D'AMICO v. Mullen

351 A.2d 101, 116 R.I. 14, 1976 R.I. LEXIS 1236
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 9, 1976
Docket75-277-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 351 A.2d 101 (D'AMICO v. Mullen) 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
D'AMICO v. Mullen, 351 A.2d 101, 116 R.I. 14, 1976 R.I. LEXIS 1236 (R.I. 1976).

Opinion

*15 Joslin, J.

This civil action was commenced by taxpayers of the Town of Barrington against the defendants in their respective capacities as members of the Barring-ton Town Council and as Town Treasurer. The plaintiffs asked for a declaration that an election held in Barrington on November 6, 1973 was invalid and also sought an injunction against the defendants from taking any action to implement the announced result of that election. The case was heard in the Superior Court on an agreed statement of facts by a trial justice sitting without a jury and resulted in a judgment denying the relief sought and dismissing the action. The case is now here on the plaintiffs’ appeal.

During its 1973 session, the General Assembly, at the Barrington Town Council’s request, enacted legislation which, upon approval of the qualified electors of the town, would permit the construction of a town sewer system and authorize the necessary financing therefor, including a bond issue. Pursuant to further provisions of that enactment, the town council selected November 6, 1973 as the date for submitting the enabling legislation to the qualified electors of the town for their approval or rejection. That date was also the one on which the electors of the state were to vote on seven proposed amendments to the State Constitution.

In preparation for that election and under the authority of G. L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) §17-11-1.1 1 the local *16 board of canvassers combined the town’s ten regular voting districts into four districts, designated one polling place for each combined district and notified the State Board of Elections of this action and of the number of eligible voters. That board then furnished two voting machines for each combined voting district. The sewer project was approved by the narrow margin of 2458 to 2448. Since the election, almost $1½ million has been expended on the project, but actual construction has not yet commenced, and while no bonds have been issued, $5½ million in bond anticipation notes have been.

On July 25, 1975, nearly 2 years after the submission, plaintiffs commenced this action. They claim that the State Board of Elections failed to furnish the polling places with the number of voting machines mandated by § 17-19-4 2 and/or §17-19-4.1, 3 and that as a result long *17 lines formed at the polling places and a number of electors, who went to the polls two or three times, desiring to vote were unwilling to wait and departed without voting. The defendants’ response is that compliance with these statutory provisions was not required, and that, even if it were, noncompliance did not invalidate the election. They also raise the equitable defense of laches.

The sum and substance of the trial justice’s decision was that the questioned election was a special election, defined by § 17-1-2 (k) as “* * * any election other than a local election or primary election which is not held on a general election day”; that the nonpartisan election referred to in §17-19-4.1 is one wherein candidates without a party designation run for political office; that the special election held on November 6, 1973 was not a nonpartisan election and therefore §17-19-4.1, which applies only to nonpartisan elections and primaries, was not relevant; that underlying §17-11-1.1’s authorization for the combination of voting districts at a special election was a legislative awareness of the typically low voter turnout to be anticipated at this kind of election and an intention to take advantage of the concomitant opportunity to reduce the expenses attendant thereon; that the legislative objective would have been frustrated had the board of elections been required to furnish each combined voting district with the number of voting machines stipulated by § 17-19-4; 4 and that the Legislature had not otherwise *18 provided for the number of voting machines to be furnished at the election in question.

Having thus recognized that there was a gap in the statutory scheme, the trial justice proceeded to fill it by concluding (1) that the Legislature, had it been aware of the void, would have provided that the State Board of Elections should determine what number of voting machines would be reasonable and proper for a special election where districts had been combined; and (2) that the number furnished in this case met that standard.

We neither approve nor reject the trial justice’s views, preferring in this instance to leave the responsibility of filling the open spaces in the law to the Legislature, which is now in session. This does not mean that we will always shy away from that task. Our opinion in Town of North Kingstown v. North Kingstown Teachers Ass’n, 110 R. I. 698, 705-06, 297 A.2d 342, 345-46 (1972), proves otherwise. What it does mean is that we are reluctant to engage in this kind of activity and will do so only where there is no adequate alternative basis upon which a case may be decided. There is such a basis in this case. We approach it assuming, but not deciding, that the number of machines furnished by the State Board of Elections on November 6, 1973 was inadequate, and on that assumption the issue becomes whether that inadequacy standing alone is sufficient reason for invalidating an election held almost 2 years prior to the institution of plaintiffs’ challenge. We hold that it is not.

First, plaintiffs do not seriously contend that either they or any other electors were actually deprived of the right to vote. Clearly, they were discouraged by the long lines at the polling places, but nothing in the agreed statement of facts suggests that they would have been denied the right to exercise their franchise had they awaited their turn at the polls. The absence of that suggestion makes *19 In re Election of Council of Village of Oak Harbor, 57 Ohio Op. 426, 118 N.E.2d 692 (C.P. 1953), 5 and In re Carthagena Local School Dist., 7 Ohio Op.2d 470, 155 N.E.2d 267 (C.P. 1958), upon which plaintiffs rely principally, clearly distinguishable. In one of those cases the ballot supply was exhausted prior to the close of the polls, and in the other the voters received improper ballots. In both, therefore, the effect of the irregularities was to disfranchise; whereas in this case the irregularities, while they may have resulted in inconveniencing prospective voters and in dampening their desire to vote, in nowise prevented a full and free exercise of their franchise. Absent that effect, an irregularity is not invalidating. See Armantrout v. Bohon, 162 S.W.2d 867 (Mo. 1942);

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430 A.2d 765 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1981)
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431 F. Supp. 1361 (D. Rhode Island, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
351 A.2d 101, 116 R.I. 14, 1976 R.I. LEXIS 1236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/damico-v-mullen-ri-1976.