time.
The general rule as laid down by our decisions, as well as by those of other jurisdictions, is that the certificates made by the precinct election officers are prima facie evidence of the *271
result of the election, but that the ballots, if identified as the same cast at the polls, are the best evidence of such result, when it appears that they have been preserved in the manner and by the officers prescribed by the statute, and that while in such custody they have not been changed or tampered with. Dent v. Board of Canvassers,
While in this case the evidence of opportunity to tamper with the ballots while they were in the custody of the proper officers charged with preserving them may not of itself be sufficient to destroy their value as primary evidence, it conclusively appears that they were changed at some time between the canvass by the election commissioners and the recount by the board of canvassers. The board of canvassers in their return admit that they found twenty-six ballots to have been changed, and gave that as their reason for rejecting them on the recount. The respondent Jewell made no return to the writ.
We think this case is controlled by the decision in State exrel. Jarrett v. Banks et al.,
The evidence clearly proving that the ballots cast at precinct number four were not preserved in such manner as to maintain their character as primary evidence, they can not be looked to by the board of canvassers in ascertaining the result of the election, and resort must be had to the certificates of the precinct election officers therefor. State ex rel. Jarrett v. Banks et al., supra, and cases cited.
Our conclusion is that relator is entitled to the relief prayed for, and a peremptory writ of mandamus will be awarded in conformity with the alternative writ heretofore issued.
Writ awarded.