In an election contest over the office of Mayor of the City of North Miami Beach, the lower court held on final hearing that ‘the testimony taken by and before the Court, upon consideration whereof, the Court finds that at the general election held in the City of North Miami Beach on April 19, 1955, the plaintiff Daniel D. Diefenbach received 1161 votes and the defendant George B. Slick received 1193 votes, and that out of said number of votes 19 absentee ballots were cast for the plaintiff and 81 absentee ballots were cast for the defendant Slick; that a sufficient number of absentee ballots, as appears from the record of the application for such ballots and the ballots which were introduced as evidence in this cause, to alter the result of said election were illegal and null and void in that the applications for such absentee ballots either were not made at all or were not executed in the manner required by law’, and entered an appropriate decree determining that Daniel D. Diefenbach, the incumbent, was lawfully elected as Mayor of said City at the general election on April 19, 1955. It is conceded here that in many instances either applications for the ballots were not made or, if made, such applications were either undated, lacked witnesses or notarial seal, failed to specify a reason for the issuance of the ballot or were not returned within the time provided by law. See
Section 101.62 F.S.1951, F.S.A.