ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
William R. Groth David W. Brooks
Geoffrey S. Lohman Brooks, Koch & Sorg
Fillenwarth Dennerline Groth and Towe Indianapolis, Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
Marion O. Redstone
Indianapolis, Indiana
______________________________________________________________________________
In the
Indiana Supreme Court
_________________________________
No. 49S00-0501-CV-17
KAREN C. HORSEMAN,
Appellant (Cross-Appellee below),
v.
J. SCOTT KELLER,
Appellee (Cross-Appellant below).
_________________________________
Appeal from the Marion Superior Court, Civil Division 10, No. 49D10-0311-MI-001998
The Honorable David Dreyer, Judge
_________________________________
On Direct Appeal
_________________________________
January 31, 2006
Rucker, Justice.
Case Summary
The trial court affirmed a decision of the court-appointed Recount Commission that
concluded J. Scott Keller was the winner of the 2003 election for the Marion County City-
County Council District 16 seat. In so doing the trial court also declared unconstitutional an
absentee voting statute. We previously announced (on February 11, 2005) that we agreed with
the trial court’s conclusion concerning the ultimate outcome of the election. However, we
disagree with its decision concerning the constitutionality of the statute and now write to explain
our reasoning.
Facts and Procedural History
Marion County employed new voting machines during the November 2003 general
elections. These machines provided voters with paper ballots that included a line for write-in
candidates.
The November 4, 2003 Marion County municipal elections included a contest for the
office of City-County Councilor of the Indianapolis City-County Council District 16. On the
ballot were Karen C. Horseman (“Horseman”), Democrat, J. Scott Keller (“Keller”), Republican,
and one other candidate.
Horseman and Keller garnered most of the votes. The initial results showed Keller with
1,407 votes and Horseman with 1,404 votes. Horseman filed a Verified Petition for Recount on
November 10. Ind. Code § 3-12-6-1. On December 17 the court-appointed Recount
Commission (“Commission”) determined that Keller received 1,408 votes and Horseman 1,403
votes. The three-member Commission reached its conclusion after inspecting each individual
ballot and voting on whether certain contested ballots could be counted. Horseman appealed the
Commission’s determination to the Marion Superior Court. Ind. Code § 3-12-6-22.5. Three
voters from District 16 marked a section of the ballot indicating that they wished to cast straight
Democratic Party tickets. However, these voters also used the available write-in line to vote for
individuals other than Horseman for the District 16 Council seat. One voter wrote in Ricky
2
Hence, the Democratic candidate for District 1, one wrote in Patrice Abduallah, the Democratic
candidate for District 15, and one wrote in Katherine Caldwell Kennedy, the Democratic
candidate for District 25. The Commission did not include these ballots as votes for Horseman.
Two absentee ballots containing votes for Horseman were received but not counted. The
Commission determined that these ballots were correctly rejected pursuant to Indiana Code
section 3-12-1-13 because they did not bear the initials of two members of the Marion County
Election Board and/or its official seal. The absence of initials or seals on these two ballots was
apparently due to human error.
Concluding that the Commission’s decision concerning the three disputed ballots was
based on questions of fact which were not reviewable, the trial court addressed only the issue of
the validity of the two absentee ballots. It determined that the statute disallowing these two
ballots violated Article 1, Section 23 of the Indiana Constitution and that the votes must therefore
be credited to Horseman. Thus, the court concluded that Keller won the election by three votes
as opposed to five.
Both parties filed motions to correct error, which the trial court denied. On March 15,
2004, Horseman appealed to the Indiana Court of Appeals. It was not until late December 2004
that the parties finished submitting filings to that court. On January 14, 2005, the Court of
Appeals realized that this case involved a trial court declaring a statute unconstitutional.
Because this Court has mandatory and exclusive jurisdiction over such cases, see Ind. Appellate
Rule 4(A)(1)(b), we received this matter on January 18, 2005. Because substantial time had
elapsed before this Court received the case and because it involved a matter which could
significantly impede local governance absent resolution, this Court promptly reviewed the
arguments and issued an order on February 11, 2005, affirming the outcome of the election in
Keller’s favor. We declared that the Court would issue in due course a more extensive opinion
reflecting the Court’s reasoning. In Re: Horseman and Keller, Case No. 49S00-0501-CV-17 at 2
(Ind. Feb. 11, 2005) (unpublished order). We now undertake to do so.
3
Discussion
At issue in this appeal are five contested ballots. 1 To determine the fates of these ballots,
we are asked to examine two questions: first, whether Indiana law recognizes write-in votes cast
for individuals who are not registered write-in candidates as votes for the nominated same-party
candidate in an electoral race where the voters otherwise selected the straight ticket ballot option,
and second, whether Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13 is unconstitutional.
The Write-In Votes
The Commission’s decision to exclude the three contested straight ticket ballots from
Horseman’s tally is not an appealable determination. Indiana Code section 3-12-6-22.5 limits an
appeal of the Commission’s findings to “questions of law arising out of the recount” and
“procedural defects by the recount commission that affected the outcome of the recount.” The
trial court declined to address the merits of Horseman’s arguments about these three ballots
because it determined that the exclusion was a determination of an issue of fact. Namely, the
trial court determined that the issue at bar was the “intent” of the voters under Indiana Code
section 3-12-1-1. It correctly noted that intent is a question of fact under Indiana case law. See,
e.g., Wright v. State, 690 N.E.2d 1098, 1104 (Ind. 1997) (trial court’s finding of discriminatory
intent was a finding of fact); Gibson County Farm Bureau Coop. Ass’n, Inc. v. Greer, 643
N.E.2d 313, 320 (Ind. 1994) (whether parties intended a writing to create a security interest was
a question of fact); Deming Hotel Co. v. Sisson, 216 Ind. 587, 24 N.E.2d 912, 915 (1940)
(“question of fraudulent intent is a question of fact”).
Horseman contends that the Commission’s decision is appealable. She argues that the
Commission’s conclusion involved a determination of the application of Indiana Code section 3-
12-1-7.5(a). Specifically, she asserts that the statutory meaning of the term “candidate” is at
issue. And the law is clear that “[t]he interpretation of a statute . . . is not a question of fact, but
one of law reserved for the courts.” Joseph v. Lake Ridge Sch. Corp., 580 N.E.2d 316, 319 (Ind.
1
On cross-appeal, Keller also challenges the Commission’s determination concerning one other ballot
which he contends should not have been counted for Horseman. Because this case is resolved on other
grounds, we decline to address this issue.
4
Ct. App. 1991) (emphasis added). See also Bettenbrock v. Miller, 185 Ind. 600, 112 N.E. 771,
774 (1916) (“The courts are charged finally with the responsibility of construing doubtful
statutes . . . .”); Figg v. Bryan Rental Inc., 646 N.E.2d 69, 72 (Ind. Ct. App. 1995) (“The
interpretation of a statute is a question of law . . . .”). Indeed, if the statutory definition of
“candidate” were at issue, it would be the clear province of the courts to evaluate it on appeal.
Ind. Code § 3-12-6-22.5.
The three contested ballots contain straight Democratic Party votes but also attempt to
vote for Democratic candidates from different Council district races. The Horseman-Keller race
was for District 16, but the three contested ballots contain write-in votes for Democratic
candidates from Districts 1, 15, and 25. Horseman, who was the District 16 Democratic Party
candidate, argues that the write-in votes, but not the ballots, should be ignored because they are
not for “candidates” for the District 16 race and thus cannot, under Indiana Code section 3-12-1-
7.5(a), take votes that would have been hers if the voters had left their write-in lines blank.
Alternatively, Horseman claims these three ballots should be counted in her favor because the
voters manifested the intent to cast Democratic ballots. 2
Horseman rests her first argument upon the language of Indiana Code section 3-12-1-
7.5(a), which reads:
Sec. 7.5. If a voter votes a straight party ticket for at least one (1)
office for which only one (1) person may be elected and writes in
the name of a candidate, the straight party ticket vote shall be
counted for all offices except the offices for which a write-in vote
was cast. The write-in vote shall be counted if the voter’s intent
can be determined.
She asks us to construe the statutory meaning of “candidate” to exclude from its scope those
individuals written in on the three contested ballots. Because, Horseman argues, no alternative
“candidates” were written in on the ballots, Indiana Code section 3-12-1-7.5(a) does not remove
votes from her tally.
2
Because we hold that the trial court’s finding that the Commission made a finding of fact is not clearly
erroneous, this argument need not be discussed.
5
However, we need not interpret 3-12-1-7.5(a) because the Indiana legislature has
provided us the guidance of another statutory provision that renders an analysis of “candidate”
immaterial here. Provisions of the Indiana Code do not stand alone; the statutes complement
each other and must be applied harmoniously. Freeman v. State, 658 N.E.2d 68, 70 (Ind. 1995)
(“[W]here two statutes address the same subject, they are in pari materia, and we strive to
harmonize them where possible.”); Matter of Lemond, 413 N.E.2d 228, 246 (Ind. 1980). Indiana
Code section 3-12-1-1 reads:
Sec. 1. Subject to sections 5, 6, 8, 9, 9.5, and 13 of this chapter,
the primary factor to be considered in determining a voter’s choice
on a ballot is the intent of the voter. If the voter’s intent can be
determined on the ballot or on part of the ballot, the vote shall be
counted for the affected candidate or candidates or on the public
question. However, if it is impossible to determine a voter’s
choice of candidates on a part of a ballot or vote on a public
question, then the voter’s vote concerning those candidates or
public questions may not be counted.
The trial court found that the Commission made a finding of fact regarding the intent of these
three voters. App. at 58. We review a lower court’s findings of fact for clear error. Infinity
Products, Inc. v. Quandt, 810 N.E.2d 1028, 1031 (Ind. 2004). “Findings of fact are clearly
erroneous when the record lacks any reasonable inference from the evidence to support them . . .
.” Id. Further, when evaluating findings of fact for clear error, “we consider only the evidence
favorable to the judgment and all reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom.” Id. The
evidence in the record supports the trial court’s finding that the Commission made a finding of
voter intent. From the transcript of the Commissioner’s meetings, it is clear that the
Commissioners contemplated whether their determinations regarding these three ballots reflected
findings of fact and law. App. at 64 (quoting Ex. A at 96), 65-67 (quoting Ex. A at 100-104).
And it is clear that at least one Commissioner believed that the exclusion of the three ballots was
based at least partially upon Indiana Code section 3-12-1-1. App. at 64 (quoting Ex. A at 96).
Thus, we cannot conclude that the trial court’s finding was clearly erroneous.
Therefore, we are faced with a finding of fact from the Commission that these three
voters did not intend to cast votes for Horseman. And under Indiana Code section 3-12-6-22.5
6
findings of fact by the Commission are not appealable. Thus, we affirm the determination that
the three write-in ballots may not be included in Horseman’s tally.
We take the opportunity to note that even if we recognized the need to interpret
“candidate,” the result would remain the same. Indiana’s election laws strive to uphold the
Indiana Constitution by protecting the virtues of freedom and equality in the electoral process.
Hathcoat v. Town of Pendleton Election Bd., 622 N.E.2d 1352, 1354 (Ind. Ct. App. 1993). And
in its efforts to prevent fraud, undue influence, and oppression in the process, the Indiana
legislature has given the voter’s intent a central role. Borders v. Williams, 155 Ind. 36, 57 N.E.
527, 529 (1900); Ind. Code § 3-12-1-1. It is illogical to say that votes not cast for a candidate
should be deemed cast for that candidate. An analysis of the facts of this case against the
backdrop of Indiana Code section 3-12-1-1 would lead to a determination that these three voters
did not definitively intend to vote for candidate Horseman, and thus their votes would remain
uncounted.
Indiana Code Section 3-12-1-13
Also at issue are two absentee ballots. These two ballots contained votes for Horseman
but were left uncounted by the Commission because they did not conform to the requirements of
Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13. An appeal of this decision led the trial court to declare Indiana
Code section 3-12-1-13 unconstitutional under Article I, Section 23 of the Indiana Constitution.
Thus the trial court ordered that these two votes be included in Horseman’s tally.
While our holding pertaining to the write-in ballots settles the ultimate question of which
candidate prevails, it is important to address the trial court’s determination regarding Indiana
Code section 3-12-1-13. 3 Typically, the doctrine of mootness leads courts to decline to address
3
It is unclear why the trial court declared Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13 unconstitutional rather than
section 3-12-1-12(b), which is actually the statutory provision that excludes absentee voters from the
protections included in section 3-12-1-12. Section 3-12-1-13 merely sets out the endorsement
requirements for absentee ballots and is paralleled by section 3-12-1-2, which prescribes the endorsement
requirements for Election Day ballots. Because the trial court’s order dealt with the contents of section 3-
12-1-12(b) while referring to section 3-12-1-13, our analysis of section 3-12-1-13 should be understood to
evaluate section 3-12-1-13 in conjunction with section 3-12-1-12(b).
7
the merits of claims that have otherwise been resolved. Ind. Bureau of Motor Vehicles v.
Zimmerman, 476 N.E.2d 114, 118 (Ind. 1985). Where there is a matter of great public
importance, however, and the possibility of repetition, Indiana courts may choose to adjudicate a
claim. Ind. Educ. Employment Relations Bd. v. Mill Creek Classroom Teachers Ass’n, 456
N.E.2d 709, 711 (Ind. 1983). Public elections will continue to be affected by Indiana Code
section 3-12-1-13. Because the question before us is “capable of repetition, yet evading review,”
we now address the constitutionality of Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13. Ray v. State Election
Bd., 422 N.E.2d 714, 716 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981) (citing Rosario v. Rockefeller, 410 U.S. 752, 756
n.5 (1973)).
The Indiana legislature is vested with the responsibility of providing state election laws
designed to efficiently and fairly govern voting and challenge procedures.
The Legislature may set up machinery for the conduct of elections,
and delegate to ministerial or executive agencies the duty of
conducting elections, and may prescribe the procedure by which
elections may be contested, so long as they stay within their
constitutional powers, and such procedure conforms to the law,
such steps and procedure will be governed by the legislative rules
prescribed.
State ex rel. Nicely v. Wildey, 209 Ind. 1, 197 N.E. 844, 847 (1935). We presume that state
legislation is constitutional. Matter of Tina T., 579 N.E.2d 48, 56 (Ind. 1991) (“Legislation . . . is
clothed in a presumption of constitutionality.”). Thus, our standard of review where a trial court
finds an Indiana statute unconstitutional is even less deferential than de novo. Ind. Dep’t of
Waste Mgmt. v. Chem. Waste Mgmt., 643 N.E.2d 331, 336 n.2 (Ind. 1994). “Since statutes are
presumed to be constitutional, if there are any grounds for reversing the trial court’s judgment we
will do so.” Id.
There are three types of absentee ballots included in Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13: the
Walk-in voter, the Mail-in voter, and the Shut-in voter. 4 The Walk-in voter goes to the county
4
The Brief of Appellee/Cross Appellant mistakenly reports that Shut-in voters are excluded from the
scope of section 13. The trial court apparently relied upon this assertion and did not address Shut-in
voters. We include Shut-in voters in our discussion.
8
clerk’s office and casts his ballot in person. The Mail-in voter mails in his ballot from home or
from another location. The Shut-in voter receives a visit from an absentee voter board and casts
a ballot pursuant to the requirements of any absentee voter voting before the absentee voter
board. Regular ballots (not absentee) are, of course, cast in person at designated polls on
Election Day. The statute at issue reads in full:
Sec. 13. (a) This section applies only to absentee ballots.
(b) The whole ballot may not be counted unless the ballot is
endorsed with the initials of:
(1) the two (2) members of the absentee voter board in
the office of the circuit court clerk under IC 3-11-4-19
or IC 3-11-10-26; or
(2) the two (2) appointed members of the county election
board (or their designated representatives) under IC 3-
11-4-19.
Ind. Code § 3-12-1-13.
Indiana Code section 3-12-1-12 permits a recount for votes not counted due to clerical
error (except in cases of fraud and the like). 5 However, the section excludes absentee ballots. In
other words, an absentee ballot may not be recounted in situations where clerical error by an
election officer rendered it invalid. In this way, the statute treats absentee voters differently from
the way it treats Election Day voters.
Based on this differentiated treatment, the trial court found the statute unconstitutional
under Article 1, Section 23 of the Indiana Constitution, also known as the Equal Privileges and
Immunities Clause. This section reads, “The General Assembly shall not grant to any citizen, or
5
Indiana Code section 3-12-1-12 reads in full:
Sec. 12. (a) This section applies to votes cast by any method.
(b) Except as provided in section 13 of this chapter, a ballot that has been marked and cast by a
voter in compliance with this title but may otherwise not be counted solely as the result of the act
or failure to act of an election officer may nevertheless be counted in a proceeding under IC 3-12-
6, IC 3-12-8, or IC 3-12-11 unless evidence of fraud, tampering, or misconduct affecting the
integrity of the ballot is presented by a party to the proceeding.
(c) The act or failure to act by an election officer is not by itself evidence of fraud, tampering,
or misconduct affecting the integrity of the ballot.
(Emphasis added).
9
class of citizens, privileges or immunities, which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong
to all citizens.” Claims asserted under this section are subject to a two-part test:
First, the disparate treatment accorded by the legislation must be
reasonably related to inherent characteristics which distinguish the
unequally treated classes. Second, the preferential treatment must
be uniformly applicable and equally available to all persons
similarly situated. Finally, in determining whether a statute
complies with or violates Section 23, courts must exercise
substantial deference to legislative discretion.
Collins v. Day, 644 N.E.2d 72, 80 (Ind. 1994).
The trial court found that the legislature was not justified in treating all absentee ballots
differently from Election Day ballots. Specifically, it recognized no characteristics of Walk-in
absentee voters that make them inherently different from Election Day voters:
[T]he law prescribes different standards for persons who vote in
person at their precinct polling place and those who vote by
absentee ballot, even if they also vote in person. Under Section
12, a regular voter will not lose their [sic] vote unless there is
evidence of fraud, even if an election official fails to act or makes a
mistake. But absentee voters do lose their vote merely because of
the mistake or failure of a clerk, under Section 13, even when there
is no evidence of fraud and the voter has done everything the law
requires to enter their vote. Under Collins v. Day, such different
treatment of absentee voters is only allowed if it is reasonably
related to “inherent characteristics,” not “mere characteristics,”
that supposedly make absentee voters different than the regular
voter. Such different treatment must be justified by substantial
considerations, not arbitrary or capricious.
Destroying one’s fundamental right to vote because of a clerk’s
mistake is totally unjustified. It is not reasonably related to any
inherent characteristic of absentee voters that is different than a
regular voter, especially those who vote absentee in person at the
Clerk’s own office just like regular voters at their neighborhood
polling places. Clerks are human and will always make mistakes.
But why kill an absentee vote, but not the regular vote? There is
no reason, and Section 13 accordingly violates Article 1, Section
23 of the Constitution of Indiana.
10
Even if a reasonable argument can be made that absentee voting by
mail is “inherently” different, Collins requires a showing that the
“preferential” treatment, that is, upholding the right to vote despite
clerk’s mistakes, must be available to everybody in the same
group. Since Section 13 does not differentiate between absentee
voting by mail, and absentee voting in person, it still must fail.
App. at 59.
We disagree with the trial court’s evaluation of Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13 under
Collins. First, we find that there are indeed inherent differences between all absentee voters and
Election Day voters. By their very nature absentee ballots differ from Election Day ballots. See
Ind. Code § 3-11-4-1. Eligible voters may qualify to cast absentee ballots when faced with
certain enumerated circumstances that make it impossible to vote at their polling places on
Election Day. While it is true, as the trial court discussed, that some absentee ballots are given
by voters directly to election officials, as in Election Day procedures, the “in person” aspect of
the ballot-casting does not eradicate the inherent differences between these types of voting.
Because the absentee voter is not present at the Election Day polling site, the absentee voter is
not exposed to the extensive precautions followed by Election Day officials to guard the integrity
of the ballots. 6 The fact that absentee ballots reach the hands of election officials outside of the
confines of the Election Day polling place necessitate statutory procedures for receiving,
verifying, storing, transporting, and counting these ballots. See, e.g., Ind. Code §§ 3-11-10-1, 3-
11-10-3 to -22. This is true for all absentee balloting, whether by Mail-in, Walk-in, or Shut-in
voters.
Second, we find that the combined application of Indiana Code sections 3-12-1-12(b) and
-13 reasonably relate to this difference. As we look for a reasonable relationship between the
inherent difference between absentee and Election Day voters and the preferential treatment
given to Election Day voters under these statutory provisions, we are extremely deferential to the
legislature. Collins, 644 N.E.2d at 79-80 (“[T]he courts must accord considerable deference to
the manner in which the legislature has balanced the competing interests involved.”) (citing
6
For information about polling site procedures and safeguards, see Indiana Election Division, 2004
Indiana Election Day Handbook: A Guide for Precinct Election Boards and Poll Workers (2003),
http://www.in.gov/sos/elections/pdfs/2004_Election_Day_Handbook.pdf.
11
Johnson v. St. Vinc. Hosp., Inc., 273 Ind. 374, 404 N.E.2d 585, 604 (1980)). Under Indiana law,
an absentee ballot may be irrevocably invalidated by an election official’s failure to affix
necessary endorsements to the ballot. Where an Election Day ballot lacks the necessary
7
endorsements, however, the language of Indiana Code section 3-12-1-12(b) permits its inclusion
in a subsequent recount. As this Court has previously noted, “[t]he importance of having the poll
clerks’ initials on the ballots . . . insures the integrity of the voting system.” Schoffstall v.
Kaperak, 457 N.E.2d 550, 554 (Ind. 1984) (citing Wright v. Gettinger, 428 N.E.2d 1212, 1219
(Ind. 1981)). 8 And “[i]n order to keep the integrity of the system it may happen that some
individual voters will be disfranchised through no fault of their own, and in situations where they
have made an honest effort to vote for the offices of their choice.” Wright, 428 N.E.2d at 1220.
Although the legislature has included numerous provisions in our code meant to protect the
integrity of absentee ballots cast, 9 those provisions cannot safeguard the ballots and the intent of
the individual voters to the extent that provisions surrounding Election Day procedures can. For
example, Election Day polling sites operate as closed environments. Only precinct elections
officers (including the election sheriff, inspector, two judges, poll clerks, and assistant poll
clerks), deputy election commissioners, authorized watchers, and precinct pollbook holders are
permitted in the Election Day polling place except for voters casting ballots and their underage
children. Ind. Code § 3-11-8-15; Ind. Election Day Handbook at 4. If a ballot originates from a
particular precinct polling place, every election worker present is easily discerned. It is also
known that each of those election workers (with the possible exception of the election sheriff)
was present at the site for the entirety of Election Day. Ind. Code § 3-11-8-12; Ind. Election Day
Handbook at 3. But absentee voters might encounter many other individuals while casting their
ballots at home or in the clerk’s office, thus allowing greater opportunity for outside influences
to impact their votes. And absentee voting may take place over a period of up to ninety days,
creating situations in which completed ballots in a precinct are received by different county
employees in the presence of a variety of individuals. Ind. Code §§ 3-11-4-4, 3-11-4-18. Thus it
7
See Ind. Code § 3-12-1-2.
8
Schoffstall discussed a previous code provision.
9
See Ind. Code §§ 3-11-10-1, 3-11-10-3 to -22.
12
is reasonable that the legislature believed it in the interests of Indiana voters to more stringently
govern absentee balloting.
Finally, we note that the preferential treatment, i.e. access to recount procedures in cases
of clerical error, is equally available to all Election Day voters. There is no contention
otherwise.
Because we find that the preferential treatment given to Election Day voters under
Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13 is reasonably related to the inherently different characteristics of
Election Day voters and absentee voters and that all Election Day voters receive the same
treatment under the statute, we hold that Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13 is constitutional under
Article 1, Section 23 of the Indiana Constitution.
Conclusion
We affirm that portion of the trial court’s judgment that concluded the Recount
Commission’s findings of voter intent were non-appealable findings of fact. We reverse that
portion of the trial court’s judgment declaring unconstitutional Indiana Code section 3-12-1-13.
Shepard, C.J., and Dickson, Sullivan and Boehm, JJ., concur.
13