Bryer v. Sevigney

106 A. 155, 42 R.I. 187, 1919 R.I. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 8, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 A. 155 (Bryer v. Sevigney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bryer v. Sevigney, 106 A. 155, 42 R.I. 187, 1919 R.I. LEXIS 20 (R.I. 1919).

Opinion

Sweetland, J.

This is a petition in equity brought under the statute in the nature’ of quo warranto to try the title of the respondent to the office of third councilman of the town of West Warwick.

The parties have agreed to the following material facts. At the time of the election for said office of third councilman on November 5, 1918, the respondent Omer Sevigney was a male citizen of the United States and was twenty-nine years of age. He was born in Canada, but now resides, and has his domicile in the town of West Warwick, and has so resided and had his domicile continuously for twenty-seven years last past. He is a naturalized citizen of the-United States. His final naturalization papers were granted and legally issued to him by the District Court of the United States for the District of Rhode Island on October 2, 1916, and said papers have been since that time and now are in full force and effect. He registered his name in accordance with law as a registered voter of said town before the last day of June, 1916, and also before the last day of June, 1918. At a meeting of the town council of said town acting as a board of canvassers of said town held in accordance with law before the election in November, 1916, the name of the respondent was placed on the voting list as a registered voter in said town. His name was not stricken from said list by said board of canvassers and he voted at the election held in November, 1916, as a registered voter. The town council of said town, acting as a board of canvassers of said town, at a meeting legally held before the election on the fifth day of November, 1918, placed the name of the respondent on the list of registered voters of said town. Said board of canvassers did not strike the respondent’s name from said list and the respondent voted *189 at said election held on the fifth day of November, 1918, as a registered voter. Said respondent did not file his said certificate of naturalization with the town clerk of said town until December 11, 1918, when he filed the same with said town clerk. At the election held in said town on the fifth day of November, 1918, the respondent was a candidate for the office of third councilman for said town, and received 1,014 votes at such election. The petitioner received at said election 1,008 votes for the office of third councilman. It is alleged in said petition and admitted by the respondent that said town council acting as a board of canvassers on the sixth day of November, 1918, declared the respondent elected to said office; that the respondent took an engagement of said office, entered upon the duties thereof, and still holds, uses and enjoys the privileges, powers, authorities and franchises of said office.

Article IX, Sec. 1 of the Constitution of Rhode Island provides as follows: “No person shall be eligible to any civil office (except the office of school committee), unless he be a qualified elector for such office.” Article VII of Amendments to the Constitution, Sec. 1, as amended by Article XI, Section 11 of Amendments to the Constitution, so far as the same is applicable to the matter before us, is as follows: “Every male citizen of the United States of the age of twenty-one years, who has had his residence and home in this state for two years, and in the town or city in which he may offer to vote six months next preceding the time of his voting, and whose name shall be registered in the town or city where he resides on or before the last day of June, in the year next preceding the time of his voting, shall have a right to vote in the election of all civil officers and on all questions in all legally organized town or ward meetings.” Chapter 7, Sec. 2, Gen. Laws, 1909, with reference to the registry and canvassing of voters among other things provides as follows: “Provided, that before any person’s name shall be placed upon the voting-list, if such citizen shall be of foreign birth, he shall file p'roof, at least five days *190 before any meeting of the board of canvassers, with the town clerk that he is a citizen of the United States, and such proof shall be subject to the approval of the board of canvassers of the town or ward wherein such person shall claim the right to vote.”

(1) By Article YII of Amendments to the Constitution as amended, quoted above, the Constitution has fixed the qualification of registered voters of the town of West Warwick who are electors for the office of third councilman. Article II, Section 6, Constitution of Rhode Island, provides as follows: “The general assembly shall have full power to provide for a registry of voters, to prescribe the manner of conducting the elections, the form of certificates, the nature of the evidence to be required in case of a dispute as to the right of any person to vote, and generally to enact all laws necessary to carry this article into effect, and to prevent abuse, corruption and fraud in voting.” Under this provision the General Assembly may make rules relating to the exercise of the right of suffrage given by the constitution provided such rules are reasonable and do not tend to defeat the right. King v. Board of Canvassers, 42 R. I. 41. As a part of the statutory regulations, deemed by the General Assembly essential to the orderly conduct of elections, boards of canvassers have been created in the cities and towns of the State. Such boards are required, among other things, to prepare before each election fists of voters eligible to vote at such election. Under the provisions of Chapter 8, General Laws, 1909, “Of canvassing the Rights and Correcting the Lists of Voters,” and of Chapter 10, General Laws, 1909, “Of the Manner of Conducting Elections,” the requirement that boards of canvassers shall prepare voting fists for the use of election officers in the conduct of elections and the provision that no person shall vote at an election unless his name appears upon such a voting fist are clearly mandatory. Statutory directions regarding the preparation of voting fists by boards of canvassers unless made mandatory by the terms of the statute are generally held to be directory. *191 If a voter qualified to vote for a certain office finds his name upon the official voting list in the hands of the election officer and is permitted to vote at an election for such office such vote shall not be regarded as an invalid or illegal vote and such voter shall be held to be a qualified elector for such office although all the statutory directions have not been complied with by the board of canvassers in placing his name upon such voting list.

The purpose of the statutory direction contained in Chapter 7, Section 2, General Laws, 1909, quoted above, providing that a citizen of foreign birth shall file with the town clerk proof that he is a citizen of the United States at least five days before any meeting of the board of canvassers, is apparent. It was to assist boards of canvassers in the preparation of voting lists, and in accordance with well established principles is a directory provision and not a mandatory one. Such provision is binding upon a citizen of foreign birth who seeks to have his name placed upon a voting list or who complains of the action of a board of canvassers in refusing to place his name there. Such citizen if he fails to comply with this requirement cannot be heard to object because his name has.been omitted from the voting list.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 A. 155, 42 R.I. 187, 1919 R.I. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryer-v-sevigney-ri-1919.