Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Honorable A. A. Miller County Attorney I Mewton County Newton, Texas Dear Sir: Opinion No. G2853 Re: The holdLng of a local option liquor election on general elec- tlon day, together with related questions. Your letter of October 23, 1940, recites that the commisslocers' court of your county has called a local option election for the 5th day of November, 1940, which Is general election day, to determine whether cr not the sale of llqucrs within the county shall be legalized. In connection therewith, you propound two questions stated by you as follows: “1. Can a Commissioners Court order an elec- tion on the question of the sale of Intoxicating liquor in a dry County to be held on General Election day November 5, 1940, at the same time and polling places that will be used for the General Election and supervised by the same elec- \tlon officials? ?2 . If the answer to question number cne 1s ‘yes’, will the Court be required to furnish separa%e ballot boxes and poil books for the liquor law election or can the liquor law ballc,tsbe drcpped in the same ballot boxes as the General glectlon ball&s and be listed and counted in the General Election books?” The statutes regulating local option 1Fquor electlorz and general elections do not contemplate or make specifl.cnro- vision for the ‘holdingof a local option electlon and a general electlcn at the same time and in the manc.er descrlbed Fn your letter. Nevertheless, there Is no prohibF.t:onagainst such be- ing d@ne. The courts of Texas have estabilshed lFbera1 prece- dents pertaining to elections and consFstentlp hold that the Honorable A. A. Miller, Page 2 (0-2853) statutory regulations are directory rather than mandatory. It is said In Texas Jurisprudence, Vol. 16, para. 5, page 10: "Thus the Supreme Court has said that the ultimate test of the validity of an electlon is involved Fn the questlon: Did the qualified electors at the time and place designated, act- Fng in concert, either actively or by acquies- cence, hold an election and cast their votes in the ballot box; and has this been done in a manner sufficiently conformable to fhe direction of the law as that the true result can be arrlv- ed at with reasonable certainty?" In Miller vs. Tucker, 119 SW 2d 92, 94, It was held: "Appellees' contention that the election was rendered invalid because J. Roy Lawson, the presiding officer, was at the same time mayor of Newton is also without merit. There was no showing or contention that the presence of Mr. Lawson as presiding officer in any way improperly affected the result of the electIon. No objection was made to Mr. Lawson serving. The election was fairly and honestly held and, so far as shown by the record, the votes were correctly counted and returns accurately made. Article 2940, Vernon's Ann. Civ. St., is directory only and an election is not vitiated by the fact that the election judge acting under the color of authority did not possess the required quali- fications In the absence of a showing of fraud or misconduct. Hill v. Smlthville Independent School Dist., Tex. Civ. App. 235 S.W. 987; Gajrle v. Alexander, Tex. Civ. App., 75 S.W. 2d 706:’ In Orth vs. Benevides, 125 SW 2d 1081, 1084, there is quoted with approval the following language by the Supreme Court In Fowler vs. State, 68 Tex. 35, 3 SW 255: "Electors must not be deprived of their votes on account of any technical objection fo the manner in which the election has been held, or for any misconduc~t on the part of its presid- ing officers, If these have not affected the tme result of the election.... This would be to de- prive citizens of a great constitutional privilege Honorable A. A. Miller, Page 3 (O-2853) for a mere informality, - to place l.twLthin the power of a few persons to defeat the right of suffrage altogether. The very means provlded to insure a fair and proper electlon might become an Instrument of fraud and dishonesty. Hence, all such irregularities of the offFcers in the conduct and return of the election as have not prevented the electors from a free and fair exer- cise of the right of suffrage, and from having their votes fairly estimated for the candidate of their choice, and which the law has not de- clared shall set aside their ballots, must be treated as informalities not vitiating the elec- tion. This princFpa1 Is to be taken with the qualification that It must be made to appear that the neglect or misconduct of the offi.cershas not, in the particular case, prevented an honest and fair election." "Adverting to the subject at hand in the light'of these well-settled principles, it is observed that Section 33, Article I, of the Texas Liquor Control Act (ArtLcle 666-33 V.A.P.C.) stipulates that when the commissloners' court has ordered an election it shall be its duty to order such elec- tion to be held at the voting places in the county within a specified time and "that said court shall appoint such offi- cers to hold such election as now required to hold general elections." It Is also to be noted that Section 36, Article I, of this Act, states that "the officers holding such electlon shall, in all respects not herein specified, conform to the general election laws in force regulatFng elections.... The provision of the general election laws shall be followed in calling and ccnducting said election where not inconsistent herewith." The holding of a local opticn election on general election day is, of course, calculated to result in more vote-s partlclpating therein and a ccnsequent greater expression of the public will. The desira3ility of this Ls apparent. The expediency and econ-my incident thereto is likewise mani.fest. Such Is not prehLbited and it is our opinion that neither elec- tion would be Invalid if each 13 otherwise conducted se as to secure a fair and honest election. Honorable A. A. Miller, Page 4 (O-2853) Article 2937, et seq., R.C.S., provides for the.ap- pointment by the commissioners ’ court of electIon judges who in turn appoint the electFon clerks. We can perceive no rea- son why these election officials could not, at the same time, supervise both a local option liquor election and a general election. We therefore hold In answer to your first question that the commissioners I court may order an election on the question of the sale of IntoxlcatFng liquor in a dry county to be held on general election day, November 5, 1940, at the same time and at the same polling places, and that each elec- tion may be under the supervision of the same election offi- clals. With reference to the use of the same ballot boxes, It is to be noted that the statutory plan pertaining to ballot boxes comprises four different boxes with each serving a parti- cular purpose. Ballot box No. 4 receives defectively printed ballots’together with defaced and mutilated ballots, and Arti- cle 3016, R.C.S., prescribes the purpose of ballot boxes Nos. 1, 2 and 3 as follows: “At the expiration of one hour after voting has begun, the receiving judges shall deliver ballot box No. 1 to the counting judges, who shall at once dellver in its place ballot box No. 2, vhich shall again be opened and examined in the presence of all the judges and securely closed and locked; and, until the ballots in box No. 1 have been counted, the receiving judge shall receive and deposlt ballots in ballot box No. 2. Ballot box No. 1 shall, on Its receipt by the counting judges, be immediately opened and the tickets taken out by one of them, one by one, when he shall read and distinctly announce whLle the ticket remains In his hand, the name of each candidate voted fcr there on, which shall be noted on the tally sheets, and shall then deliver the ballot to the other counting judge, whc shall place the same in box No. 3, which phall remain locked and in view until the Honorable A. A. Miller, Page 5 (O-2853) counting is finished, when said box shall be return- ed with the other boxes, locked and sealed, to the county clerk. Ballot boxes Ncs. I and 2 shall be used by the receiving judge and the counting judge alternately, as above provided, as often as the counting jucige has counted and exhausted the ballots In either box." Ballot box No. 3 therefore is the locked and sealed repository for the ballots after they have been counted and until the ballots have been destroyed in accordance with law or are subjected to examination and Inspection in a manner incident to a proceeding contesting the electlon as speclfically provided for by the Legislature. It Is manifest that if both the ballots cast in the local option election and in the general election are deposited in ballot box No. 3 after being counted, the ballots cast In both elections would be subject to an exposure;hovever casual or Incidental it might be, in the event of a contest of either election whereunder the ballots cast in the parti- cular election being contested would be subject to examina- tion and inspection. In Carroll vs. State, 61 SW 2d 1005, the constltu- tional safeguard surrounding the ballot was recognized and enforced. It was pointed out that ballots cast in an election may be opened and Inspected only in a manner, and incident to a proceeding, authorized by the Legislature. The court cie- clared: "The mandate of the Constitution of this State that the vote be by ballot must be con- strued as meaning a 'secret ballot'...." Anything that would relax this protection to the voter, namely, that his bailot in a particular election shall be kept secret, is to be scrupulously avoided. Accordingly, if the use of the same ballot boxes in the holding of a local option election and a genera!.election at the same time would In any way permit a ballot cast in either election to be ex- posed other than in a manner, and incident to a proceeding, authorized by t'neLegislature, it should not be done. We therefore regard it as indispensable that the commissioners' court shall at least furnish a separate ballot box No. 3 when it has ordered a lccal option eiectlon to be held at the same time as a general election. We deem it more desirable and appropriate, moreover, that separate ballot boxes Nos. 1, 2 and 4 also be furnished, relating to each election, although Honorable A. A. Miller, Page 6 (O-2853) there Is no compelling objection to the use thereof as exists with reference to ballot box No. 3. It would not appear necessary that separate lists of the voters be furnished but the tally and poll lists of the votes cast in each election, and the returns of each, vould necessarily have to be separate and distinct. Yours very truly ATPORNEYGENERAL OF TEXAS By /s/ Zollie C. Steakley Zollle C. Steakley Assistant ZCSEAH SC APPROVED NO'J 1, 1940 /s/ Gerald C. Mann ATPORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS APPROVED Opinion Committee BY BWB Chairman