This action was instituted by plaintiff to contest the election for county commissioner held in one of the commissioner districts in Pland county on November 3, 1914. The election canvassing board found that plaintiff had received 162 votes, and that defendant had received 165 votes, and declared defendant elected to said office, and issued to him a certificate of election. Plaintiff alleged that certain ballots were erroneously counted for defendant, and that certain other ballots were erroneously not counted for plaintiff, by reason of which plaintiff should have been declared legally elected to said office instead of defendant. After hearing the evidence on the trial, the court found that the vote, as between plaintiff and defendant, had resulted in a tie, and that neither plaintiff nor defendant had been elected, each having received 160 votes, and the judgment was thereupon rendered canceling defendant’s certificate of election. From the judgment and order denying a new trial, defendant has appealed.
[1] Appellant assigns the insufficiency of the evidence to support the 'findings and judgment and that the trial court erred in the conclusions of law. On the recounting of ballots on the trial, defendant objected to the counting of twelve ballots as votes for plaintiff, and plaintiff objected to the counting of seven ballots as votes for defendant. These nineteen contested ballots were a part of the findings and are a part of the appeal record now before this court. We have examined each of these contested ballots and the objections thereto, and are of the view that the learned trial court found correctly as to them all, except six thereof, being those designated in the record as “Exhibits Ai, A4, Ay, Bi, D2, and Ei.” These six last-mentioned ballots are the only ones that *37will be necessary for us to consider. Ballots Ai, A4, Bi, and El, each had a plain cross, made with the official stamp, in the circle in front of plaintiff’s name; it is also evident, from inspection, that each of these four ballots had1 a mark, made with the official stamp, in the circle in front of defendant’s name, and which mark in all human probability, in view of' the surrounding circumstances, was a cross, intentionally made by the voter, but which mark in the circle in .front of defendant’s name had been partially obliterated by scratching and erasures. Ballot D2 had a plain cross in the circle in front of defendant’s name, with a partially obliterated and erased mark in the circle in front of plaintiff’s name. Under the findings and conclusions of law, ballots Ai, A4, Bi, and Hi were counited for plaintiff, and D2 for defendant. We are of the view that none of these five last-mentioned ballots should have been, counted at all for either candidate. This method of marking a ballot by the voter furnishes a sure and certain means for identification, and also- made the ballot a mutilated and spoiled ballot. Section 1922, Pol. Code, provides that spoiled ballots may be returned and a new ballot obtained in place thereof. This court, in Church v. Walker, 10 S. D. 90, 72 N. W. 101, and in Ward v. Fletcher, 36 S. D. 98, 153 N. W. 962, has said that, if the cross outside the circle was made by mistaké; the voter should have procured another ballot. If the voter by mistake makes and places a cross in a wrong circle in front of the name of a candidate not intended to be voted for by him, the same reasoning applied in these former decisions of this court would require him to return such spoiled ballot and procure a new one, instead of erasing and mutilating the cross thus made by mistake; otherwise his erasures and mutilations might serve as a means of identifying the ballot cast by him.
We are also of the view that ballot Ay was erroneously count-ea for defendant. This ballot was erased and mutilated the same as ballots like Ai, but as to other candidates than plaintiff or defendant. For the same reasons as applied to ballots like Ai, this ballot A7 should not have been counted for any one.
[2] The foregoing holding results in there having been 156 legal ballots cast for plaintiff and 158 legal ballots cast for defendant. The chief purpose and object of the enactment of the Australian ballot law was to prevent fraud and corruption at *38elections, and as a potent means for accomplishing this purpose the law requires that certain formalities in the marking of ballots must be observed, one of which is that they must not show or ■contain any distinguishing or identification marks, and another is that a spoiled -ballot must be returned. While no actual fraud or corruption on the part of any one appears in the record of this ■case, still we are of the view that these particular six ballots in question were marked in such a manner as to constitute an unauthorized and illegal marking which rendered them ineffectual and void as legal ballots.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment for defendant, dismissing plaintiff’s contest upon the merits.