DocketNumber: Appeal, 166
Citation Numbers: 41 A.2d 630, 351 Pa. 451, 1945 Pa. LEXIS 347
Judges: Deew, Maxey, Drew, Linn, Stern, Patterson, Stearne
Filed Date: 9/29/1944
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/13/2024
This is an appeal from the order of the court below dismissing the exceptions filed to the order of that court dismissing the petition for a contest for the office of Commissioner for the Third Ward in Shaler Township, Allegheny County.
The Return Board made the following return:
Edward T. Bauman, Jr. ................... 122 votes Elmer Mertz ............................. 121 votes
It is argued by the contestants, 24 citizens and qualified electors of the Third Ward, that ballots marked Exhibits "1" and "2", respectively, were improperly rejected by the Return Board. Exhibit "1" was excluded as an improper ballot because in addition to the crosses on it there also appeared on it two "check marks" after the crosses and another slight mark in the square which *Page 453
is to the right of the name of Elmer Mertz as the Republican candidate for Township Commissioner. This latter was a vertical mark, less than one-eighth of an inch in length, in front of the cross. This mark apparently made inadvertently by the voter, clearly does not invalidate his vote for Mertz. In the party square to the right of the word "Republican" there is a cross which indicates that the voter wished to vote for the Republican candidates for all the offices named on the ballot. Whatever mark this voter placed in the square to the right of Mertz's name was mere surplusage and nugatory. The fact that the voter made both a cross and a check mark after the name of the Democratic candidate for Judge of Election and after the name of the Republican candidate for Constable and the fact that he wrote "No good" after the name of one of the Democratic candidates for School Director does not invalidate the entire ballot. The provision in sub-section (a) of sec. 1223 (Art. 12) of the Act of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333 (
Exhibit No. 1 contains no marks which can be "reasonably supposed" to have been made by the voter for the purpose of distinguishing his ballot, and it would be unjust not to count the vote given by that ballot for Elmer Mertz for the office indicated. Election officers would have enough power to change in many instances the result of an election if they were permitted to throw out every ballot which contained marks which were not contained on any other ballot. The power to throw out a ballot for minor irregularities, like the power to throw out the entire poll of an election district for irregularities, must be exercised very sparingly and with the idea in mind that either an individual voter or a group of *Page 455
voters are not to be disfranchised at an election except for compelling reasons. In Ayre's Contested Election,
As to Exhibit No. 2, the voter instead of making his cross with only two diagonal lines crossing each other in the center, made in addition thereto a third and parallel line from the left of the square to the right, passing about one-sixteenth of an inch below the center of the properly crossed diagonal lines. The voter thus indicated his choice by a proper X and then added the meaningless line. We do not think the mark described made the ballot void as being in contravention of the provision in section 1223 (a) supra, which reads as follows: "Any ballot marked by any other mark than an (X) in the spaces provided for that purpose shall be void and not counted: Provided, however, that no vote recorded thereon shall be declared void because a cross (X) mark thereon is irregular in form." This provision obviously means that if a voter uses anyother mark than an X to *Page 456
indicate his choice, that "vote" shall not be counted. For example, if he drew an "arrow" or a "hand" in the squareinstead of a cross, it could not be counted as a vote. That this construction of the provision quoted is the one customarily adopted is indicated by the printed instructions on the ballot used in this case, which, inter alia, read as follows: "A cross (X), not a check mark or any other mark, in the square opposite the name of any candidate indicates a vote for that candidate." But if a voter makes a cross in the square, as this voter did, he has in fact voted even though the cross he made is "irregular in form", as this one was because of the extra line. If, for example, this voter had made his X out of two double oblique lines crossing each other the "cross" would be "irregular in form" but it would not be void. A voting cross made in the proper square by a voter does not have to be made of only two perfectly straight oblique lines crossing each other at the exact center. Marking a ballot in voting is a matter not of precision engineering but of an unmistakable registration of the voter's will in substantial conformity to statutory requirements. See Pfaff v. Bacon,
The Act of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333, Article 14, Sec. 1407,
The order of the Court below which declared Edward T. Bauman, Jr., elected to the office of Commissioner in the Third Ward in Shaler Township is reversed, and it is ordered that a certificate of election be issued to Elmer Mertz for that office. Costs to be paid by the Township of Shaler.
Ayre's Contested Election , 287 Pa. 135 ( 1926 )
McCaffreys' Appeals , 337 Pa. 552 ( 1940 )
Armstrong's Appeal , 293 Pa. 1 ( 1928 )
Smith's Petition , 292 Pa. 140 ( 1928 )
Foy's Election , 228 Pa. 14 ( 1910 )
Pfaff v. Bacon , 249 Pa. 297 ( 1915 )
Carpenter's Case , 14 Pa. 486 ( 1850 )
Commonwealth v. Smith , 185 Pa. 553 ( 1898 )
Nomination Certificate of Robb , 188 Pa. 212 ( 1898 )
Independence Party Nomination , 208 Pa. 108 ( 1904 )
Cramer's Election Case , 248 Pa. 208 ( 1915 )
Carbondale's Election , 280 Pa. 159 ( 1924 )
Twenty-Eighth Congressional District Nomination , 268 Pa. 313 ( 1920 )