List of UK parliamentary election petitions

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{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

An election petition is a petition challenging the result of an election to a United Kingdom Parliament constituency. The Parliamentary Elections Act 1868 transferred the jurisdiction for considering petitions from the House of Commons to the law courts. The Corrupt and Illegal Practices Prevention Act 1883 substantially altered and strengthened the law in respect of election offences. The current governing law is the Representation of the People Act 1983.{{cite web |title=Trial of controverted elections; Procedure under the Representation of the People Act 1983 |url=https://erskinemay.parliament.uk/section/4926/procedure-under-the-representation-of-the-people-act-1983 |website=Erskine May |publisher=UK Parliament |access-date=16 August 2024 |date=November 2023}} The following table lists all those petitions which subsequently came to trial.

Glossary (by columns)

;Allegation:

  • 'Bribery, etc.' : It was routine for election petitions in the 19th century brought on grounds of bribery also to make accusations of treating and undue influence.{{cite journal |title=The Coming Election Petitions |journal=The Irish Law Times and Solicitors' Journal |date=28 February 1874 |volume=8 |issue=371 |pages=102–103 |url=https://archive.org/details/irishlawtimesan02unkngoog/page/n120 |publisher=John Falconer |location=Dublin}}Helmore 1967 p. 27 Some petitions were apparently written using boilerplate text.
  • Personation: One person knowingly voting in the name of another.Helmore 1967 p. 29
  • Scrutiny of votes: A process where the votes were recounted, the eligibility of each voter was checked, and ineligible votes struck off.Helmore 1967 p. 32
  • Treating: The act of giving free food and drink with intent to persuade the recipient to vote for a particular candidate.Helmore 1967 p. 28
  • Undue influence: Any attempt to win votes by threats.

;Result:

There are four possible outcomes of a petition trial, named as follows and also denoted by the colour of the corresponding row.

  • {{font color|black|#D0FFD0|Duly elected}}: The court upheld the election, and declared the sitting Member the rightful winner.
  • {{font color|black|#FFD0D0|Undue election}}: The court found that the person who was elected had not won the election, but that another candidate had the majority of lawful votes, and therefore declared the other candidate elected.
  • {{font color|black|#FFD0FF|Void election}}: The court found that the election had not been conducted fairly, and annulled the result, meaning that the seat was vacant. Typically a by-election ensued, which is linked from the result. Exceptions, which are noted, were where "general and notorious bribery and corruption" in a borough constituency impelled the House to refuse to move a by-election writ (and in extreme cases to disfranchise the borough, with its territory subsumed into the surrounding county constituency).Erskine May: [https://erskinemay.parliament.uk/section/4929/corrupt-practices-in-elections#footnote-item-2 25th ed. ¶2.25, n. 2];

20th ed. pp. 35–36;

[https://archive.org/details/treatiseonlawpri0000mayt/page/188/ 17th ed. pp. 188]–189

  • {{font color|black|#FFFFD0|Withdrawn}}: The judges allowed the petitioner to withdraw the case, and the election result stood. A petitioner might do so to save the expense of further proceedings if the likelihood of victory was small. As petitioners might be induced to withdraw a petition by a further act of corruption, the judges had to give permission on the basis that they were satisfied no corrupt consideration was involved.

;Details:

  • Agent: Anyone acting directly or indirectly on behalf of the candidates; not merely the designated election agent but anyone employed by the candidate. Many cases turned on whether a person proved to have carried out illegal activity was an agent (voiding the election) or was acting independently.
  • Recriminatory case: Where a petition was presented by a defeated candidate claiming to have been the rightful winner (and not that the election be declared void), it was open to the Respondent to bring forward accusations against their election campaign.
  • Relief: If certain aspects of election law have been broken through inadvertence, it is possible for those involved to be relieved from the consequences of breaking the law. The effect of relief is as if the breach of the law never occurred.Helmore 1967 pp. 31–32
  • Special case: Where the dispute in an election petition concerned a question of law and not the facts, it was referred to three Judges of the High Court of Justice (England and Wales), the Court of Session (Scotland), or the High Court of Justice in Ireland and its successor the High Court of Northern Ireland.

Petitions tried

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data-sort-type=date| Election
The full date is given for a by-election. For a general election, only the year is given (or year and month where two elections were held in the same year).

! ConstituencyThe parliamentary constituency for which the election was held.

! Petitioner(s)The person or people bringing the petition and challenging the election. Typically, supporters of a losing candidate at the constituency election.

! Respondent(s)The defendant in the case. A person who had been declared elected for the constituency at the election was always a respondent; if procedural irregularity was alleged, the returning officer could be added.

! Allegation ca

! Result

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| 1868

BelfastJames M'Tier and Charles Murray ArundellThomas McClureBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| The Judge did not believe voters who claimed to have been bribed. McClure's campaign had given £200 to support William Johnston's campaign for the other seat, which appeared to be corrupt spending intended to help McClure, but did not fall within the legal definition of bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n292 1 O'M & H 281]; Fitzgerald pp. 19–27; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA214 HCP 1869 120-I p. 214]–217
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| 1868

BeverleyLuke Hind, John Armstrong and Joseph DannattSir Henry Edwards and Edmund Hegan KennardBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election. Constituency abolished.}}
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|

colspan="5"| At least 800 and up to 1,000 people were bribed. [https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n154 1 O'M & H 143]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA2 HCP 1869 120 p. 2]–6; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PR1 HCP 1869 90]; Command [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106494255&seq=9 C.15 and C.16]
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| 1868

BewdleyCharles Sturge and John BaldwinSir Richard Atwood GlassBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| Glass's campaign paid for free drink to be provided in 19 or 20 public houses in the borough during the election, and the agent submitted an inaccurate return of election expenses to hide it. Bribery was not proved. There was no evidence that Glass expected this treating.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n27 1 O'M & H 16]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA6 HCP 1869 120 p. 6]–11; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA3-PP1 HCP 1869 9]
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| 1868

BlackburnJohn Gerald Potter and Montague Joseph FeildenWilliam Henry Hornby and Joseph FeildenBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| Allegations of bribery and treating were abandoned, but it was found that workmen in mills in the borough owned by supporters of Hornby and Feilden who supported their opponents, were sacked or prevented from working. Neither candidate nor their agent were responsible; no order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n209 1 O'M & H 198]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA11 HCP 1869 120 p. 11]–25
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| 1868

BodminRichard Adams, Abraham Hambly, and James FellHon. Edward Frederick Leveson-GowerBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| William Grose did give a meal in Lanivet for supporters of Leveson-Gower, but it was frugal and involved few people, so did not appear to be corrupt treating.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n128 1 O'M & H 117]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA25 HCP 1869 120 p. 25]–35
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| 1868

Bradford (No. 1)John Haley, Charles Hastings, Angus Holden, Titus Salt Jr.Henry William RipleyBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| Ripley was found to have given his agent an unlimited bank account, which was used to keep 115 public houses open supplying drink to voters who would vote for Ripley.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n41 1 O'M & H 30]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA35 HCP 1869 120 p. 35]–39; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA5-PA1 HCP 1869 28 pp. 1]–146
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| 1868

Bradford (No. 2)Samuel Storey and Thomas GarnettWilliam Edward ForsterBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Evidence of bribery by cash gifts was described by the Judges as "beneath contempt", and while refreshments were provided for campaign workers, this was not corrupt as all of them had always intended to vote for Forster.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n46 1 O'M & H 35]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA39 HCP 1869 120 p. 39]–44; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA5-PA147 HCP 1869 28 pp. 147]–206
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| 1868

BreconDr. Thomas Prestwood Lucas and Mordecai JonesHowel GwynBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| John New, a spy from the Lucas and Jones's party, had received a bribe from someone known to be an agent of Gwyn.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n223 1 O'M & H 212]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA219 HCP 1869 120-I p. 219]
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| 1868

BridgwaterHenry Westropp and Charles William GreyAlexander William Kinglake and Philip VanderbylBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election. Constituency abolished 1870.}}
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|

colspan="5"| It was established that voters had been given cash by Henry Chapman Bussell, who was clearly acting for Kinglake and Vanderbyl.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n123 1 O'M & H 112], [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA44 HCP 1869 120 p. 44]–46
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| 1868

CarrickfergusRobert TorrensMarriott Robert DalwayBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Assaults on two voters were not part of deliberate intimidation. Food and drink did not appear to be given corruptly. No order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n275 1 O'M & H 264]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA219 HCP 1869 120-I p. 219]–227
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| 1868

CashelHenry MunsterJames Lyster O'BeirneBribery, etc.; Scrutiny of votesVoid election
{{small|Borough disfranchised}}
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|

colspan="5"| O'Beirne was found to have bribed voters under the guise of paying claims from previous elections and room hire charges. A recriminatory case found that Munster had also committed bribery by his agents.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n297 1 O'M & H 286]; Fitzgerald pp. 28–48; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA228 HCP 1869 120-I p. 228]–235; [https://archive.org/details/op1249565-1001 HCP 1869 121]; Command [https://archive.org/details/op1249653-1001 C. 9]
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| 1868

CheltenhamJames Tynte Agg-GardnerHenry Bernhard SamuelsonBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| A prize-fighter had been employed on behalf of Samuelson to intimidate voters, but there was no general riot. Some voters had had their rates paid to qualify them as electors, but it was not proved that Samuelson was responsible.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n73 1 O'M & H 62]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA46 HCP 1869 120 p. 46]–52
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| 1868

CoventryThomas Berry Bishop and 31 othersHenry William Eaton and Alexander Staveley HillBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Eaton's agreement to pay Hill's election expenses was not illegal. Any food and drink was supplied with a total absence of corrupt design. The weight of evidence was against bribery having occurred. No order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n108 1 O'M & H 97]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA53 HCP 1869 120 p. 53]–69
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| 1868

DoverJohn HelliottMajor Alexander George DicksonBribery, etc.Withdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| Witnesses expected to prove the charges were unbelievable and the Petitioner successfully applied to withdraw the case.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n221 1 O'M & H 210]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA69 HCP 1869 120 p. 69]
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| 1868

DroghedaSir Francis Leopold M'ClintockBenjamin WhitworthUndue influenceVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Whitworth was found to have organised a system of intimidation through the Roman Catholic clergy of the borough.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n263 1 O'M & H 252]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA320 HCP 1869 120-I p. 320]–332; [https://archive.org/details/op1249566-1001 HCP 1869 27]
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| 1868

Dublin City (No. 1)Thomas Woodlock and George FoleySir Arthur Edward Guinness, Bt.Bribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| Bribery of 30–40 freemen was proved. 41 voters living outside Dublin were also bribed by promises of payment of their travelling expenses.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n281 1 O'M & H 270]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA69 HCP 1869 120 p. 69]–90; [https://archive.org/details/op1249567-1001/ HCP 1869 29]; Command [https://archive.org/details/op1249655-1001 C. 93]
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| 1868

Galway BoroughThomas M'GovernLord St Lawrence and Sir Rowland Blennerhasset, Bt.Bribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Payments to voters had been reckless but had been voters taking advantage of the candidates rather than bribes. The Roman Catholic clergy had the right to address their congregations on the merits of the candidates. No order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n314 1 O'M & H 303]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA332 HCP 1869 120 p. 332]–351
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| 1868

GreenockWilliam Dougal ChristieJames Johnston GrieveBribery, etc.; illegal arrangements for pollingDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| The Sheriff as Returning Officer had taken the advice of the town clerk and polling places were not in accordance with the law, but it did not affect the result. The Judge found the claims of bribed voters to be of no consequence.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n258 1 O'M & H 247]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA91 HCP 1869 120 p. 91]–99
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| 1868

GuildfordWilliam Edward Elkins and othersGuildford Hillier Mainwaring Ellerker OnslowBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Two non-resident voters had had their travel expenses paid but it was not proved that the person sending the money was an agent. Drink was supplied by debating societies, not the candidate. No bribery was shown. No order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n24 1 O'M & H 13]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA99 HCP 1869 120 p. 99]–106
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| 1868

Hastings (No. 1)Edward Barker Sutton and Robert RansomFrederick NorthBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| An association set up by North and Thomas Brassey's party to encourage registration of their voters paid the voters for time off to register and gave them refreshments, but this was not bribery or treating when they came to vote many months later.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n228 1 O'M & H 217]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA235 HCP 1869 120-I p. 235]–242
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| 1868

Hastings (No. 2)Somerset Gough-Calthorpe and Clement Arthur ThrustonThomas BrasseyBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Brassey's lavish spending on his household was not illegal even if it intended to influence the election; to be illegal it must aim at a particular vote. The Hastings (No. 1) petition considerations also applied.
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| 1868

HerefordFrancis Henry Thomas, Josiah Webbe Goldsworthy, and John CleaveGeorge Clive and John William Shaw WyllieBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| A breakfast was given by one Harrison for anyone who wanted to have a drink; it was established that he was an agent for Clive and Wyllie, although they were unaware of it.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n205 1 O'M & H 194]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA106 HCP 1869 120 p. 106]–113
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| 1868

HorshamRobert Henry HurstJohn AldridgeScrutiny of votesUndue election
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|

colspan="5"| The candidates polled the same number of votes and had both been returned even though it was a single-seat constituency. The respondent Aldridge did not defend his claim on the seat.[https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA399 HCP 1869 120-I p. 399].
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| 1868

King's LynnWilliam Armes and George HolditchHon. Robert BourkeBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Only one allegation of a bribed voter would require an answer; there the evidence was contradicted.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n217 1 O'M & H 206]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA113 HCP 1869 120 p. 113]–115
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| 1868

LichfieldMajor Hon. Augustus Henry Archibald AnsonColonel Richard DyottBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Individual accusations of bribery were made, which did not show organised corruption. The individual cases were unbelievable. One landlord did supply free food in order to create good will for his pub, but not at the instigation of the candidate.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n33 1 O'M & H 22]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA115 HCP 1869 120 p. 115]–123
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| 1868

Limerick CityDaniel Ryan, Thomas M'Knight, Mathew Brennan, Robert Stacpool, Thomas M'Namara, and Denis GrimesMajor George Gavin and Francis William RussellBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| No proof of bribery could be found; evidence of refreshments did not show they were given to influence votes. The respondents had summoned a mob, paid by being given £300-£400 of beer, to defend them from what they reasonably suspected to be an attempt to attack them. No order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n271 1 O'M & H 260]; Fitzgerald pp. 2–18; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA243 HCP 1869 120-I p. 243]–248
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| 1868

Londonderry CityDavid John M'Gown and George David ChristieRichard DowseBribery, etc.Duly elected
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colspan="5"| People employed in the election had been paid wages but had all promised votes to Dowse long before. No evidence was offered to support allegations of intimidation.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n285 1 O'M & H 274]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA249 HCP 1869 120-I p. 249]–260
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| 1868

ManchesterFrederic Royse and Charles WrightHugh BirleyDisqualificationDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Birley was a partner in a company which held two contracts with the Government. One of the contracts had been fully delivered by the time of the election, and although the company had not been paid, it was held to have been a completed and finished contract. Birley did not know of the other contract. Special case.[https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA260 HCP 1869 120-I p. 260]–268
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| 1868

Norfolk, NorthernEdward ColmanHon. Frederick Walpole and Sir Edmund Henry Knowles Lacon, Bt.Bribery, etc.; employing person reported guilty of corrupt practiceDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| A man named Preston had previously been reported guilty of corrupt practices but had only chaired public meetings and proposed Lacon as a candidate, which was not illegal. Bribery claims were not made out. A squire had given a dinner to his tenants to celebrate after the election, to increase his influence unconnected with the candidates.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n247 1 O'M & H 236]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA269 HCP 1869 120-I p. 269]–282
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| 1868

NorthallertonJasper Wilson JohnsJohn HuttonBribery, etc.; scrutiny of votesDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| The scrutiny confirmed Hutton's victory. Hutton made no corrupt promises, the treating alleged amounted only to a suspicion about a single glass of beer and a cigar, and the intimidation amounted only to a squabble between two people.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n178 1 O'M & H 167]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA283 HCP 1869 120-I p. 283]–285
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| 1868

NorwichJacob Henry TillettSir Henry Josias Stracey, Bt.Bribery, etc.; Scrutiny of votesVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| It was proved that a man called Hardiment had bribed voters to support Stracey, and he was definitely an agent. The petitioner did not press his claim to the seat on a scrutiny.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n19 1 O'M & H 8]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA123 HCP 1869 120 p. 123]–127
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| 1868

OldhamJohn Morgan Cobbett, Frederick Lowten Spinks, Thomas Evan Lees and John BentleyJohn Tomlinson Hibbert and John PlattScrutiny of votesWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| Several votes given by wrongly registered electors were struck off; other tendered votes were held good, but after six days the petitioners accepted that Platt had a majority of one vote.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n162 1 O'M & H 151]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA127 HCP 1869 120 p. 127]–128
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| 1868

Penryn and FalmouthRobert Richard Broad and othersRobert Nicholas Fowler and Edward Backhouse EastwickBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Voters had not been employed in order to influence their votes; an attempt to prove a deaf voter had been promised a cure if he supported Fowler and Backhouse broke down in court.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n138 1 O'M & H 127]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA128 HCP 1869 120 p. 128]–137
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| 1868

SalfordRoderick Anderson, Jesse Bryant, and Edward Charlton HardingCharles Edward Cawley and William Thomas CharleyBribery, etc.; hiring cabs to convey voters to the pollDuly elected
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colspan="5"| The cabs were to convey canvassers to workplaces. The respondents hired a gang of roughs after hearing rumours about Irish interference, which the Judges criticised. 2s. 6d. of bribery by an agent was proved in isolated acts, but this did not upset the election.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n144 1 O'M & H 133]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA138 HCP 1869 120 p. 138]–144
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| 1868

SalisburyGranville Richard RyderEdward William Terrick HamiltonVotes were cast by people wrongly registeredDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Small tenant farmers, whose rates were compounded and paid by their landlords, were entitled to register. Special case.[https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA286 HCP 1869 120-I p. 286]–289
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| 1868

Sligo BoroughMichael Foley and Joseph FoleyMajor Lawrence Edward KnoxBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|Borough disfranchised}}
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|

colspan="5"| Proof of bribery of many voters, by a man named Cherry on behalf of Major Knox, was established. There was also a system of intimidation and violence was practiced by large mobs opposed to Knox.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n311 1 O'M & H 300]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA144 HCP 1869 120 p. 144]–155; [https://archive.org/details/op1249568-1001 HCP 1869 85]; Command [https://archive.org/details/op1249654-1001 C. 48]
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| 1868

Southampton Alfred PeglerThe Rt Hon. Russell Gurney, Q.C. and Peter Merrick HoareBribery, etc.; Scrutiny of votesDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Some voters' sons were employed to help in the election, but this employment was not corrupt. A cabman hired for election day and paid his normal fare was not bribery. The scrutiny and a recriminatory case were abandoned.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n233 1 O'M & H 222]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA289 HCP 1869 120-I p. 289]–294
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| 1868

Stafford (No. 1)Richard Croft ChawnerColonel Walter MellerBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| An agent of Meller had put names of voters down on a list for payments after the election, if there were funds available. Meller was not personally involved. A recriminatory case established that Chawner had appointed a corrupt agent and was therefore disqualified from election.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n239 1 O'M & H 228]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA295 HCP 1869 120-I p. 295]–302
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1868

Stafford (No. 2)Joseph Wile and Thomas SmallmanHenry Davis PochinBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Five or six men were deterred from voting by threats of violence from a mob. Pochin was not personally responsible.
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1868

StalybridgeJames Ogden, John Woolley and Abel BuckleyJames SidebottomBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The evidence of treating at two pubs was not trustworthy. There was no evidence that intimidation was instigated by the candidates. One voter was promised a day's wages to vote for Sidebottom, but by two volunteers.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n77 1 O'M & H 66]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA156 HCP 1869 120 p. 156]–162
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1868

Tamworth (No. 1)John Hill and Thomas WattonSir Robert Peel, Bt. and Sir Henry Lytton Bulwer, Bt.Bribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Claims of personal bribery by Peel were groundless, and Peel's land agent Carmichael had not bribed either. Bulwer had allowed his agent Barraclough to hire men to keep the peace on polling day, and Barraclough had hired 130 (many more than necessary), but this was done without approval.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n86 1 O'M & H 75]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA163 HCP 1869 120 p. 163]–183
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1868

Taunton (No. 2)Thomas Meredith Williams and Joseph MellorMr. Serjeant Edward William CoxBribery, etc.; Scrutiny of votesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| An association had been formed for registering voters. A long time after the registration, the association paid voters 5s. each for registering; no check was made for what anyone had done for the money. The candidates worked closely with the association. When the corrupted votes were struck off, Henry James had a majority and was duly elected.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n192 1 O'M & H 181]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA352 HCP 1869 120 p. 352]–357
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1868

WallingfordSir Charles Wentworth Dilke, Bt.Stanley VickersBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Seven voters living outside the town were invited to the house of Deacon, an agent of Vickers, who gave them food and drink and took them to vote in his carriage, but there was no corrupt intention.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n68 1 O'M & H 57]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA184 HCP 1869 120 p. 184]–189
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1868

WarringtonMiles Crozier and othersPeter RylandsIrregular taking of votes at one polling boothDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| There had been confusion at the No. 1 polling booth in the south-east of the town, and for an hour votes were incorrectly recorded or not recorded at all. However it was the legal duty of the voters to make sure their votes were recorded properly.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n53 1 O'M & H 42]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA189 HCP 1869 120 p. 189]–191
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1868

WestburyAbraham LavertonJohn Lewis PhippsBribery, etc.; Scrutiny of votesVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Joseph Harrop, a manufacturer in the town, told his employees that they would be dismissed if they voted for Laverton who was his business rival. A recriminatory case against Laverton failed but brought forward serious evidence.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n58 1 O'M & H 47]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA191 HCP 1869 120 p. 191]–197
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1868

WestminsterJames Beal and othersWilliam Henry SmithBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Smith spent an enormous amount to pay shopkeepers to display his posters, but without an intention to bribe the shopkeepers. Campaign workers were supplied with food and drink, but only ordinary meals.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n100 1 O'M & H 89]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA198 HCP 1869 120 p. 198]–202
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1868

Wexford BoroughJohn Sutton, Thomas Edward Cavanagh, John Wheelock, James Jones, Patrick Brian, and Michael HughesRichard Joseph DevereuxReturning Officer wrongly accepted withdrawal of a candidateVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A show of hands went in favour of Standish Motte, and a poll was demanded. Motte then withdrew, and the Returning Officer subsequently declared Devereux elected; he had no authority to do so. A poll should have been held. Special case.[https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA202 HCP 1869 120 p. 202]–203
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1868

WiganDaniel Brayshay and William AtkinsonHenry Woods and John LancasterBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| An employee of the political association formed in the town to support Woods and Lancaster had corruptly paid the rates of one voter, but he was not acting as their agent in this action.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n199 1 O'M & H 188]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA203 HCP 1869 120 p. 203]–207
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1868

WindsorColonel Robert Richardson GardnerRoger EykynBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A voter who had previously promised Eykyn his vote subsequently was given £1 to help him after his two children died, but this was an isolated gift and not a bribe. Eykyn chaired the Odd Fellows Society and had paid for wine at its annual dinner, but it was a non-political occasion.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n11 1 O'M & H 1]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA208 HCP 1869 120 p. 208]–212
style="background:#FFFFD0;"

| 1868

Yorkshire (West Riding), Southern (No. 1)Hon. Francis Dudley Stuart Wortley and George Wilton ChambersViscount Milton and Henry Frederick BeaumontBribery, etc.Withdrawn
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A list containing voters alleged to have been bribed was delivered to the respondents too late and was inadmissible. A recriminatory case established that railway fares were paid to allow farmers in Penistone to come to Sheffield to vote, but they would have gone to market on that day in any case.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n224 1 O'M & H 213]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA303 HCP 1869 120-I p. 303]–304
style="background:#FFFFD0;"

| 1868

Yorkshire (West Riding), Southern (No. 2)Walter Thomas William Spencer StanhopeHenry Frederick BeaumontBribery, etc.Withdrawn
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The No. 2 petition was withdrawn, before any evidence was offered, as soon as the No. 1 petition was withdrawn.
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1868

YoughalJohn Welling BrasierChristopher WeguelinBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| From the time he proclaimed himself a candidate until the dissolution of Parliament, Weguelin had offered drink to voters to get their support. The Judge obtained a ruling by the Court of Common Pleas that this was corrupt treating even if halted at dissolution.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n302 1 O'M & H 291]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA304 HCP 1869 120 p. 304]–320
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 11 Mar 1869

BewdleyHon. Augustus Henry Archibald AnsonJohn Cunliffe Pickersgill CunliffeScrutiny of votesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Anson established that some voters had wrongly been registered and had voted; when their votes were struck off he had a majority of eight. A counter-charge of bribery was withdrawn.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n185 1 O'M & H 174]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=wCpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA217 HCP 1869 120-I p. 217]–219
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 16 Jun 1869

NottinghamLawrence Torr and othersCharles SeelyBribery, etc.; RiotingDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Evidence of bribery did not establish it was done by the candidate's agents. A single voter was prevented by fear from voting but there was no general riot.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n256 1 O'M & H 245]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 131–133
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 22 Nov 1869

Waterford CityJohn Slattery and Daniel CarriganSir Henry Winston Barron, Bt.Bribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Sir Henry had appointed his cousin, Marcus Barron, as his agent; Marcus Barron had arranged for extensive bribery to be carried out by Nathaniel Allen.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n10 2 O'M & H 1]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 145–150
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 31 Dec 1869

LongfordThomas Broderick, Michael Lynch, Alexander Birne, and Edward DugganHon. Reginald Greville-NugentFailure to give proper notice of election; Bribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The Judge thought the sheriff was entitled to proclaim the election on 27 December after receiving the writ on 24 December. There was "unusual violence" around the election but no proof of intimidation. There was a systematic system of corrupt treating.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n15 2 O'M & H 6]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 86–103; [https://archive.org/details/op1249675-1001 HCP 1870 178]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 3 Feb 1870

MallowMajor Lawrence Edward KnoxHenry MunsterBribery, etc.; Scrutiny of votesVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| 22 out of the 47 publicans in the borough were given orders to distribute free food and drink, and all voted for Munster despite some having previously opposed him. Knox was unable to strike off enough votes to prove himself the winner.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n27 2 O'M & H 18]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 103–113
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 25 Feb 1870

Waterford CityThomas Condon and Michael O'SheaRalph Bernal OsborneBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Claims of undue influence by landlords, employers and spiritual intimidation were abandoned at trial. Claims of corrupt offers were not believed.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n33 2 O'M & H 24]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 151–157
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 28 Feb 1870

Tipperary CountyPatrick Mackay and Thomas Patrick O'ConnorDenis Caulfield HeronBribery, etc.; interruption of telegramsDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| All charges but those relating to bribery and undue influence were abandoned at trial. There was insufficient evidence of bribery and the Roman Catholic clergy were exercising legitimate influence.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n40 2 O'M & H 31]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 140–145
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 29 Mar 1870

BristolJames Brett, Frederick Meers, Henry Matthews, and George PalmerElisha Smith RobinsonBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Prior to the election, a test ballot had taken place between three candidates of Robinson's party to determine which of them should be nominated. It was proved that Robinson organised corrupt treating at this election. A special case determined that treating at the test ballot would void the subsequent election.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n36 2 O'M & H 27]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 8–19
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 13 Jul 1870

NorwichGardener Christopher StevensJacob Henry TillettBribery, etc.; employment of corrupt agent; candidate previously guilty of briberyVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Tillett had run in the 1868 election with Sir William Russell, who employed Orlando Dennis Ray as agent; Ray had been reported guilty of bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n47 2 O'M & H 38]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 113–130
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 19 Jul 1870

Brecon (No. 1)Overton and MainwaringJames Price William Gwynne HolfordBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The petitioners attempted to withdraw the petition before trial but were not in time. No evidence was offered.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n42 2 O'M & H 33]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 4–6
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 19 Jul 1870

Brecon (No. 2)Richard Watkins and J. WatkinsJames Price William Gwynne HolfordBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After the previous petition had been dismissed, Holford's mother (with his knowledge) organised a party to celebrate his election win. The attendees included some who had voted against him and the party had not been thought of until after the election.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n52 2 O'M & H 43]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 6–8
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 21 Sep 1870

ShrewsburyButtress, Cock, Davies and WhitwellDouglas StraightBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The pub owned by a Mr Townsend was used by Straight for the election, and he gave suppers to supporters of Straight, but it was not directed at encouraging voting.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n45 2 O'M & H 36]; HCP 1872 268 pp. 133–140
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1 Apr 1872

Galway CountyHon. William De La Poer TrenchJohn Philip NolanTreating; undue influence; candidate disqualified as previously guilty of corrupt practicesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Tuam (John MacHale), Bishop of Clonfert (Patrick Duggan)), and Bishop of Galway (John McEvilly) and 29 parish priests of the county were held to have used all influence to overthrow all free will. A special case decided that notices put up by Trench alerting voters to Nolan's previous involvement in treating were sufficient to inform voters that he was disqualified. Catholic nationalists regarded judge William Keogh's ruling as a betrayal.{{multiref|

[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n55 2 O'M & H 46]|

HCP 1872 268 pp. 20–85|

{{cite Hansard |url=https://hansard.parliament.uk/Commons/1872-06-13/debates/cc9836ef-52c1-4ac6-aecb-fcc2133d56da/JudgmentOfMrJusticeKeogh |date=13 June 1872 |house=HC |title=Judgment Of Mr Justice Keogh |column_start=1669 |column_end=1676 |volume=211 }}|

{{cite DNB|wstitle=Keogh, William Nicholas|display=Keogh, William Nicholas|volume=31|page=34}}|

[https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/102373124 HCP 1872 241]|

[https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/011723576 HCP 1872 241 I–III]|

[https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/011724169 HCP 1872 276]|

[https://archive.org/details/op1250133-1001 HCP 1874 0.1]}}

style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 8 May 1873

GloucesterSir William Vernon Guise, Bt., William Philip Price, William Charles Lucy, Henry Allen, and John Pleydell WiltonWilliam Killigrew WaitBribery, etc.; personationDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Claims of bribery and treating were abandoned. Two men of the same name were registered in one street, only one of them qualified; the right one had voted. The under-age son of a voter had been persuaded to vote in his father's name but the canvasser was unaware he was not the right man.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n68 2 O'M & H 59]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA75 HCP 1874 374 pp. 75]–79
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 14 Oct 1873

TauntonJohn Marshall and Walter Chorley BrannanHenry JamesBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Bribery by a man named Rollings was shown, but it could not be established that Rollings was an agent of James.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n75 2 O'M & H 66]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA150 HCP 1874 374 pp. 150]–154; HCP 1874 74
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1874

AthloneEdward SheilJohn James Ennis and Walter Nugent (returning officer)Returning officer wrongly rejected votesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The original result had given both candidates 140 votes. 21 clear votes for Sheil and 9 for Ennis placed the cross in the wrong place on the ballot paper. The court held that they should have been counted and not rejected, giving Sheil a majority. Special case. No order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n195 2 O'M & H 186]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA3 HCP 1874 374 pp. 3]–6; [https://archive.org/details/op1250131-1001 HCP 1874 144]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1874

Barnstaple John Fleming and John HoltThomas Cave and Samuel Danks WaddyBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The Judges did not believe witnesses who accused the candidates of bribery. Evidence of intimidation by landlords was contradicted.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n114 2 O'M & H 105]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA6 HCP 1874 374 pp. 6]–12
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1874

BoltonJames Ormrod, William Hargreaves, Thomas Lever Rushton, William Walter Cannon, Nathaniel Greenhalgh, Charles Henry Houldon, William HeskethJohn Kynaston CrossBribery, etc.; unlawful communication of names of votersDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| It was illegal for personation agents in polling stations to inform the candidate who had voted, but it did not upset the election. Giving railway passes to allow people to come in and vote was not bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n147 2 O'M & H 138]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA12 HCP 1874 374 pp. 12]–18
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1874

BostonJohn Wingfield MalcolmWilliam James Ingram and Thomas ParryBribery, etc.; Scrutiny of votesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| 877 voters received gifts of coal from agents of Parry with intent to influence their votes; several voters at the Bull Inn were treated by Henry Cabourn Simonds. When votes of those who received coal were struck off, Malcolm had a majority. A special case established this approach to deciding the case was correct.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n170 2 O'M & H 161]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA19 HCP 1874 374 pp. 19]–30; HCP 1874 375 = [https://books.google.com/books?id=nhpcAAAAQAAJpg HLP 1875 38]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=iyxcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA13-PA3 HCP 1875 342 pp. 3]–11; Command [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106501802&seq=15 C.1441 and C.1441-I]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1874

DroghedaMorton and othersDr. William Hagarty O'Leary and Mr Daly (returning officer)Bribery, etc.; irregular procedure for voting and maintaining secrecyDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Charges of corrupt practices were withdrawn. The poll opening was delayed by 45 minutes but no voter was prevented from voting. A special case found that, despite the voters' marked papers being visible to others within the polling station, no unauthorised person saw them.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n210 2 O'M & H 201]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA31 HCP 1874 374 pp. 31]–50
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

DudleyBenjamin Hingley, Edward Bowen, Josiah Robinson, and Thomas FoxallHenry Brinsley SheridanRiotingVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Void at common law because of rioting by both sides; the only reason there was more violence from Sheridan's side was that he had more riotous supporters.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n124 2 O'M & H 115]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA50 HCP 1874 374 pp. 50]–51
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

Durham CityJames and anotherJohn Henderson and Thomas Charles ThompsonBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Several voters had been bribed by John Heaton, John Newton and Charles Dawson who were agents of Henderson and Thompson; Heaton, Newton and Thomas Marshall were also guilty of corrupt treating. The candidates were unaware.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n143 2 O'M & H 134]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA51 HCP 1874 374 pp. 51]–56
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

Durham, NorthernBurdon and othersIsaac Lowthian Bell and Charles Mark PalmerBribery, etc.; riot and intimidationVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The charges of corruption by the agent were rebutted, but there was intimidation in many towns: it took the form of shopkeepers being told they would lose custom if they did not vote in line with their customers, opposition committee rooms being wrecked and houses attacked.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n161 2 O'M & H 152]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA57 HCP 1874 374 pp. 57]–61
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

HackneyWilliam John GillSir Charles Reed, John Holms, and Henry ChildFailure to hold a poll at some polling placesVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The returning officer had designated 19 polling places. In several of them ballot boxes and ballot papers were not available and no poll was taken; others opened late. At least 4,838 electors were unable to vote out of an electorate of 40,870.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n86 2 O'M & H 77]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA79 HCP 1874 374 pp. 79]–83
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

HaverfordwestThomas Whicher DaviesLord Kensington and William Lewis HardingRefusal to accept nominationVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The returning officer, Harding, refused to accept Davies as a candidate unless he gave a £40 deposit against the costs of a contested election (which at this point fell on candidates). Davies declined and was not accepted as a candidate, so Kensington was returned unopposed. The returning officer had no power to insist on a deposit. Special case.[https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA84 HCP 1874 374 pp. 84]–92
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

KidderminsterJames Youngjohns and Charles ThomasAlbert GrantBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Grant had been invited to contest the seat at the last minute. On the eve of poll he gave a speech promising "an entertainment" if he won, and after winning he made the same promise. A grand fête costing £1,480 was later held. This constituted corrupt treating.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n179 2 O'M & H 170]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA92 HCP 1874 374 pp. 92]–99
style="background:#FFD0FF;" {{anchor|Launceston 1874}}

| 1874

LauncestonHerbert Charles DrinkwaterJames Henry Deakin (sen.)Bribery, etc.; candidate disqualified through corrupt practice; Scrutiny of votesVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Deakin, a landowner, had allowed his tenants to kill rabbits on his estate, and sell them; this was a form of bribery. Drinkwater had published a notice declaring his actions corrupt and asserting that Deakin was thereby disqualified. The judges agreed it was corrupt. A special case determined that the notice did not automatically nullify votes for Deakin.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n138 2 O'M & H 129]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA99 HCP 1874 374 pp. 99]–118; [https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/011724055 HCP 1874 250]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

MayoSir George Clendining O'DonelGeorge Ekins Browne, Thomas Tighe, and Joseph PrattRefusal to accept nominationVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The returning officer, Pratt, refused to accept O'Donel as a candidate despite his otherwise valid nomination, because he had not appointed an election agent. The returning officer had no right to do so and ought to have held a poll. Special case.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n200 2 O'M & H 191]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA119 HCP 1874 374 pp. 119]–123; [https://archive.org/details/op1250134-1001 HCP 1874 165]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1874

PetersfieldHenry John Dayrell StoweHon. Sydney Hylton JolliffeBribery, etc.; voting by ineligible people; Scrutiny of votesDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A house was let to a voter years before on the promise of a vote in return; reminding him of the promise without a threat was not undue influence and the letting was too long ago to constitute bribery. A recriminatory case was abandoned. On a special case, Insufficient ineligible voters were found to upset Jolliffe's majority.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n103 2 O'M & H 94]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA123 HCP 1874 374 pp. 123]–130
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

Poole (No. 1)Charles Hurdle and Henry StarkCharles WaringBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The agent received bills for drink and refreshment supplied during the election, which were paid. Beer had been ordered after the election by Waring's agents and given away free. Because neither was a spontaneous act, this was corrupt treating.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n132 2 O'M & H 123]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA130 HCP 1874 374 pp. 130]–140
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

Poole (No. 2)Hiram Young and John RennisonCharles WaringBribery, etc.; payments after the electionVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Considered alongside No. 1 petition.
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1874

RenfrewshireCharles Edward Irvin and James MacgregorColonel William MureRecountDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The recount increased Mure's majority from 88 to 91. 22 irregularly marked ballots were found, with clear intentions of 8 to vote for Mure and 14 for the runner-up Colonel Campbell. They made no difference to the result.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n222 2 O'M & H 213]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA141 HCP 1874 374 pp. 141]
style="background:#FFD0FF;" | {{anchor|Stroud 1874}}

| 1874

StroudBaynes and othersSebastian Stewart Dickinson and Walter John StantonBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| An agent of the respondents, Smith, openly organised treating and entertainments as part of the campaign, probably in ignorance of the law. When this was proved the two MPs abandoned their defence save to establish that they had neither authorised it nor known about it.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n116 2 O'M & H 107]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA142 HCP 1874 374 pp. 142]–143
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1874

WakefieldWilliam Hartley Lee and Isaac BriggsEdward GreenBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Green was vice-president of a society, many of whose members were his political supporters. Others who attended its meetings were bribed there by his supporters.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n109 2 O'M & H 100]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA155 HCP 1874 374 pp. 155]–159
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1874

Wigtown BurghsAndrew Haswell and Robert JamiesonMark John StewartReturning officer wrongly counted irregular votesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Some ballot papers were discounted, others held good. A special case was referred to the Court of Session on 19 irregularly marked ballot papers. At the end it was found that Stewart was one vote behind Rt Hon George Young; Young had since been made a judge so the seat was vacant,[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n224 2 O'M & H 215]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA160 HCP 1874 374 pp. 160]–172 necessitating a by-election
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1874

WindsorHerbert and anotherRobert Richardson-GardnerBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Richardson-Gardner had evicted tenants who voted against him in the 1868 election, but there was no proof this action influenced voters in 1874. Because it was reprehensible behaviour, no order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n97 2 O'M & H 88]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA174 HCP 1874 374 pp. 174]–180; HCP 1874 373; HCP 1874 152
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 20 Mar 1874

Galway BoroughPierce Joyce, jun.Francis Hugh O'DonnellBribery, etc.; employment of corrupt agentVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A system of intimidation was organised by O'Donnell and mob violence used to intimidate voters. O'Donnell was assisted by some of the Catholic priests reported guilty of undue influence in the County Galway petition in 1872.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n205 2 O'M & H 196]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA62 HCP 1874 374 pp. 62]–74; [https://archive.org/details/op1250132-1001 HCP 1874 201]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 18 May 1874

StroudSamuel Marling and othersJohn Edward DoringtonBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Dorington had been an unsuccessful candidate in the general election and his agents had sent large sums to voters living outside the town as travelling expenses, which were much more than a railway ticket would cost.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n188 2 O'M & H 179]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA143 HCP 1874 374 pp. 143]–146
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 18 May 1874

StroudBaynes and othersAlfred John StantonBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Mills in the town had closed for polling day but workmen were paid for a day's work. This was a kindness and not bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n190 2 O'M & H 181]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA146 HCP 1874 374 pp. 146]–149
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 15 Jun 1874

Wigtown BurghsAugustus SmithMark John StewartScrutiny of votesDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The scrutiny reduced Stewart's majority from 8 votes to 2.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n241 2 O'M & H 232]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=dytcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA4-PA172 HCP 1874 374 pp. 172]–174
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 22 Jun 1874

Durham, NorthernThomas Graholm and Samuel StoreySir George Elliot, Bt.Bribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After "trifling" evidence of bribery, the petitioners applied to withdraw the petition. The Judge insisted on giving a full judgment.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n12 3 O'M & H 1]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=iyxcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA13-PA12 HCP 1875 342 pp. 12]–14
style="background:#FFFFD0;"

| 22 Jun 1874

Durham, NorthernEdward Pickering and William WilliamsCharles Mark PalmerBribery, etc.Withdrawn
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| As soon as the case was opened the petitioners applied to withdraw it; the Judge allowed them.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n15 3 O'M & H 4]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=iyxcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA13-PA14 HCP 1875 342 pp. 14]–18
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 27 Jul 1874

StroudGeorge HollowayHenry Robert BrandBribery, etc., at this and previous electionsVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| At least 13 bribed voters were found (two more were offered bribes) and five bribers were named. Brand's agent, on realising what he would have to disclose in court, had absconded. There was a £1,200 fund for 'decorations' which was partly used for bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n18 3 O'M & H 7]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=iyxcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA13-PA25 HCP 1875 342 pp. 25]–39
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 30 Dec 1874

St IvesSir Francis LycettCharles Tyringham PraedBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After it was established that several pubs in St Ives and surrounding areas were opened to supply free drink in support of Praed, Praed's counsel conceded that the election must be void.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n24 3 O'M & H 13]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=iyxcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA13-PA23 HCP 1875 342 pp. 23]–24
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 6 Mar 1875

NorwichFrancis AmesJacob Henry TillettBribery, etc.; employment of corrupt agentsVoid election
{{small|No by-election before 1880 general election.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After seven witnesses were called, counsel for Tillett declared that he believed that they and many other voters were bribed by being unjustifiably employed on the election. Tillett was unaware.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n26 3 O'M & H 15]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=iyxcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA13-PA18 HCP 1875 342 pp. 18]–22; [https://books.google.com/books?id=nhpcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA2-PA1 HLP 1875 164]
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 11 Mar 1875

Tipperary (No. 1)Matthew Villiers Sankey MortonJohn Mitchel (replaced after his death by Michael John Cahalan and Edward Galway)Candidate disqualified due to conviction for treason felonyUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Before the petition was heard, Mitchel died. Cahalan failed in an application to the Court of Common Pleas to set the petition aside. Galway was struck out as a respondent. Mitchel had been convicted of treason felony in 1848. As voters knew of his history, their votes for him were thrown away and the runner-up, Moore, was duly elected.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n30 3 O'M & H 19]; [https://books.google.com/books?id=iyxcAAAAQAAJ&pg=RA13-PA39 HCP 1875 342 pp. 39]–52
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 11 Mar 1875

Tipperary (No. 2)Captain Stephen MooreJames Scully (High Sheriff) and Michael John CahalanCandidate disqualified as a naturalised alien and through treason felonyUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Mitchel had escaped transportation in 1853 and been naturalised as a citizen of the United States of America at San Francisco, renouncing his allegiance to Britain. Considered alongside No. 1 petition
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 18 Oct 1875

Armagh CityDr James Ledlie Riggs, George Scott Riddell, and James GardnerCaptain George de la Poer BeresfordBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| 96 cases of bribery were alleged with 125 witnesses, but the Judge found that those for the defence always outweighed those for the petitioners.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n61 3 O'M & H 50]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 17 Dec 1875

HorshamJohn AldridgeRobert Henry HurstBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Letters sent to voters living outside the town offered to pay their travelling expenses to vote, provided they promised their vote to Hurst. Travelling expenses were money and this was therefore bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n63 3 O'M & H 52]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

AthloneEdward SheilSir John Ennis, 2nd BaronetPersonationDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Shiel had a majority of one and Ennis claimed two voters had voted instead of their identically named deceased fathers. The Judge found that the sons were the people on the register. Other personation cases were not proved.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n68 3 O'M & H 57]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=7 HCP 1880 337 pp. 3]–10
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

BewdleyWilliam Francis Spencer and John BlundellCharles HarrisonBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| An association formed to promote Harrison worked together with his election agent. Members of the association were involved in several acts of bribery including letting voters off debts if they promised their votes.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n156 3 O'M & H 145]; HCP 1880 322
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

Boston (No. 1)Sydney Charles BuxtonThomas GarfitBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election. Constituency reduced to one member from 1885.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After several witnesses had given unchallenged evidence of bribery, counsel for Garfit admitted that he could not defend the case.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n161 3 O'M & H 150]; HCP 1880 330Command [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503436&seq=15 C.2784 and C.2784-I]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

Boston (No. 2)Charles Thomas Tunnard, William Barton, John Ashlin Thomas, Edward Clarke Porter, Charles Dobson, John William Rowland, William Charlton, John Thompson, William Smart, George Colley Bland, and Samuel SherwinWilliam James IngramBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election. Constituency reduced to one member from 1885.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Ingram's agent, believing his opponents would engage in bribery, employed 300–400 voters on polling day in various nominal roles. This was a disguised form of bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n162 3 O'M & H 151]; HCP 1880 330
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

ButeshireArchibald McKay, Richard Ferguson, John Duncan, Alexander Brown, and Alexander McLeanThomas RussellBribery, etc.; Candidate disqualified due to Government contractVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Russell accepted that he was indeed disqualified under the House of Commons Disqualification Act 1782 (22 Geo. 3. c. 45); the bribery allegations were abandoned and no trial was held.HCP 1883 325 p. 6
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

CanterburyHenry Munro-Butler-JohnstoneHon. Alfred Erskine Gathorne-Hardy and Col. Robert Peter LaurieBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election before 1885 general election.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After several witnesses had given evidence of direct bribery by people acting for Hardy and Laurie, counsel for the respondents told the court that he had to advise his clients they did not have an answer to the charges. The candidates were unaware.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n114 3 O'M & H 103]; HCP 1880 263; Command [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503428&seq=11 C.2775 and C.2775-I]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

CarrickfergusMarriott Robert DalwayThomas GreerBribery, etc.; personation; scrutiny of votesDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The scrutiny was abandoned. Greer's charitable gifts were genuinely charitable and not an indirect attempt at corrupting voters. Providing cars to help voters was illegal but was not done corruptly. No proof of personation was found.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n101 3 O'M & H 90]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=17 HCP 1880 337 pp. 13]–32
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

CheltenhamPakenham and othersBaron Charles Conrad Adolphus du Bois de FerrieresBribery, etc.; disqualified as an alienDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Coal and bread tickets were distributed by a man called Solomon who was possibly an agent of de Ferrieres, but were bought by a subscription fund. De Ferrieres had been naturalised by a private act of Parliament, Baron de Ferrieres' Naturalization Act 1867 (30 & 31 Vict. c. 11 {{small|Pr.}}), which made him eligible to take a seat in Parliament.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n97 3 O'M & H 86]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=37 HCP 1880 337 pp. 33]–34
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

ChesterThomas Heywood, William Dodd, William Jones and William DaviesRt Hon John George Dodson and Hon. Beilby LawleyBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election before 1885 general election. Dodson had already resigned and been returned unopposed in a ministerial by-election by the time the petition was tried; he was unseated and stood instead in Scarborough }}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| When the candidates began their campaign, they found a political association was very well organised in the city, and they could not run their campaign without dealing with it. More than 30 witnesses established that the association engaged in bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n159 3 O'M & H 148]; HCP 1880 301
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

DownBlakely McCartneyViscount CastlereaghUndue influence; scrutiny of votesDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Carriages had been hired to take voters to the poll, which was illegal, but the votes of the cabmen were not nullified in consequence. No order as to costs.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n126 3 O'M & H 115]; HCP 1880 260
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

DungannonRobert Newton and Armytage Lennox NicholsonThomas Alexander DicksonBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Dickson's agent had offered an ex-employee of his £10 not to vote for his opponent. Two other cases of alleged bribery were not proved.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n112 3 O'M & H 101]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=41 HCP 1880 337 pp. 37]–44
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

EveshamEdward Charles Rudge and Joseph MastersDaniel Rowlinson RatcliffBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Ratcliffe had made many charitable gifts nationwide, including at Evesham. His agent, Ballinger, had made sure that anything given in Evesham was conditional on the recipient promising their vote.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n105 3 O'M & H 94]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=13 HCP 1880 228]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

GloucesterEdmund Digby Worsley, James Franklin, and George TwyfordThomas Robinson and Charles James MonkBribery, etc.Void election
(Robinson only)
{{small|No by-election before 1885 general election.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Robinson gave notice before the trial that he would not defend the petition. The petitioners presented evidence of direct bribery by Robinson's agent but offered no evidence against Monk. The Judges made a special report that the withdrawal of the petition against Monk appeared to be a corrupt agreement to cover up his involvement in bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n83 3 O'M & H 72]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=59 HCP 1880 229]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=67 HCP 1880 229-I]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=73 HCP 1880 242]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503824&seq=223 HCP 1880 287]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

GravesendSir Francis TruscottThomas BevanBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Bevan was an employer of 1,000 in the town, of which 180 were voters and many others were relations of voters. On election day the employees clocked in as usual, were given rosettes in Bevan's colours, and all voted in a group, then had a paid holiday. This constituted bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n92 3 O'M & H 81]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=51 HCP 1880 337 pp. 47]–49
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

HarwichCol. George TomlineSir Henry Whatley TylerBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Tyler had given firm instructions that his canvass was to be run by Francis Hales; he had no connection to an unofficial canvass and was not responsible for their corrupt acts. A recriminatory case established that Tomline's agents had bribed voters.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n72 3 O'M & H 61]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=77 HCP 1880 227]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

KnaresboroughBasil Thomas Woodd and Thomas SlingsbySir Henry Meysey Meysey-Thompson, Bt.Bribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After evidence of extensive treating had been given, counsel for Meysey-Thompson conceded that he could not deny that an admitted agent was responsible.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n152 3 O'M & H 141]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=57 HCP 1880 337 pp. 53]–55; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=201 HCP 1880 410]; Command [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106504731&seq=11 C.2777 and C.2777-I]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

LichfieldSir John Swinburne, Bt.Colonel Richard DyottBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Agents of Dyott's, stationed in one polling station on election day, continued to solicit votes and kept such a close eye on voters as to intimidate them.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n147 3 O'M & H 136]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=251 HCP 1880 278]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

Louth CountyGeorge Harley KirkPhilip CallanBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Trivial amounts of food and drink were given as gifts during the election; they could not have influenced votes. Others accused of corrupt practices were clearly not agents of Callan.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n172 3 O'M & H 161]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=417 HCP 1880 300]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

MacclesfieldIsaac Day, Charles Shaw, James Gayes, and Edward FairhurstWilliam Coare Brocklehurst and David ChadwickBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election before 1885 general election.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| An extensive system of bribery and treating by agent was proved.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n111 3 O'M & H 100]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=551 HCP 1880 262]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

PlymouthIsaac Latimer and Francis BarrattSir Edward Bates, Bt.Bribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Bates had sent an agent, Stibbs, to Penzance to find Plymouth voters and bring them back; one fisherman had insisted on having his travelling expenses and paying for a substitute to do his fishing during his absence, which was paid. This constituted bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n118 3 O'M & H 107]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=67 HCP 1880 337 pp. 63]–68
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

SalisburyRigden and othersJohn Passmore Edwards and William Henry GrenfellBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Witnesses accusing the two MPs of personal bribery were unconvincing and that part of the case was withdrawn. A well-known local resident who helped introduce Edwards and Grenfell to local people had engaged in bribery but was not their agent.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n141 3 O'M & H 130]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=79 HCP 1880 337 pp. 75]–77
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

TewkesburyCollins and othersWilliam Edwin PriceBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Ebenezer Lugg was established as having given money to, and forgiven the debts of, a shoemaker and elector called Samuel Jones; he also gave a new pair of boots to another voter. The court was satisfied that Lugg was an agent of Price.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n108 3 O'M & H 97]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=83 HCP 1880 337 pp. 79]–81
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

ThirskSamuel Bradley Wilcock, Robert Skilbeck, Thomas Humphrey, and David MeekColonel Hon. Lewis Payn DawnayBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The petitioners brought evidence of corrupt dealings by a man called Wright but the judge found all the allegations had failed; it seemed that Wright had no connection to Dawnay.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n124 3 O'M & H 113]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=87 HCP 1880 337 p. 83]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1880

WallingfordEdward WellsWalter WrenBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Many acts of bribery by a single person were uncovered. Wren's counsel accepted that he was clearly an agent and that Wren was responsible in law for his actions.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n117 3 O'M & H 106]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=89 HCP 1880 337 p. 85]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

WestburyAbraham LavertonCharles Nicholas Paul PhippsBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Several acts of bribery were proved to have been committed by George and William Cornish. George Cornish had sought employment by one candidate, and when refused, supported his opponent; William was his brother. However each had acted independently of Phipps.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n89 3 O'M & H 78]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=91 HCP 1880 337 pp. 87]–89
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

WorcesterGeorge Farmsworth, Frederick Wadeley, Walter Baylis, Henry Davis and James EdmondsThomas Rowley Hill and Æneas John McIntyreBribery, etc.; failure to open and close poll on timeDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Evidence of bribery was unbelievable; witnesses failed to give evidence in court along the lines they had given to the petitioners. One polling station was rushed by a large group during the afternoon, which caused the presiding officer to close up briefly to restore order; this was justified.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n195 3 O'M & H 184]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106504665&seq=283 HCP 1881 10 pp. 27]–34
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1880

Worcestershire, WesternFildes and DarlingSir Edmund Lechmere, Bt. and Frederick Winn KnightTreatingDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The claims of treating were minor in the first place. Claims that a free round of beer were bought for people at a public meeting for Lechmere and Knight were disproved on the evidence.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n146 3 O'M & H 135]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=97 HCP 1880 337 pp. 93]–96
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 10 May 1880

OxfordThomas H. Green, Owen Grimbly, William Parish, George Rolleston, Henry S. Underhill, and George YoungAlexander William HallBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election. Constituency reduced to one member from 1885.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Hall's campaign employed 744 'messengers' on election day, of whom 600 were voters. Their work was purely nominal and the employment was a cover for a bribe.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n166 3 O'M & H 155]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=63 HCP 1880 337 pp. 59]–61; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=571 HCP 1880 349]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 19 May 1880

SandwichSir Julian Goldsmid, Bt.Charles Henry Crompton-RobertsBribery, etc.Void election
{{small|No by-election. Constituency abolished 1885.}}
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Crompton-Roberts engaged a solicitor, Hughes, to run the election. Hughes hired a 'committee room' in each of 88 pubs in the constituency, for £5 each which was much more than the market rent; most of the rooms were never used. The Judges decided this was a hidden form of bribery.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n169 3 O'M & H 158]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=73 HCP 1880 337 pp. 69]–73; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=624 HCP 1880 350]; Command [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106504723&seq=11 C.2796 and C.2796-I]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 20 May 1880

Wigtown BurghsAlexander Boyd and James O'KaneMark John StewartBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| After witnesses had given evidence of bribery, counsel for Stewart declared that he could not maintain his defence of the petition. The Judges accepted that Stewart had no personal involvement.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n125 3 O'M & H 114]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039883m&seq=99 HCP 1880 337 p. 91]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1 Jul 1880

WallingfordRobert William HanburyPandeli RalliBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Groups of agricultural workers were bribed to come to vote by a man named Green, but Green's connection to Ralli could not be substantiated.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n202 3 O'M & H 191]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106504665&seq=279 HCP 1881 10 pp. 23]–26
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 9 Jul 1880

EveshamFrederick Dixon Dyke HartlandAugustus Frederick LehmannBribery, etc.; scrutiny of votesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Extensive treating by agents of Lehmann was established; the Judges noted that Lehmann himself was never called as a witness. A recriminatory case against Hartland failed to prove corrupt practices on the part of his campaign. On a scrutiny, Lehmann's two vote majority was converted into a one-vote majority for Hartland.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n203 3 O'M & H 192]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106504665&seq=261 HCP 1881 10 pp. 5]–22
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 21 Jul 1880

Berwick-upon-TweedJohn McLarenDavid Milne HomeReturning officer wrongly refused and rejected votes; scrutiny of votesDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Some irregularly marked votes which had been rejected were held good. The scrutiny resulted in Home's majority increasing from two to three.[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n189 3 O'M & H 178]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106504665&seq=259 HCP 1881 10 pp. 3]–4
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 20 Jan 1881

WiganJames Spencer and Edward PresttFrancis Sharp PowellBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Powell's agent worked closely with Thomas Scott, who was secretary of a local political Association. Scott was responsible for several acts of direct bribery. Food and drink provided on election day was more effective treating because the local miners were on strike and many families were starving.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=13 4 O'M & H 1]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106504665&seq=315 HCP 1881 201]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 21 Nov 1882

SalisburyMoore and othersColeridge KennardBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| While Kennard employed 214 people on election day (including 78 voters), each of them could account for the fact that they were employed for genuine duties, and so the jobs were not a cover for bribery.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=33 4 O'M & H 21]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1885

AylesburyFrederick CharsleyBaron Ferdinand de RothschildBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| 158 men employed in tree planting on an estate belonging to a cousin of Rothschild were allowed half a day's paid leave to go to vote, but the foreman was not an agent and was only allowing them reasonable time. Rothschild gave an annual school treat to up to 10,000 people in the area which was held shortly before the election, but it was not a political occasion.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=71 4 O'M & H 59]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/453 HCP 1886 177 pp. 3]–8
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1885

Barrow-in-FurnessHenry William SchneiderDavid DuncanBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| It was not illegal for Duncan to pay people to distribute leaflets, but his provision of refreshments to 441 campaign workers on polling day constituted a form of payment which was now illegal. A recriminatory case was withdrawn.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=88 4 O'M & H 76]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/459 HCP 1886 177 pp. 9]–21
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1885

IpswichPackard and othersHenry Wyndham West and Jesse CollingsBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| West and Collings' agent hired a number of 'roughs' to keep order at their public meetings shortly before the polling day. Doing so was not illegal but the expenditure was illegal under s. 17 of the 1883 Act.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=82 4 O'M & H 70]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/489 HCP 1886 177 pp. 39]–53
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1885

KenningtonJohn Crossman, George Garlick, John Charles Jowett, and John SandesRobert Gent-DavisIllegal payments; illegal employmentDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Gent-Davis had paid for an electoral registration drive, and during the election had published a local newspaper to promote his views. While they were done to improve his chances, they did not count as election expenses.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=105 4 O'M & H 93]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/505 HCP 1886 177 pp. 55]–58
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1885

NorwichHenry Birkbeck and othersHarry BullardBribery, etc.; election expenses not paid through agentVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Costs of meetings held to invite Bullard to contest the election were not election expenses. A leaflet urging voters to persuade their friends to support Bullard did not make all the recipients his agent. Charges of bribery were not made out but several public houses engaged in treating. Posters were distributed in the city by a man called Corrick who was not the agent, and they cost £19 18s; this was illegal expenditure.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=96 4 O'M & H 84]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/509 HCP 1886 177 pp. 59]–83
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1885

St Andrews BurghsSir Robert Anstruther, Bt.Stephen WilliamsonRecount with scrutinyUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The original result had been a tie. A voter named John Watson was found to have been personated; the personated vote went to Williamson while Watson's real vote went to Anstruther. Another voter had been registered twice and had cast both votes for Anstruther. Other objections to votes failed. As a result, Anstruther had a majority of one.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=44 4 O'M & H 32]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/535 HCP 1886 177 pp. 85]–87
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1885

StepneyFrederick Wootton IsaacsonJohn Charles DurantVotes cast by voters who were corrupt, voting twice, personated, disqualified; Erroneous counting; Scrutiny of votesDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A voter employed by Durant before his selection was held to be disqualified from voting; one whose children were employed was also disqualified. Compensating a voter for the loss of his hat at a public meeting was not illegal expenditure. One personated vote was struck and a tendered vote accepted. The judges disagreed in the recriminatory case on whether Isaacson was entitled to employ people to hand out handbills outside polling stations. The Queen's Bench Division of the High Court was asked to rule on whether people born in Hanover before 1837 were British subjects. At the conclusion of the scrutiny and recount, Durant had a majority of 10 votes.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=46 4 O'M & H 34]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/539 HCP 1886 177 pp. 89]–99
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1885

ThornburyBenjamin St John AckersEdward Stafford HowardBribery, etc.; Rioting and intimidation; counting ballot papers which were voidDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Organised bands came into the constituency and attacked Ackers' committee rooms as well as homes, but most electors in the affected areas voted anyway. A slight overpayment for hiring a committee room was not bribery. On a point of law reserved to the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court, it was decided that ballots with the official mark only on the back and not the front were valid.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=77 4 O'M & H 65]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/573 HCP 1886 177 pp. 23]–37
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1886

Belfast, WestJames Horner HaslettThomas SextonBribery, etc.; Disqualified from election; PersonationDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Sexton had been returned unopposed for South Sligo on 5 July but nominations in Belfast had closed on 2 July. Witnesses failed to give any evidence of bribery. 13 cases of personation were proved in respect of people who had voted for Sexton, but they did not affect the result.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=117 4 O'M & H 105]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/581 HCP 1887 90 pp. 3]–12
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1886

BuckroseChristopher SykesWilliam Alexander McArthurVotes cast by voters who were corrupt, personated, disqualified; Erroneous counting; Scrutiny of votesUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Certain votes were struck off and others were held good. It was illegal to use a schoolmasters' home, provided it was part of the premises of a state school, as a committee room; as this was illegal, the votes of those in charge were struck off. A tendered ballot put in the ballot box was bad even though the voter had been personated. Payments made by a local political association which were not returned as election expenses were illegal and the secretary of the association's vote was struck. At the end of scrutiny a majority of 1 for McArthur had become 11 for Sykes.Craig 1974 p. 424[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=122 4 O'M & H 110]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/593 HCP 1887 90 pp. 15]–17
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1886

Londonderry CityJustin McCarthyCharles Edward LewisBribery, etc.; Voting by minors; Erroneous countingUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Five non-resident freemen had voted; they were entitled to. One voter, Robert Neely, was proved to have been bribed by an agent of Lewis. As a result of the scrutiny, Lewis' majority of 3 was reversed and McCarthy had a majority of lawful votes.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=108 4 O'M & H 96]; [https://archive.org/details/reportsfromselec0005grea/page/591 HCP 1887 90 p. 13]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1892

Clare, EasternJoseph Richard CoxWilliam Hoey Kearney RedmondBribery, etc.; Intimidation; Returning Officer irregularitiesDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| It was not illegal for the Young Ireland Society to print 3,000 cards reading "Men of Clare, remember Parnell; vote for Redmond". The Returning Officer had held the poll too soon after nomination but it was an honest mistake and Cox had not objected at the time. Two presiding officers who had closed the poll for lunch did not invalidate the election. 195 votes which were not detached from the counterfoils were bad; they did not affect Redmond's majority.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=174 4 O'M & H 162]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=179 Day pp. 161]–167; HCP 1893 25 pp. 15–24
style="background:#FFFFD0;"

| 1892

Finsbury, CentralFrederick Thomas PentonDadabhai NaorojiVotes cast by voters who were disqualified, personated, employed by Naoroji, corrupt, voting twiceWithdrawn
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Some votes were from aliens who had not been naturalised, and were struck. Others were struck because the voter was registered in two divisions of Finsbury. Personated votes was struck. People contracted to post bills or clean rooms by Naoroji were entitled to vote. At the end of the scrutiny Naoroji's majority increased from 3 to 5,Craig 1974 p. 13 and the Judge allowed the petition to be withdrawn.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=183 4 O'M & H 171]
style="background:#FFD0D0;"

| 1892

GreenockSir Thomas SutherlandJohn BruceRecountUndue election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| As a result of the recount, a majority of 44 for Bruce was reversed to a majority of 55 for Sutherland.Craig 1974 p. 510[https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1892/aug/09/controverted-election-greenock Hansard] 4ser vol 7 cols 187–8
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1892

HexhamWilliam Hudspeth and John Knox LyalNathaniel George ClaytonBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Clayton had given his agent, Isaac Baty, £326 for the local political association, including £35 for holding a picnic at Clayton's home. This constituted illegal treating.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=155 4 O'M & H 143]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=108 Day pp. 90]–98; HCP 1893 25 pp. 3–13
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1892

Manchester, EastJoseph Edward Crawfurd MunroRt Hon Arthur James BalfourBribery, etc.; illegal hiringDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Claims of illegal hiring were malformed in the wording of the petition and had to be abandoned. There never was any evidence that workmen at Chester's Brewery had been given a paid holiday; Munro abandoned this part of the case. Claims by a man called Green that he agreed to participate in bribery were incredible. The evidence did not support charges of treating.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=132 4 O'M & H 120]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=171 Day pp. 153]–155; HCP 1893 25 pp. 101–104
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1892

Meath, NorthernPierce Charles de Lacy O'MahonyMichael DavittIntimidation; undue influenceVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The same factors were at work in North Meath as in South Meath, which was tried first. A pastoral letter written by Thomas Nulty, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Meath, was read from the altar in all churches in the diocese attacking Charles Stewart Parnell, and stating with no-one could remain a Catholic and support him. After the South Meath judgment the petition was not defended.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=197 4 O'M & H 185]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=159 Day pp. 141]–147; HCP 1893 25 pp. 39–46
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1892

Meath, SouthernJames Joseph DaltonPatrick FulhamBribery, etc.; Intimidation; undue influenceVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Charges of bribery and treating could not be proved. A pastoral letter written by Thomas Nulty, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Meath, was read from the altar in all churches in the diocese attacking Charles Stewart Parnell, and stating with no-one could remain a Catholic and support him. This constituted undue influence.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=142 4 O'M & H 130]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=150 Day pp. 132]–140; HCP 1893 25 pp. 25–37
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1892

Montgomery BoroughsT. George, J. Pickup and J. AndrewSir Pryce Pryce-JonesBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A voter named Withers claimed to have been bribed by Pryce-Jones but he was not a reliable witness. Pryce-Jones' campaign was unlikely to have appointed Thomas Jones a member of their committee and instructed him to go about bribing voters, and he did not bribe. Evidence of treating did not establish a link to Pryce-Jones.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=179 4 O'M & H 167]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=166 Day pp. 148]–152; HCP 1893 25 pp. 47–60
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1892

RochesterAlfred Barry and Charles John Saxby VarrallHoratio David DaviesBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Payments by Davies to a constituency association were supposed to cover registration expenses, but no accounts were produced to prove it. The association held a conversazione with food and drink provided at nominal price to the attendees; the costs were not returned as election expenses.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=168 4 O'M & H 156]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=116 Day pp. 98]–106; HCP 1893 25 pp. 79–88
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1892

StepneyWilliam Rushmere and William Charles SteadmanFrederick Wootton IsaacsonBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Some voters who were employed for pay and disqualified from voting did vote, but they were unaware; the agent had not told them, but had not procured their votes either. Banners stretched across streets endorsing Isaacson, paid for by Isaacson's agent, were illegal expenditure, but the agent's actions were inadvertent and so he was given relief.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=179 4 O'M & H 189]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=134 Day pp. 116]–125; HCP 1893 25 pp. 89–99
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1892

WalsallHenry Hately, Thomas Moss and James MasonFrank JamesBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| 2,000 hat cards ordered by the local Licensed Victuallers' Association were paid for by James's agent out of the election account. This was illegal expenditure.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=135 4 O'M & H 123]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=124 Day pp. 106]–115; HCP 1893 25 pp. 61–68
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1892

WorcesterWilliam Glaszard and Edwin TurnerHon. George AllsoppBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The petitioners identified 147 cases of bribery by money, and 93 by drink, but the evidence brought forward was minimal.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=165 4 O'M & H 153]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=103 Day pp. 85]–90; HCP 1893 25 pp. 69–77
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 13 Oct 1892

CirencesterHarry Lawson Webster LawsonColonel Thomas Chester-MasterRecount with scrutinyVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The original result had been a majority of 2 for Chester-Master. One voter had erroneously been recorded as voting; his tendered vote was added. Votes not marked with the official mark on the back were bad, but if the ink showed through from the front, they were good. Other votes were struck and others held good. At the end, the candidates were exactly equal.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=206 4 O'M & H 194]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=173 Day pp. 155]–160; HCP 1893 25 pp. 105–107
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 13 Feb 1893

PontefractJohn ShawHarold James ReckittBribery, etc.Void election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| An agent of Reckitt's had corruptly paid travelling expenses of one voter, and had given him an additional payment after he had voted. A corrupt offer of payment had been made to another voter.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=212 4 O'M & H 200]; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&seq=143 Day pp. 125]–131; HCP 1893 25-I pp. 3–12
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 11 Aug 1893

HalifaxAlfred ArnoldWilliam Rawson ShawRecountDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The recount resulted in Shaw obtaining the same 368 vote majority as in the original count.Craig 1974 pp. 116–117[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271&seq=215 4 O'M & H 203]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1895

Elginshire and NairnshireJames Hood and Alexander GillandersHon. John Edward GordonBribery, etc.Duly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Gordon's election expenses began only when he was selected, not when he began seeking selection. A paid polling agent lawfully appointed, who also canvassed on a voluntary basis, was not illegally employed. After these points the petitioners offered no more evidence.5 O'M & H 1; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039875l&seq=7 HCP 1896 63-II p. 3]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1895

HaggerstonWilliam Randal CremerJohn LowlesBribery, etc.; excessive election expenses; RecountDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Some election expenses had not been returned, but would not have taken Lowles over the legal limit. To mark his birthday Lowles distributed 500 cards entitling recipients to 6d. of food, but his name did not appear on them and the cards were distributed by a political opponent; the Judges disagreed on whether this was corrupt treating. They had to agree to make a finding of corruption. The recount increased Lowles' majority from 31 to 40. A recriminatory case was withdrawn.5 O'M & H 68; HCP 1896 63 pp. 23–35
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1895

LancasterThomas Bradshaw and Alfred Wilkes KayeColonel William Henry FosterBribery, etc.; inducing prohibited people to vote; election literature without imprintDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Smoking concerts had been held by Foster's agent, at which free drinks were distributed; these concerts went on routinely outside election times, so were not corrupt. It was not illegal for a voter to have his tram fare to the poll paid for by a friend. The judges did not believe evidence of direct bribery.5 O'M & H 39; HCP 1896 63 pp. 3–14
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1895

LichfieldSir Charles Wolseley, Bt., Theophilus John Levett, John Alkin and John ShawHenry Charles FulfordBribery, etc.; Illegal employment; Incomplete return of election expensesVoid election
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Fulford's donation to an association of miners was not bribery. Treating could not be proved. A sub-agent had voted, and as a result had not been paid; his inferred salary was not an election expense. Paid agents had canvassed, which was unlawful. A regular subsidy paid to a supportive newspaper ought to have been returned as an election expense. Some election meetings were not returned as they ought to have been.5 O'M & H 27; HCP 1896 63 pp. 15–22
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1895

St GeorgeJohn Williams BennHarry Hananel MarksBribery, etc.; False statement of fact; Recount with scrutinyDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Marks was president of a philanthropic society to help the poor of the constituency which distributed tickets for free coal, but distribution was not political and it was not corrupt. Marks' subscription of 5gs. to help costermongers fight a ban on placing stalls was legitimate. Free drinks at a smoking concert were paid by the Irish Unionist Alliance and not by Marks. A campaign statement that Benn had "a skeleton in his cupboard" was not made by an agent of Marks. A recriminatory case failed when it accused Benn of false statements of fact failed because the leaflet in question was published before the Corrupt and Illegal Practices Prevention Act 1895 had come into force; the case did establish that Benn's payment for linen banners was illegal. The recount increased Marks' majority from 4 to 11.5 O'M & H 89
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1895

Southampton (No. 2)Walter Crees Austen and John RowlandTankerville Chamberlayne and Sir John Barrington Simeon, Bt.Bribery, etc.Void election
(Chamberlayne only)
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A member of Chamberlayne and Simeon's committee paid the rail fare for a voter to come from Winchester; this was illegal but a very small amount, and he was given relief. Claims of attempted bribery at public meetings by Chamberlayne were not proved. Chamberlayne had led a procession through the town followed by brewery carts; the procession stopped at many local pubs where followers were given drink. This constituted corrupt treating; Simeon was unconnected with it.5 O'M & H 17; HCP 1896 63 pp. 37–44
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1895

SunderlandSamuel StoreyWilliam Theodore DoxfordFalse statements of factDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| A speech by Doxford saying Storey had accused him of sacking his older workers, and a newspaper claim that Storey had endorsed a socialist programme, were withdrawn at the trial. The Sunderland Herald and Daily Post had republished an editorial as a leaflet, attacking Storey for paying low wages, but the editor of the newspaper was not an agent of Doxford.5 O'M & H 53; HCP 1896 63 pp. 45–50
style="background:#FFFFD0;"

| 13 Jan 1898

YorkSir Christopher FurnessLord Charles William de la Poer BeresfordRecount and scrutinyWithdrawn
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| The recount resulted in Beresford's majority of 11 being eliminated and both candidates receiving the same number of votes, with several ballot papers reserved for a court decision. Furness was advised that he would probably get 4, while Beresford would get 11; his counsel therefore applied to withdraw the petition.5 O'M & H 118
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| 1900

ChristchurchHon. Thomas Allnutt BrasseyMajor Kenneth Robert BalfourVotes cast by ineligible voters; Recount with scrutinyWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| After the recount increased Balfour's majority from 3 to 11, Brassey was advised that he did not have sufficient evidence to prove enough cases of ineligible voters to overturn the result. He was granted permission to withdraw the petition.5 O'M & H 147
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| 1900

CockermouthJohn Armstrong, James Hardaker Brooksbank, Benjamin Brown, James Beck, William Cooper, and Barwise HendersonJohn Scurrah RandlesIllegal practices by agentDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| A room in a pub had been used as a committee room, but it had previously been used in elections and had no connection to the bar. The election address did not have the printers' name, but the photograph of Randles on one side of it had the stamp of the company responsible, so the Judges gave relief. A tea meeting held by Randles' party association was organised independently of his campaign and did not form part of it. A speech critical of Randles' opponent Sir Wilfrid Lawson which was also published as a pamphlet was critical of Lawson's political conduct rather than his personal character, and so could not infringe the law.5 O'M & H 155; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039878f&seq=5 HCP 1901 97]
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| 1900

Islington, WestFrancis Hastings MedhurstThomas Lough and Charles Gasquet, Returning OfficerPolling stations remained open after 8 PMDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| When it turned 8 PM (the time the poll should have closed), voters waiting within polling stations were allowed to vote. The Judges decided that voters who had been given a ballot paper before the close of poll ought to be allowed to fill it in and vote, but those waiting for ballot papers should not be supplied with them. Only 14 ballot papers were given out after 8 PM, which meant that Lough's majority of 19 was safe.5 O'M & H 120; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015033876288&seq=451 HCP 1902 43]
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| 1900

MaidstoneFiennes Stanley Wykeham CornwallisJohn BarkerBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| After several witnesses had given evidence of direct bribery by Barker's agents, Barker's counsel announced that he could not contradict them; Barker himself was unaware of what had happened. There were about 25 proven cases where voters were given either 5s., 7s. 6d., or 10s., to support Barker.5 O'M & H 149; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015033910715&seq=49 HCP 1901 92]
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| 1900

Monmouth BoroughsThomas Embrey and Christopher SweetingDr Frederick Rutherfoord HarrisPayments not made through agent; False return of election expenses; Illegal expenditure; False statement of factVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Thomas Icke gave unchallenged evidence he had been engaged as a clerk, but had been paid in the name of his son; counsel for Harris accepted that this voided the election. The editor of the Western Daily Mail had successfully pressed Harris to advertise in the paper; the bill had been paid by Harris's private secretary (not an agent) but when it was realised that it was election spending the money was refunded and then paid by the agent. Harris's statements accusing his opponent Albert Spicer of living off the profits of cheap foreign labour and giving ammunition to the enemies of England were false statements of fact about Spicer's personal character.5 O'M & H 166; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015033876288&seq=461 HCP 1902 44]
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| 1900

Pembroke BoroughsThomas TerrellGeneral John Wimburn LaurieRecount and scrutinyWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| The recount increased Laurie's majority from 12 to 17. A separate court judgment shortly before the election had ordered the removal of freeholders of Haverfordwest from the electoral register of this constituency, but the election had taken place using the old register; because it was still current, the 28 freeholders who cast votes were entitled to do so. At that point the petitioners applied to withdraw the petition and Laurie also applied to withdraw a counter-petition alleging corruption; the court allowed both applications.5 O'M & H 135; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015033876288&seq=439 HCP 1902 42]
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| 1906

ApplebyHon. Henry William Edmund Petty-Fitzmaurice, Earl of KerryLeifchild Stratten JonesRecount and scrutinyWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| The recount increased Jones's majority from 3 to 8; nine ballot papers were reserved for the opinion of the court. Kerry was advised that he would not secure enough to obtain a majority and successfully applied to withdraw the petition.5 O'M & H 237
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| 1906

BodminLt-Col William Henry Vallack Tom and William Stuart Bruton DuffHon. Thomas Charles Reginald Agar-RobartesBribery, etc.; False return of election expensesVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Evidence on bribery substantiated only one case which involved a shilling; the petitioners withdrew the charge, and also offered no evidence of illegal payments. Agar-Robartes had held a series of meetings from 1903 onwards to make himself known; the Judges disagreed about whether their costs were election expenses. Agar-Robartes had regularly gone to pubs around the constituency and bought everyone a round of drinks, sometimes with his election agent; this was corrupt treating. A garden party given by Agar-Robartes' parents had 4,000 attendees; Agar-Robartes' election agent used it to campaign for his election, so it too was corrupt treating.5 O'M & H 225
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| 1906

Great YarmouthMartin WhiteArthur FellBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| A man named Baker drove voters to the polls in a cart which had been lent to Fell for polling day. He gave each voter between two and five shillings. When one of Fell's campaign workers was told about it, he challenged Baker, who denied doing so; Baker was allowed to continue using the cart. The Judges disagreed on whether Baker was an agent of Fell for the purposes of election law; they needed to agree to avoid the election. An almanac distributed by Fell on Christmas Day was not returnable as an election expense. Meetings and smoking concerts organised by Fell's local association from 1904, at which free drink was distributed, were not election expenses and did not constitute corrupt treating. A party for the retiring MP for the seat openly advertised in local newspapers where some whisky was given was not corrupt treating.5 O'M & H 176; HCP 1906 169
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| 1906

MaidstoneSir Francis Evans, Bt.Charles Stewart Henry Vane-Tempest-Stewart, Viscount CastlereaghBribery, etc.; false statement of election expenses; exceeding maximum election expensesDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| A witness statement from a campaign worker claiming to have been paid £2 by Castlereagh's agent had been taken under pressure and the witness recanted. An elderly voter who had been brought by car to vote but missed the lift back was given his railway fare back home, but after the polls had closed; this did not constitute bribery. A "mad freak of [a] man" named Tyrer who had seized some of Castlereagh's leaflets and gone out waving them, calling for support for Castlereagh, and throwing money down from a balcony was not authorised by the campaign. Castlereagh was not adopted as a candidate until 27 December 1905 and his spending before then was not election expenses.5 O'M & H 200
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| 1906

Sheffield, AttercliffeArnold Muir WilsonJ. Batty LangleyFalse statement of factDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Wilson, a solicitor and Sheffield City Councillor, had pressed the Attorney-General to prosecute fellow councillor Charles Hobson who had accepted a £100 bribe for persuading the council to buy a piece of land; Wilson had been the prosecuting counsel and Hobson had been imprisoned. Langley had issued a leaflet on polling day stating "Who hounded Charles Hobson to prison? NOT BATTY LANGLEY". The statement that Wilson had hounded Hobson was not a false statement of fact in the mind of Langley. Other statements in the leaflet were not about Wilson's personal character.5 O'M & H 218
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| 1906

WorcesterHenry Devenish Harben and Richard CadburyGeorge Henry WilliamsonBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| After three days of evidence which established extensive bribery of voters, counsel for Williamson accepted that he could not contest the petition. Williamson was personally unaware of the bribery.5 O'M & H 212; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039880s&seq=5 HCP 1906 198]; Command [https://books.google.com/books?id=dh41AQAAMAAJ Cd.3268] and [https://books.google.com/books?id=TiE1AQAAMAAJ Cd.3269]
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| Jan 1910

Denbigh BoroughsAllen Clement EdwardsHon. William George Arthur Ormsby-GoreRecount and scrutinyWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| The recount increased Ormsby-Gore's majority from 8 to 10 votes. As a result, Edwards applied for, and was given, leave to withdraw the petition.6 O'M & H 57
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| Jan 1910

Dorset, EasternLt-Col Walker Miller Lambert and Gerald Dennis BondCaptain Hon. Frederick Edward GuestBribery, etc.; false declaration of election expensesVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| The Guest family under Viscount Wimborne was a major local landowner. A workman on the family estates was sacked in what the Judges suspected was a demonstration to other workers of the need for political loyalty. 400 allotment holders, who were being evicted by the estate which wanted building land, were allowed to stay after a campaign by a political supporter of Guest, but this action did not appear to be corrupt. Estate agents were outside polling booths watching voters; this was lawful. The Judge did not believe claims of direct bribery. A large number of cars were used to drive voters to the polls, including by Lady Wimborne; their cost was election expenses. Pamphlets defending the Guest family should have been counted for election expenses, which took the total over the maximum.6 O'M & H 22; [https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=umn.31951d02039881q&seq=13 HCP 1910 158]
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| Jan 1910

The HartlepoolsJoseph Forster Wilson and John Roger ButterwickSir Christopher FurnessBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| Furness's son Marmaduke hired a special train to convey horses, carriages and grooms to the borough where they were used to transport voters to the polls; this expenditure was not illegal. Clerks working for Furness's firm were allowed to help on election day, a Saturday, but the work was voluntary and therefore their salary was not election expenses. £5 of postage stamps was not returned as election expenses, which took the amount over the maximum, but the Judges gave relief. Furness's agent had however, unknown to the candidate, hired a band of miners who went about the streets intimidating voters. The election was void for undue influence.6 O'M & H 1
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| Jan 1910

Kerry, EasternJohn Murphy and Daniel CollinsEugene O'SullivanViolation of secrecy of the ballot; Personation; Undue influence; Employment of prohibited personsVoid election
{{small|No by-election before December 1910 general election.}}
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|

colspan="5"| Claims that O'Sullivan voted twice were disproved by the presiding officer at the polling station; nor had he illegally helped an illiterate voter to mark his ballot paper. There may have been personated votes cast, but O'Sullivan's campaign was not involved. Speeches by O'Sullivan had not threatened violence against his opponents. A crowd led by an agent of O'Sullivan's had threatened a group of Murphy's supporters, preventing them from voting; other voters were intimidated against going to the polls. O'Sullivan may have kicked opposing voters and fired pistol shots. The election was void for undue influence.6 O'M & H 58
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| Jan 1910

North LonsdaleJoseph BlissGeorge Bahr HaddockRecount; Ballot papers erroneously counted or rejectedDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| The recount increased Haddock's majority from 69 to 169. Bliss then asked for the petition to be taken as a special case, which was allowed, but no new issues were raised.6 O'M & H 97
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| Dec 1910

CheltenhamEdward Powell Smythies and John Richard Baker ClaridgeRichard MathiasFalse declaration of election expenses; illegal employment; illegal hiringVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| At the end of the petitioners' case, counsel for Mathias accepted that at an early stage it had been proved that his campaign had exceeded the maximum of election expenses, and had submitted a false declaration to hide it. The campaign overspent on vehicles to carry voters to the polls. Mathias was personally unaware.6 O'M & H 194
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| Dec 1910

ChippenhamBryn Hozier FreemanGeorge TerrellRecountWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| The recount reduced Terrell's majority from 26 to 24, with 21 further ballot papers which had been rejected. As they could not overturn Terrell's majority, Freeman applied for and was given permission to withdraw the petition. Heard as a special case by request of the parties.6 O'M & H 99
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| Dec 1910

Cork, EasternTimothy Glavin and Thomas CoadyCaptain Anthony John Charles DonelanIntimidation; Bribery, etc.; personation; illegal payments; false declaration of election expensesVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Isolated acts of burning effigies of opponents and exhibiting coffins did not prove general intimidation. An "eccentric and irresponsible person" had offered a bribe unconnected with Donelan. Personation was not proved. Donelan ought not to have supplied food to people attending his meetings but it was not corrupt. Donelan's campaign had paid for vehicles to convey voters to the polls and also hired special trains. The account book of the campaign spending was said to have been routinely destroyed; the Judges found that it was deliberately destroyed to prevent illegal payments being proved; the submitted return must have been false.6 O'M & H 318; HCP 1911 204
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| Dec 1910

ExeterHenry Edward DukeRichard Harold St. MaurScrutiny of votesUndue election
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|

colspan="5"| The original result and a recount both gave St. Maur a majority of 4 votes, with several papers left for the court to decide. A vote with "Up, Duke!" in addition to a cross in Duke's box was held bad because the voter might be identified. A voter who had moved into a house previously occupied by someone with the same surname, and voted in the name of the previous occupier, was entitled to do so because he was eligible to register. A voter who had voted twice in two different wards had one vote struck. A voter whose son was employed on election day was entitled to vote. Five people employed on St. Maur's campaign had voted and their votes were struck; a recriminatory case succeeded in striking off two votes from people employed by Duke's campaign and one whose son was employed. At the end of all objections, Duke had a majority of one vote.{{multiref|6 O'M & H 228|Helmore 1967 [https://archive.org/details/corruptillegalpr0000helm/page/37 Part 2: The Petition]}}
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| Dec 1910

GloucesterHenry Finnis Blosse LynchHenry TerrellRecountWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| The recount left Terrell's majority of four votes unchanged, and counsel for Lynch was granted permission to withdraw the petition.6 O'M & H 101
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| Dec 1910

Kingston upon Hull CentralMarriott Morley, Charles Wray, and Benjamin MusgraveSir Henry Seymour KingBribery, etc.Void election
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|

colspan="5"| King had celebrated his 25th anniversary as MP for the constituency shortly before the election. To mark it, he had distributed coal to anyone receiving out-relief, and also sent sweets to all children in local schools. Although distribution was stopped immediately that the election was called, the distribution constituted corrupt treating.6 O'M & H 372
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| Dec 1910

King's LynnHarry Flanders, William Carter Watling, and Richard SenterHolcombe InglebyBribery, etc.; illegal hiringDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Ingleby was Mayor of King's Lynn in 1909–10 and gave a large amount of hospitality in his year in office, which he funded. However he took the Mayoralty before becoming a candidate, and the entertaining was not done with a corrupt intention to influence voters. The Judges found that a voter who was given a lift to the polls was taken not in a hired car but a personal car, which was not illegal.6 O'M & H 179
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| Dec 1910

Louth, NorthernDaniel Fearon, James Hanlon, Thomas Hanratty, and Patrick LarkinRichard HazletonIntimidation; violation of secrecy of ballot; bribery, etc.; personation; illegal payments; false statement of factVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Crowds did jeer voters known to oppose Hazleton, and some were assaulted, but not prevented from voting, so general intimidation was not proved. Only 12 ballot papers were exposed, and those accidentally. An unemployed voter was offered a job with the Dundalk Urban District Council by a councillor allied to Hazleton; this was bribery. Several voters were treated by police officers. Mobs under the control of agents of Hazleton threatened voters; this was undue influence. Campaign workers were illegally employed by the United Irish League rather than the agent. Two motor cars were apparently hired but there was no proof of the contract. A leaflet which stated that the family of Hazleton's opponent Timothy Michael Healy were all seeking government jobs was a false statement of fact.6 O'M & H 103; HCP 1911 75
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| Dec 1910

Mile EndBertram Stuart StrausHon. Harry Lawson Webster LawsonRecountWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| The recount increased Lawson's majority from 2 to 6; counsel for Straus then applied for, and was given, permission to withdraw the petition.6 O'M & H 100
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| Dec 1910

Nottingham, EastGeorge Goodall and Joseph ReidCaptain James Archibald MorrisonBribery, etc.Duly elected
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|

colspan="5"| A large number of witnesses gave statements claiming to have been given 5s. for their votes, but they were paid for making the statements, and almost all when called as witnesses in the court gave evidence that their statements were not true. A small number of election payments were not returned as election expenses but it was a trivial amount. Morrison was the head of a charity which distributed gifts, and he probably intended to influence the constituency generally, but they were not individual bribes.6 O'M & H 292; HCP 1911 170
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| Dec 1910

St. Pancras, WestJohn George Haller and William Lloyd-TaylorFelix Maximilian Schoenbrunn CasselRecountWithdrawn
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|

colspan="5"| The recount increased Cassel's majority from 8 to 9. Counsel for the petitioners were then given permission to withdraw the petition.6 O'M & H 102
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| Dec 1910

West BromwichAlfred Ernest William HazelWilliam Legge, Viscount LewishamScrutiny of votesDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| The initial result was a majority for Lewisham of 5; a recount increased it to 42. Several dubious ballot papers were held good. A voter said to have admitted he was employed by Lewisham's agent did not prove that he was, so his vote was good. The employment of a voter's 22-year-old son in the election did not invalidate his vote. A voter who was employed and who had cast a spoilt ballot did not mean that a good vote should be disallowed. People working for an advertising company contracted to post Lewisham's posters, and those paid as sandwich-board men, were not employed on the campaign and their votes were good. A voter paid for carrying a torch in a torchlight procession, and the organiser of the procession, had their votes struck. Other people who had worked on the campaign had their votes struck. At the end of the scrutiny Lewisham had a majority of 2.Craig 1974 p. 2056 O'M & H 256
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| Dec 1910

West Ham, NorthEdmond Johnson Boake and George Alfred BrabazonCharles Frederick Gurney MastermanFalse return of election expenses; exceeding maximum election expenses; illegal employmentVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Masterman's election agent admitted in evidence that he had suffered a breakdown during the election. The court refused to give Masterman relief for the excess spending, accepting it did not have the power.6 O'M & H 392
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| 1922

Berwick-upon-TweedRobert Carr Bosanquet and Bertram Fitzherbert WiddringtonHilton PhilipsonFalse return of election expenses; exceeding limit on election expenses; illegal hiring; payment other than through election agentVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Philipson's agent had ordered £164 15s. 1d. of printing work from George Martin, which resulted in him exceeding the maximum. In order to bring the return below, Martin agreed to reduce the amount on the invoice to £68 3s. 7d. The return also omitted £6 6s. 6d. on hire of motor cars, the salary of a woman organiser, and the hire of a room for election work. £4 for the hire of cars on election day was illegal hiring. Some expenses were paid through sub-agents, which was lawful; however there were payments made after the deadline. Philipson was unaware of the illegal practices.7 O'M & H 1
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| 1922

Derbyshire, North-EasternJoseph Stanley HolmesFrank Lee and Harry Reginald Cleaver, Returning OfficerRecount; erroneous counting of votes; mislaying votesDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| The recount reduced Lee's majority from 5 to 3, with 63 votes for Lee and 56 for Holmes challenged and 76 rejected. The petition was heard as a special case. Three votes (2 for Lee, 1 for Holmes) had been found in the counting hall after the result had been declared; they were held good. 45 of the challenged votes for Holmes were good; 9 were void for want of official mark and 2 for uncertainty. 57 of the challenged votes for Lee were good; 6 were void for want of official mark. One of the rejected votes was held good for Holmes. This gave Lee a majority of 15. There were two ballot papers unaccounted for, but they could not affect Lee's majority. Of the 69 votes rejected for want of official mark, 38 were for Lee and 31 for Holmes, so they did not affect his majority.The Times Law Reports, Vol. 39, p. 423
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| 1923

OxfordHugh Hall and James Herbert MorrellFrank GrayFalse declaration of election expenses; exceeding limit on election expenses; payment other than through election agent; illegal hiringVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Gray's agent returned expenses in excess of the legal maximum, but sought relief on grounds of inadvertence; this application was ordered to stand over until the petition had been heard. The Judges found that the return was deliberately understated: an advertising bill of £91 2s. 0d. was returned as £72 17s. 7d.; printing costing £53 19s. 9d. was returned as £48 11s. 9d.; post cards costing £72 17s. 0d. were said to cost £40. The cost of distributing the post cards, £41 13s. 4d., was not returned when it ought to have been. A bill for printing from the Oxford Chronicle, originally £181 9s. 0d., was dishonestly reduced to £118 6s. 0d; a special edition of the paper costing £20 was also election expenses. The agent had deducted £4 from a bill for stationery in respect of items returned unused on which a refund was given; he was not entitled to do so. Various other items, including £2 for rent of committee rooms, and £15 7s. for two women and a youth working on the election, were added. Some payments were not made through the election agent. Paid distributors of election addresses were not illegal. Gray was exonerated of involvement.7 O'M & H 49
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| 1929

Plymouth, DrakeNicholas John Pethick Revington and Andrew Treeby EasterbrookJames John Hamlyn MosesBribery; illegal expenditure; illegal hiring; false return of election expenses; payment other than through election agentDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Albert Ballard was a well known philanthropist who had opened the Ballard Institute boys' club in Plymouth. He promised a firework display and celebration if Moses won, while threatening to close the club if Moses lost. However, no voter gave evidence that they were influenced in their vote by his actions, and he was not acting as Moses' agent when he spoke to the boys, so it was not bribery. Moses had tried to stop Ballard distributing a circular in his support, so he was not responsible for it and it was rightly excluded from the return of election expenses. A taxi was hired to help take voters to the polls by a sub-agent, which was illegal, but the agent was unaware and the Judges granted relief to those involved as they had broken the law through inadvertence. The return was not strictly compliant with proper form but relief was given.7 O'M & H 101
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| 1955

Fermanagh and South TyroneLt-Col Robert George GrosvenorPhilip Christopher ClarkeCandidate disqualified due to conviction for treason felonyUndue election
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|

colspan="5"| Clarke had been convicted of three counts of treason felony as a participant in an armed raid on Omagh barracks, and on 15 December 1954 had been sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment. As such he was disqualified from election under the Forfeiture Act 1870. Grosvenor's agent had inserted adverts in the Tyrone Courier and Dungannon News, the Impartial Reporter and Farmers' Journal and the Tyrone Constitution drawing attention to Clarke's position and likely disqualification; the Fermanagh Herald and the Dungannon Observer had also reported that Clarke's supporters were aware people serving prison sentences of over a year were disqualified. Similar statements had been broadcast on the BBC and Radio Éireann. Grosvenor had also distributed 30,121 leaflets headed "Notice of disqualification of candidate" to people known not to be his supporters, and displayed posters outside most polling stations. The Judges were satisfied that those voting for Clarke knew he was disqualified and therefore threw away their votes.{{cite journal |journal=The Table; Being the Journal of the Society of Clerks-at-the-Table in Commonwealth Parliaments |url=https://www.societyofclerks.org/Documents/Tables/The%20Table%201955%20(vol%2024).pdf#page=63 |volume=24 |pages=59–76 |title=Controverted elections to the House of Commons in 1955 |date=1955 |publisher=Butterworth |location=London |issn=0264-7133 |access-date=9 August 2024 }}
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| 11 Aug 1955

Mid UlsterCharles BeattieThomas James MitchellCandidate disqualified due to conviction for treason felonyUndue election
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|

colspan="5"| Mitchell had been convicted of three counts of treason felony as a participant in an armed raid on Omagh barracks, and on 15 December 1954 had been sentenced to 10 years' imprisonment. As such he was disqualified from election under the Forfeiture Act 1870. He had previously been elected and disqualified by resolution of the House of Commons on 18 July 1955. The news of his disqualification had been widely reported in newspapers circulating in the constituency, in newspapers read by supporters of both Beattie and Mitchell, and had also been broadcast on the BBC and Radio Éireann. During the by-election campaign the Ulster Herald, which circulated among Mitchell's supporters, had again reported that Mitchell was in prison. Beattie's election address had asserted Mitchell's disqualification. The Judges were satisfied that those voting for Mitchell knew he was disqualified and therefore threw away their votes.
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| 1959

Kensington, NorthSir Oswald Ernald Mosley, Bt.George Henry Roland Rogers and Arthur Newton Edward McHaffie, returning officerVoters not crossed off as voting; ballots improperly transported to the count; improper count arrangements; admission of improper persons to the countDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Mosley had conducted a survey of those not marked as voting, and 111 said they had in fact voted. Only 10 were willing to be called as witnesses, and five then said they had not actually voted. Of the other five, their votes were good and there was no evidence they had taken advantage of their name not being crossed off, in order to vote more than once. There was no rule requiring police to accompany ballot boxes from polling stations to the count. Ivor Richard, a candidate in Kensington, South, together with a counting agent for that constituency, had wrongly been allowed into the count but they had not interfered with it, so it did not affect the result.1960 (1) AELR 762
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| 4 May 1961

Bristol, South-EastMalcolm Archibald James St. Clair and John Malcolm HarrisHon. Anthony Neil Wedgwood Benn, Viscount StansgateCandidate disqualified as a PeerUndue election
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|

colspan="5"| {{main|Re Bristol South-East Parliamentary Election}} Benn had succeeded to the peerage as Viscount Stansgate on the death of his father on 17 November 1960; notwithstanding the fact that he had not applied for a writ of summons to the House of Lords, he was disqualified from the House of Commons. St. Clair had widely advertised in the press and displayed notices drawing attention to Benn's position and disqualification. The Judges were satisfied that those voting for Benn knew he was disqualified and therefore threw away their votes.{{multiref|1961 (3) AELR 354| [1961] 3 WLR 577| {{cite journal |journal=The Table; Being the Journal of the Society of Clerks-at-the-Table in Commonwealth Parliaments |url=https://www.societyofclerks.org/Documents/Tables/The%20Table%201961%20(vol%2030).pdf#page=23 |volume=30 |pages=23–56 |title=The Stansgate Case |date=1961 |first=M. A. J. |last=Wheeler-Booth |publisher=Butterworth |location=London |issn=0264-7133 |access-date=14 August 2024 }} }}
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| 1964

Kinross and West PerthshireChristopher Murray GrieveThe Rt Hon. Sir Alexander Frederick Douglas-Home KTExpenses incurred without authority of election agent; False return of election expensesDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| The BBC and ITA had incurred costs tranmitting party political broadcasts in which Douglas-Home had appeared as Leader of the Conservative Party. Because the broadcasts were aimed at the whole of the country, they were not aimed at promoting the election of Douglas-Home in the constituency, so the cost of the broadcasts were not election expenses within the meaning of the statute.Scots Law Times, 1965, p. 186
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| 28 Jul 1983

Penrith and the BorderLt-Comm. Eric Wilfred Morgan DSCDavid John MacleanIllegal election expenses; false declaration of election expenses; false statement of fact; undue influenceDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| No evidence could be found to support the claims of illegal spending on committee rooms; the return of election expenses was accurate. The omission of Morgan from a list of candidates published in The Daily Telegraph was unfortunate but only an irritation, and did not amount to a false statement of fact on the part of Maclean. Claims that Viscount Whitelaw exercised undue influence in supporting Maclean were "an enormous impertinence" which should never have been made.Cumberland and Westmorland Herald, 24 December 1983 p. 1
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 1992

Belfast, WestMaura McCroryDr. Joseph Gerard Hendron and Thomas KellyFailure to return election expenses or pay election expenses within the time limit; exceeding maximum election expensesDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| Hendron's election agent, Thomas Kelly, was a novice who was the only volunteer for the job after previous agents had been attacked by thugs. The return of election expenses had not included £703.25 of printing and advertisements, £40 for minibus hire, and £88.12 for public address system hire. A discount given on advertising in the Irish News, and spending on election surveys, were not election expenses. Bills settled through the treasurer of the constituency council were still made through the election agent; however not all bills were settled within the time limit. Both Hendron and Kelly applied for relief on the grounds that the breaches were inadvertent; in the circumstances of the pressure on Kelly and his ignorance of the law, the court granted relief on all items.[1993] NI QBD 177
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 1997

WinchesterGerald Peter MaloneMark Oaten and Lindsay Garrett Fox, returning officerFailure to stamp ballot papers with the official mark; improper rejection of votes; personation; failure to count tendered ballotsVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Four voters cast tendered ballots after claiming to have been personated, but the personators could not be found and the allegation was not pursued. 56 ballot papers had not been stamped with the official mark; had they been held good, Oaten's majority of 2 would have been reversed and Malone would have had a majority of 2. A special case determined that the possibility that the failure to stamp the ballot papers resulted from errors by the returning officer's staff meant that the result could not be certain.The Times, 2 October 1997, p. 2
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 2001

Fermanagh and South TyroneJames Leslie CooperMichelle GildernewFailure to close poll on time; ballot papers issued and votes cast after close of the pollDuly elected
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|

colspan="5"| At the polling station in Garrison, County Fermanagh, a queue of 40–50 people were waiting to vote at 10 PM when the poll should have closed. The presiding officer stopped issuing ballot papers at 10 PM, but was then confronted by the crowd and supporters of Gildernew who demanded to be able to vote. The presiding officer, described as "petrified" by one of the police on duty, gave way and allowed 15–20 people to vote before being ordered by the area electoral office to stop. Because the number of ballot papers issued was less than Gildernew's majority of 53, election was still conducted substantially according to law. [http://www.courtsni.gov.uk/en-GB/Judicial%20Decisions/PublishedByYear/Documents/2001/2001%20NIQB%2036/j_j_CARF3507.htm 2001 NI QB 36]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 2010

Fermanagh and South TyroneRodney ConnorMichelle Gildernew, Douglas Bain (Chief Electoral Officer), and Martin Fox (Deputy Returning Officer)Errors in issuing ballot papers; ballot papers wrongly counted and rejectedDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Some ballot boxes contained more ballot papers than verified as having been issued, involving a total of 36 votes. 24 of the votes were a result of voters putting their ballot paper in the wrong box at a polling station where there were multiple boxes. In another polling station there was an excess of 8 votes; the Judges rejected claims that they had been surreptitiously added, and decided that they had not been accurately recorded. Another box had missed a single vote, so there were only 3 unaccounted additional votes; there were innocent explanations which could explain them. Connor had not identified four votes which he contended ought not to have been counted for Gildernew, so the challenge could not be sustained. Two votes claimed to be on poor quality paper and therefore counterfeit could not be traced. When the third recount produced the same result as the second recount, the Returning Officer was right to refuse a fourth recount. As the 3 unaccounted additional votes were less than Gildernew's majority, the result would not have been affected.[http://www.courtsni.gov.uk/en-GB/Judicial%20Decisions/PublishedByYear/Documents/2010/2010%20NIQB%20113/j_j_MOR7979Final.htm 2010 NIQB 113]
style="background:#FFD0FF;"

| 2010

Oldham East and SaddleworthRobert Elwyn James WatkinsPhilip James WoolasFalse statement of factVoid election
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|

colspan="5"| Leaflets issued by Woolas claimed that Watkins sought the support of Muslims who advocated violence, that Watkins had refused to condemn death threats against Woolas, and that Watkins had reneged on a promise to live in the constituency. All three statements were false statements of fact about Watkins which attacked his personal character, and Woolas did not believe them to be true. A rhetorical question asking whether Watkins' campaign had been funded by illegal and undeclared foreign donations was also a false statement of fact attacking Watkins' personal character, but Woolas may have had reasonable grounds for believing it to be true. Woolas subsequently sought a judicial review of the findings, and was granted permission to bring the action; the High Court ruled that the statement that Watkins had reneged on a promise to live in the constituency concerned his political actions and did not therefore come under the Act, but upheld the other two statements and the avoidance of the election.[https://web.archive.org/web/20101121175647/http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/Resources/JCO/Documents/Judgments/judgment-oldham-election-05112010.pdf 2010 EWHC 2702 (QB)]; [http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20120601204028/http%3A//www.judiciary.gov.uk/Resources/JCO/Documents/Judgments/judgment%2Dwoolas%2D031210.pdf 2010 EWHC 3169 (Admin)]
style="background:#D0FFD0;"

| 2015

Orkney and ShetlandTimothy Denis Morrison, Euphemia Matheson, Fiona Morag Grahame, and Carolyn Ann WellingAlexander Morrison CarmichaelFalse statement of factDuly elected
class="expand-child"

|

colspan="5"| Carmichael's statement that he had first become aware of the leak of a memorandum from the Scotland Office was a false statement of fact, but it did not concern his personal character or conduct. A preliminary hearing determined that statements made by a candidate about themselves, and false statements to the credit of a candidate, are covered by the prohibition on false statements of fact.[https://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/search-judgments/judgment?id=eb9eeea6-8980-69d2-b500-ff0000d74aa7 2015 ECIH 71] [http://www.scotcourts.gov.uk/search-judgments/judgment?id=9452fba6-8980-69d2-b500-ff0000d74aa7 Timothy Morrison and others v Alistair Carmichael MP and Alistair Buchan]

;Notes:

{{reflist|group="n"}}

Petitions withdrawn before trial

In some cases a petition was presented and security for costs was given, but the petitioner applied to withdraw the petition before trial.

  • 1868: Athlone. John Stamforth v. John James Ennis.
  • 1868: Boston. Thomas Mason Jones v. John Wingfield Malcolm and Thomas Collins.
  • 1868: Bradford (No. 3). Samuel Storey and Thomas Garnett v. Rt. Hon. William Edward Forster.
  • 1868: Cambridge. Daniel Lloyd and John Brown v. Robert Richard Torrens and William Fowler.
  • 1868: Carlow. Richard Boardman v. William Fagan.
  • 1868: Christchurch. Harcourt Pauncefoot Popham v. Edmund Haviland Burke.
  • 1868: Derbyshire, Northern (No. 1). William Longsdon and others v. Augustus Peter Arkwright.
  • 1868: Derbyshire, Northern (No. 2). John Broxup Coates and another v. Lord George Henry Cavendish.
  • 1868: Dublin City (No. 2). Hon. David Robert Plunket v. Jonathan Pim.
  • 1868: Dumfriesshire. George Gustavus Walker v. Sir Sydney Hedley Waterlow.
  • 1868: Durham, Southern. John Cary Hendy and William Watson Brown v. Joseph W. Pease and Frederick Blackett Beaumont.
  • 1868: Enniskillen. George Kittson and Thomas Johnston v. John Henry, Viscount Crichton.
  • 1868: Gloucester. Francis Niblett and others v. William Philip Price and Charles James Monk.
  • 1868: Hampshire, Southern (No. 1). John Watkins Drew v. Lord Henry Scott.
  • 1868: Hampshire, Southern (No. 2). Charles Castleman and Arthur Frederick Naghton v. Rt. Hon. William Francis Cowper.
  • 1868: The Hartlepools. William Gray and others v. Ralph Ward Jackson.
  • 1868: Horsham (No. 1). Charles Spencer Scrace Dickins and another v. Robert Henry Hurst.
  • 1868: Kingston upon Hull. Joseph Walker Pease and others v. Charles Morgan Norwood and James Clay.
  • 1868: Pembroke. William Hughes v. Thomas Meyrick.
  • 1868: Preston. Joseph Toulmin and Richard Pemberton v. Edward Hermon and Sir Thomas George Fermor Hesketh, Bt.
  • 1868: Shrewsbury. Thomas Young and James Coch v. James Figgins.
  • 1868: County Sligo (No. 1). John Hannon and James Casey v. Sir Robert Gore Booth, Bt.
  • 1868: County Sligo (No. 2). Henry Griffith v. Denis Maurice O'Connor.
  • 1868: Stockport (No. 1). James Walton and William Jones v. John Benjamin Smith.
  • 1868: Stockport (No. 2). Ephraim Hallam and John Eskrigge v. William Tipping.
  • 1868: Taunton (No. 1). John Dyke and William Oaten v. Alexander Charles Barclay.
  • 1868: Taunton (No. 3). John Dyke and William Oaten v. Alexander Charles Barclay.
  • 1868: Thirsk. Frederic Bell and others v. Sir William Payne Gallwey, Bt.
  • 1868: Warwickhire, Southern. William Colley and others v. John Hardy.
  • 1868: Wick Burghs. Edmund Beatty Lockyer v. George Loch.
  • 1868: York (No. 1). T. H. Gladstone v. James Lowther.
  • 1868: York (No. 2). John Burrill v. Joshua Proctor Brown-Westhead.
  • 24 April 1869: Brecon. David Evans, David Williams, Rees Price and Edward Williams v. Edward Hyde Villiers, Lord Hyde.
  • 6 February 1872: Kerry. Thomas Duckett Maybury and Maurice Harman v. Rowland Ponsonby Blennerhassett.
  • 16 April 1873: Tyrone. John William Ellison Macartney v. Capt. Hon. Henry William Lowry Corry.
  • 1874: Ayr Burghs. Edward Henry John Craufurd v. Sir William James Montgomery Cuninghame, Bt.
  • 1874: Durham, Southern. Henry Edward Surtees, William Culley Stobart and George Anthony Leaton Blenkinsopp v. Joseph Whitwell Pease and Frederick Edward Blackett Beaumont.
  • 1874: Isle of Wight. Hon. A.E.M. Ashley v. A.B. Cochrane.
  • 1874: Kerry. Maurice James O'Connell, James Egan, John Harrison, and Maurice Walsh v. Henry Arthur Herbert and Rowland Ponsonby Blennerhassett.
  • 1874: Kidderminster. H.R. Willis and another v. Albert Grant.
  • 1874: Leitrim. Francis O'Beirne v. William Richard Ormsby Gore (The trial judge refused permission for the petition to be listed for trial).
  • 1874: Pembroke. G. White v. Edward James Reed.
  • 1874: Stockport. John Oldfield and James Kirk v. Charles Henry Hopwood and Frederick Pennington.
  • 26 May 1874: Poole. Sir I.B. Guest, Bt. v. Hon. A.M. Ashley.
  • 22 June 1874: Durham, Northern. Edward Pickering and William Williams v. Charles Mark Palmer.
  • 1880: Bandon. John Corcoran v. Percy B. Bernard.
  • 1880: Bury St Edmunds. W.H. Rushbrooke and another v. J.A. Hardcastle.
  • 1880: Cheshire, Western. J. Ledsham and another v. W.F.Tollemache and another.
  • 1880: Colchester. Thomas May, John Lay, Alfred Robert Staines, James Watson, William Moseley Tabrum and Frederick Abraham Cole v. William Willis.
  • 1880: Dunbartonshire. John William Burns v. Archibald Orr-Ewing.
  • 1880: Hereford. J.B. Preece and others v. J. Pulley and another.
  • 1880: Horsham. T.W. Cowan and others v. Sir H. Fletcher.
  • 1880: Leominster. S.W. Johnson and another v. J. Rankin.
  • 1880: Londonderry City. John Boyle and William Conaghan v. Charles Edward Lewis.
  • 1880: Londonderry County. James Forrest and Thomas Walker v. Rt. Hon. Hugh Law and Sir Thomas McClure, Bt.
  • 1880: Nottingham. P. Isaac and another v. C. Seely and another. Although the Judges passed on a letter reporting rumours that the Respondents had paid £10,000 to secure the withdrawal of the petition, they stated that they had no reason to believe it to be true.[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044106503642&seq=561 HCP 1880 316]
  • 1880: Stroud. W. Smith v. W.J. Stenton and another.
  • 1880: Wicklow. William Wentworth FitzWilliam Dick v. James Carlisle McCoan and Howard Brooke.
  • 1880: Wilton. S.B. Wilson v. Hon. S. Herbert.
  • 1892: Halifax. Alfred Arnold v. William Rawson Shaw.
  • 1892: Lichfield. Sir John Swinburne, Bt. v. Major Darwin.
  • 1895: Durham. Arthur Ralph Douglas Elliot v. Matthew Fowler.
  • 1895: Edinburgh, South. Robert Burn and Joseph Train Gray v. Robert Cox.
  • 1895: Southampton (No. 1). Sir Francis Henry Evans v. Tankerville Chamberlayne and Sir John Stephen Barrington Simeon, Bt.
  • 1900: Wick Burghs. James Edward Harper and others v. Arthur Bignold. (The petitioner was substituted by Thomas Charles Hunter Hedderwick.)
  • 14 July 1988: Kensington. Phylip Andrew David Hobson v. John Dudley Fishburn. Ordered to be struck out on the motion of the respondent: the petitioner was aged 19 so he could not lodge a petition claiming to have been elected, as the Parliamentary Elections Act 1695 set the minimum age at 21. Hobson attempted to withdraw the petition and substitute a new one in which he would petition as an elector, but he was out of time to do so.Shiranikha Herbert, "Courts constrained by election time-limits", The Guardian, 1 November 1988, p. 39.
  • 2015: Mid Bedfordshire. Timothy Scott Ireland v Nadine Vanessa Dorries. Ordered to be struck out on the motion of the respondent: the petition was not served on the respondent according to law as it was delivered to her constituency office rather than her home address.Tabby Kinder, "[http://www.thelawyer.com/news/practice-areas/litigation-news/clifford-chance-client-nadine-dorries-mp-bats-off-harrassment-election-petition/3037785.article Clifford Chance client Nadine Dorries MP bats off "harassment" election petition], The Lawyer, 30 July 2015.
  • 6 June 2019: Peterborough. Michael Greene v. Lisa Forbes.{{cite news |last1=Lamy |first1=Joel |title=Peterborough Brexit Party candidate ordered to pay full legal costs to Labour after dropping election result challenge |url=https://www.peterboroughtoday.co.uk/news/politics/peterborough-brexit-party-candidate-ordered-pay-full-legal-costs-labour-after-dropping-election-result-challenge-2525515 |access-date=6 April 2020 |work=Peterborough Telegraph |date=6 April 2020}}

See also

Sources

  • CommandCommand paper with the report of a special commission to enquire into the corruption found by the petition judgment.
  • {{cite book |authorlink=F. W. S. Craig |last=Craig |first=F. W. S. |title=British Parliamentary Election Results 1885–1918 |publisher=Macmillan |year=1974 |isbn=9781349022984}}
  • Day — {{cite book |last=Day |first=Samuel H. |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.35112203953296&view=1up&seq=7 |title=Election cases in 1892 and 1893: being a collection of the points of law and practice arising out of the parliamentary election petitions in those years, together with reports of the judgments |location=London |publisher=Stevens and Sons |date=1894 }}
  • Fitzgerald — {{cite book |title=The judgments of Mr Baron Fitzgerald, in the cases of the election petitions for the boroughs of Limerick, Belfast, and Cashel |first=John |last=FitzGerald, Baron FitzGerald |author-link=John FitzGerald, Baron FitzGerald |date=1869 }}
  • HCP/HLP — House of Commons Papers/House of Lords Papers. Until 1911 the House of Commons published the judgments of most election courts in the sessional papers. Some were also printed by the House of Lords. The year of the session is given and the number of the paper, followed by the relevant pages in the case where multiple judgments are in a single paper.
  • {{cite book |last1=Helmore |first1=Leonard Mervyn |title=Corrupt and illegal practices: a general survey and a case study of an election petition |date=1967 |publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |location=London |isbn=978-0-7100-5124-0 |url=https://archive.org/details/corruptillegalpr0000helm/ |url-access=registration |via=Internet Archive}}
  • O'M & H — {{cite book |last1=O'Malley |first1=Edwin L. |last2=Hardcastle |first2=Henry |title=Reports of the Decisions of the Judges for the trial of Election Petitions in England and Ireland as pursuant to the Parliamentary Elections Act 1868 |location=London |publisher=Stevens & Haynes |date=1870–1929 }} 7 volumes: ({{hlist|class=inline|

[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision02judggoog/page/n5 1870: Vol 1 (1869)] |

[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision00judggoog/page/n5 1875: Vol 2 (1870–6 Aug 1874)] |

[https://archive.org/details/reportsdecision01judggoog/page/n5 1881: Vol 3 (8 Aug 1874–2 Dec 1880)] |

[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161271 1893: Vol 4 (23 Mar 1881–11 Aug 1893)] |

[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161263 1910: Vol. 5] |

[https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id{{=}}mdp.35112103161255 1911: Vol. 6] | 1929: Vol. 7 }}) e.g. 1 O'M & H 281 = Volume 1, p. 281

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |title=The Law and Practice of Election Petitions |last=Hardcastle |first=Henry |year=1874 |publisher=Stevens and Haynes |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/lawandpracticee01hardgoog}} Updated editions were published in 1880 and 1885 by the same publisher.
  • {{cite book |title=A guide to Election Law and the Law and Practice of Election Petitions |last1=Leigh |first1=E. Chandos |author1-link=Edward Chandos Leigh |last2=Le Marchant |first2=Henry |last3=Anderson |first3=Yarborough |year=1880 |publisher=Davis and Son |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/aguidetoelectio00andegoog |edition=3rd }}
  • {{cite book |title=The Law relating to Corrupt Practices at Elections and the practice on election petitions, etc |last=Mattinson |first=Sir Miles Walker |author2=Macaskie, Stuart Cunningham |year=1883 |publisher=Waterlow and Sons |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/lawrelatingtoco00macagoog }}
  • {{cite book |title=The powers, duties and liabilities of an Election Agent, and of a Returning Officer, at a parliamentary election, etc. |last=Parker |first=Frank Rowley |year=1885 |publisher=Knight and Co. |location=London }} Second edition 1891. Third edition 1920 ed. by Oscar F. Dowson. Fourth edition 1929 ed. by O. F. Dowson, H. W. Wightwick and C. N. T. Jeffreys. Fifth edition 1949. Sixth edition under the title "Parker's Election Agent and Returning Officer" ed. by H. W. Wightwick and H. W. Woolaston, 1959. Seventh edition under the title "Parker's Conduct of Parliamentary Elections", 1970. New edition under the title "Parker's law and conduct of elections", 1996 by Richard Clayton.
  • {{cite book |title=The Law of Elections, as viewed in the light of the Election Petitions of 1892 |last=Seager |first=John Renwick |year=1893 |publisher=Hayman and Co. |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/lawofelectionsas00seag }}
  • {{cite book |title=The Corrupt and Illegal Practices Prevention Acts, 1883 and 1895 |last=Jelf |first=Ernest Arthur |year=1894 |publisher=Sweet and Maxwell, Ltd |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/jelfcorruptilleg00jelf }} [https://archive.org/details/thecorruptillega00jelf Second edition in 1895], [https://archive.org/details/corruptillegalpr00jelf third edition 1905], published by the same publisher.
  • {{cite book |title=The Law of Parliamentary Elections and Election Petitions |last=Fraser |first=Hugh |year=1906 |publisher=Butterworth |url=https://archive.org/details/cu31924031473782 }} Second edition 1910; [https://archive.org/details/cu31924030497550 third edition 1922].
  • {{cite book |title=Corrupt and Illegal Practices at Parliamentary Elections, as defined in the Judgments in Election Petitions from 1886 to 1906 |last=Seager |first=John Renwick |year=1909 |publisher=Liberal Publication Department |url=https://archive.org/details/corruptillegalpr00seagrich }}
  • {{cite book |title=Parliamentary Elections |last=Schofield |first=Alfred Norman |publisher=Shaw and Sons |year=1950 |location=London }} Second edition 1955; third edition under the title "Schofield's Election Law", 1984 ed. by A.J. Little.
  • {{cite book |title=The Elimination of Corrupt Practices in British Elections 1868–1911 |last=O'Leary |first=Cornelius |authorlink=Cornelius O'Leary |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |year=1962 }}
  • {{cite book |title=UK Election Law: a critical examination |last=Watt |first=Bob |year=2006 |publisher=Glass House Press |location=London |isbn=9781859419168 }}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Election petitions}}

Category:Case law lists by court

Category:Election law in the United Kingdom

Category:Right to petition

Category:Elections to the Parliament of the United Kingdom

Category:Election results in the United Kingdom