The Honorable Will Feland Prosecuting Attorney P.O. Box 423 Lonoke, Arkansas 72086
Dear Mr. Feland:
This is in response to your request for an opinion concerning the use of "stickers" by a write-in candidate running for Sheriff in Lonoke County. You have asked the following specific question in this regard:
May stickers be used under present law to cast a vote for a write-in candidate?
It must be concluded that the answer to your question is no. In Bennett v. Miller,
In all elections, except primary elections, at the bottom of each list of names for each position or office appearing on the ballot there shall be a blank line or lines, for possible write-in votes for that position or office.
In concluding that the use of stickers was valid and permissible, the Court refused to construe the term "write" in its technical sense and further noted that the name of a write-in candidate could be placed on the ballot ". . . .in any convenient way, such as the use of a rubber stamp or a sticker. . . ." Bennett, supra, at 414; Pace, supra, at 793.
However, in pace the Court intimated that its decision might have been different if during the intervening years following the Bennett decision the legislature had modified the provisions pertaining to write-in votes to suggest that the interpretation rendered by the Court in Bennett was contrary to legislative intent.
The language contained in A.C.A.
No write-in vote in any election in this state may be counted unless the name of the write-in candidate shall have been written on the ballot in the handwriting of the person casting the vote. . . .
Established rules of statutory construction require that provisions pertaining to the same general subject matter be read in pari materia (together), and to the extent possible they be reconciled and each given effect. Bolden v. Watt,
It is therefore clear that a court will attempt to reconcile A.C.A.
Note should also be taken of Smith v. State of Arkansas,
It may be noted that the construction we have adopted is consistent with what has been stated to be the legislative intent to bar voting for write-in candidates by use of gummed stickers, and we would emphasize that nothing we have said is intended to authorize voting by use of such stickers.
Smith, supra, at 705 n. 4.
The foregoing opinion, which I hereby approve, was prepared by Assistant Attorney General Elisabeth A. Walker.
