|
By The Associated Press
Text of the decision by Judge N. Sanders Sauls of Leon County
Circuit Court on Democratic presidential candidate Al Gore's
contest of Florida's certified election results:
SAULS: All right. At this time we call the case of Albert Gore,
et al, v. Katherine Harris, et al, case number 2000-2808. And at
this time, an action having been tried, the court at this time will
enter its rulings from the bench, due to the exigencies surrounding
this case. These rulings and findings shall be incorporated in the
final judgment, to be immediately entered herein.
At this time, the court finds and concludes as follows. The
complaint filed herein states in its first paragraph that this is
an action to contest the state certification in the presidential
election of 2000, asserting that the state Elections Canvassing
Commission's certification on November 26, 2000, is erroneous as
the vote totals wrongly include illegal votes and do not include
legal votes that were improperly rejected.
0 Plaintiffs further contest the state of Florida's certification
of the electors for George W. Bush and Richard Cheney as being
elected.
Plaintiffs further challenge and contest the election
certifications of the canvassing boards of Dade, Palm Beach and
Nassau Counties.
As to the Dade canvassing board, plaintiffs seek to compel the
Dade board to include in its certification, and the state Elections
Canvassing Commission to include in the state certification, a
six-vote change in favor of plaintiffs, resulting from the board's
initial test, partial manual recount of 1 percent of the countywide
vote total, conducted with respect to three precincts designated by
the plaintiffs' designees; also additional votes manually hand
counted in a further partial recount, total resulting from the
board's discretionary decision to stop completion of a full manual
recount of all of the votes in all of the precincts of Dade because
of insufficiency of time to complete the same vhese represent the
result of the count of an additional 136 precincts of the 635
precincts in Dade County; and also, the results of any
court-ordered manual review and recount of some 9,000 to 10,000
voter cards or ballots, which at the plaintiffs request have been
separated or were separated as alleged undervotes by the Dade
canvassing board or the Dade supervisor of elections as a result of
all of the countywide ballots being processed through the counting
machines a third time and being nonreadable by the machine.
As to the Palm Beach canvassing board, plaintiffs seek to compel
the Palm Beach board to include in its certification, and the state
Elections Canvassing Commission to include in the state
certification, additional votes representing the results of an
attempted partial certification of results completed before the
November 26, 2000, deadline mandated by the Florida Supreme Court,
as well as the additional remainder of the results of the manual
recount, which was completed after the deadline and the attempted
certification thereof on December 1; and in addition, the results
of any court ordered manual review and recount of some 3,300
ballots, which were objected to during the Palm Beach board's
manual recount, which plaintiffs alleged should have been counted
as valid votes because that board used an improper standard.
As to Nassau, the Nassau County Canvassing Board, the plaintiffs
seek to compel the Nassau board to amend its certification, and the
state elections canvassing commission to amend the state
certification, to reflect and include the results of the board's
machine recount rather than the results of the board's original
machine count, thereby resulting in a favorable net gain to
plaintiffs of 51 votes. It is the established law of Florida, as
reflected in State v. Smith, that where changes or charges of
irregularity of procedure or inaccuracy of returns in balloting and
counting processes have been alleged, the court must find as a fact
that a legal basis for ordering any recount exists before ordering
such recount.
Further, it is well-established, as reflected in the opinion of
Judge Jonas and Smith v. Tynes, that in order to contest election
results under Section 102.168 of the Florida statutes, the
plaintiff must that but for the irregularity or inaccuracy claimed,
the result of the election would have been different, and he or she
would have been the winner. It is not enough to show a reasonable
possibility that election results could have been altered by such
irregularities or inaccuracies. Rather, a reasonable probability
that the results of the election would have been changed must be
shown.
In this case, there is no credible statistical evidence and no
other competent substantial evidence to establish by a
preponderance a reasonable probability that the results of the
statewide election in the state of Florida would be different from
the result which has been certified by the state elections
canvassing commission.
The court further finds and concludes the evidence does not
establish any illegality, dishonesty, gross negligence, improper
influence, coercion or fraud in the balloting and counting
processes. Secondly, there's no authority under Florida law for
certification of an incomplete, manual recount of a portion of or
less than all ballots from any county by the state elections
canvassing commission, nor authority to include any returns
submitted past the deadline established by the Florida Supreme
Court in this election.
Thirdly, although the record shows voter error and/or less than
total accuracy in regard to the punch-card voting devices utilized
in Dade and Palm Beach counties, which these counties have been
aware of for many years, these balloting and counting problems
cannot support or effect any recounting necessity with respect to
Dade County, absent the establishment of a reasonable probability
that the statewide election result would be different, which has
not been established in this case.
SAULS: The court further finds the Dade canvassing board did not
abuse its discretion in any of its decisions in its review and
recounting processes.
Fourthly, with respect to the approximate 3,300 Palm Beach
County ballots of which plaintiffs seek review, the Palm Beach
Board properly exercised its discretion in its counting process and
has judged those ballots which plaintiffs wish this court to again
judge de novo.
All cases upon which plaintiffs rely were rendered upon mandamus
prior to the modern statutory election system and remedial scheme
enacted by the legislature of the state of Florida in section 102
of the Florida statute, or chapter 102 of the Florida statutes.
The local boards have been given broad discretion, which no
court may overrule, absent a clear abuse of discretion.
The Palm Beach County board did not abuse its discretion in its
review and recounting process. Further, it acted in full compliance
with the order of the circuit court in and for Palm Beach County.
Having done so, plaintiffs are stopped from further challenge of
its process and standards. It should be noted, however, that such
process and standards were changed from the prior 1990 standards,
perhaps contrary to Title 3, Section 5 of the United States Code.
Furthermore, with respect to the standards utilized by the board
in its review and counting processes, the court finds that the
standard utilized was in full compliance with the law and review
under another standard would not be authorized, thus creating a
two-tier situation within one county, as well as with respect to
other counties. The court notes that the attorney general of the
state of Florida enunciated his opinion of the law with respect to
this in a letter dated November 14, 2000, to the Honorable Charles
E. Burton, chair of the Palm Beach County Canvassing Board, which
in part is as follows: "A two-tier system would have the effect of
treating voters differently depending upon what county they voted
in. A voter in a county where a manual count was conducted would
benefit from having a better chance of having his or her vote
actually counted than a voter in a county where a hand count was
halted."
As the state's chief legal officer, I feel a duty to warn that
if the final certified total for balloting in the state of Florida
includes figures generated from this two-tier system of differing
behavior by official canvassing boards, the state will incur a
legal jeopardy under both the United States and state
constitutions. This legal jeopardy could potentially lead Florida
to having all of its votes, in effect, disqualified, and this state
being barred from the Electoral College's selection of a president.
The court finds further that the Nassau County Canvassing Board
did not abuse its discretion in its certification of Nassau
County's voting results. Such actions were not void or illegal, and
it was done within the proper exercise of its discretion upon
adequate and reasonable public notice.
Further, this court would further conclude and find that the
properly stated cause of action under Section 102.168 of the
Florida statutes to contest a statewide federal election, the
plaintiff would necessarily have to place an issue and seek as a
remedy with the attendant burden of proof a review and recount of
all ballots in all the counties in this state with respect to the
particular alleged irregularity or inaccuracy in the balloting or
counting processes alleged to have occurred.
As recently stated by Judge Klein, with the concurrence of Chief
Judge Warner in the 4th District court of appeal case of Fladell v.
Palm Beach Canvassing Board, Section 102.168 provides in subsection
1 that the certification of election may be contested for
presidential elections.
Section 103.011 provides that, quote, "The Department of State
shall certify, as elected, the presidential electors of the
candidates for president and vice president who receive the highest
number of votes."
There is in this type of election one statewide election and one
certification. Palm Beach County did not elect any person as a
presidential elector, but rather the election was a winner-take-all
proposition dependent on the statewide vote.
Finally, for the purpose of expedition due to the exigencies
surrounding these proceedings, this court will deny those portions
of the pending motions to dismiss of the various parties herein not
affected by or ruled upon in these findings and conclusions with
those portions consisting solely of matters of law being reviewable
upon such denial.
In conclusion, the court finds that the plaintiffs have failed
to carry the requisite burden of proof and judgment shall be and
hereby is entered that plaintiffs shall take nothing by this action
and the defendants may go hence without delay.
All ballots in the custody of the clerk of this court shall
remain pending review.
The judgment will be entered and filed with the clerk
immediately following this hearing.
All right. That'll conclude. The court will stand in recess.
|