In re Burrell

50 Misc. 261, 100 N.Y.S. 470
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 Misc. 261 (In re Burrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York County Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Burrell, 50 Misc. 261, 100 N.Y.S. 470 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Knapp, J.

This is an application under section 16 of the Liquor Tax Law for a special town meeting in the town of East Bloomfield, Ontario county, H. Y., at which the four local option questions provided by section 16 of the Liquor Tax Law shall be resubmitted.

The motion is based upon affidavits alleging irregularities in the canvass óf the vote1 and, particularly, that certain void ballots and ballots alleged to be void were counted and were not separately returned as required by the Election Law.

It is also,claimed that a recanvass of the votes could not be had because the ballot box was not sealed and locked and immediately removed to the office of the town clerk, but was opened by unauthorized persons and the ballots examined and interfered with to such- an extent that a legal presumption arises that they were not in the same condition as when canvassed.

The certified result of the vote on the questions submitted is as follows:

Proposition Ho. 1 was lost by sixteen votes; Ho. 2 by thirty votes; Ho. 3 was carried by seventy-four votes, and Ho. 4 was carried by six votes.

There is no claim of any irregularity in the form or manner of submission, or in any of the proceedings prior to the canvass of the votes, and counsel for the intervening taxpayer therefore contends that the County Court or county judge has no jurisdiction to order a resubmission.

The language of the statute is as follows: If for any reason except the failure to file any petition therefor, the four propositions provided to be submitted herein to the electors of a town shall not have been properly submitted at such biennial town meeting, such propositions shall be submitted at a special town meeting duly called. But a special town meeting shall only be called upon filing with the town clerk the petition aforesaid and an order of the supreme court or county court, or a justice or judge thereof, respectively, which may be granted upon eight days’ notice to the state commissioner of excise, sufficient reason being shown therefor

The counsel for Mrs. Horton insist that the submission [263]*263is complete and that the questions have heen “ properly submitted ” when the preliminary steps provided by the statute have been taken and the electors have had the opportunity to vote thereon; in other words, that the canvass of the vote is no part of the submission of the questions.

If this view of the law be correct, then the motion would have to be denied without an examination into the merits of the application, for it is conceded that, up to the time of the closing of the polls, every act required by the statute was performed and no irregularity .up to that point is complained of.

While I do not find that this precise question has been passed upon by any court of record, I am inclined to interpret the statute so as to give effect to all of its provisions and hold that the “ submission ” of thp questions is not complete until the vote is canvassed and the result ascertained.

This also seems to be the view taken by the department of excise. If it were not so, the election officers might refuse to canvass the votes, or a stranger might destroy them and there would be no remedy.

The question then to be determined is whether the four propositions were properly submitted and whether sufficient reason appears in the petition and affidavits for the granting of an order for resubmission.

"Undoubtedly the better practice in such cases, where election officers have not conformed their proceedings to the statute, is to proceed by mandamus to compel a recanvass of the votes; and, where questions arise as to whether void ballots have been counted, to obtain a judicial determination as to each ballot alleged to be void; but, in this case, it is claimed that such proceeding would be impossible because of the fact that the boxes were not locked, but were left practically open to the public for twenty-four hours or more after the vote was canvassed.

It would be quite impossible to say certainly that the ballots now contained in the boxes áre in the same condition, or are the same ballots, that were left there by the election officers. This proceeding, therefore, seems to me to be authorized by the statute and entirely proper.

[264]*264The affidavits made by the election officers, the watchers and bystanders do not agree as to the facts. It is conceded that one ballot, on which the word “ yes ” was written in pencil four times in the voting spaces after the printed word yes,” was counted and returned to the ballot box; there can be no question but that this was a void ballot and the protest made by the watcher should have been heeded and the ballol not counted, but separately returned. This, however, is the only ballot which was protested.

McMillán, the inspector, who canvassed all these votes also says that there was one ballot, on which, in one of the voting spaces, there was a straight line and a voting X mark in the other voting space opposite the same proposition; this ballot was also void and should not have been counted, but no one seems to know whether it was counted for or against the propositions, except that it was not counted for the proposition, opposite which was the straight line; he also contends that there were two ballots upon which there were erasures and one in which the voting mark was obliterated with a circular pencil mark.

If the inspectors decided that erasures had been made upon these three ballots, they should have declared them void. Whether an erasure has been made with a rubber may be a matter of opinion and the decision of the inspectors is in a sense judicial as to such ballots and must be regarded as final, unless a recount or recanvass is had before a court of competent jurisdiction.

These five are the only ballots, which can, with any certainty, be said to be void. McMillan, in his affidavit made for the petitioners, states, in substance, that he will not say that there were not other ballots upon which there were erasures or marks, but that he did not observe any such; and, in his affidavit made for the opponents of the motion, states that the five ballots mentioned were the only ones on which erasures or other marks occurred.

Other affiants state that there were more ballots upon which erasures were made, but fail to state how these ballots were canvassed and failed to make any protest against their being canvassed by the board of inspectors. Under such cir[265]*265cuinstances, it is impossible for me to determine, from the affidavits and from an inspection of the ballots themselves, the exact facts as to these disputed ballots.

If the five ballots impliedly admitted by the inspector McMillan to be irregular and void are the only ones and if these were all canvassed in favor of proposition 4, it would not have affected the result, hfo claim is made by the petitioners of fraud or attempted fraud, nor is it alleged anywhere thal the rejection of these ballots would have affected the result; but the petitioners claim that it is impossible to determine what the result was, or would have been if all the ballots, which they claim are void, had been rejected.

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Related

In re Norton
75 Misc. 180 (New York Supreme Court, 1912)
Ulrich v. Clement
124 N.Y.S. 133 (New York Supreme Court, 1910)
In re Clancy
58 Misc. 258 (New York Supreme Court, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
50 Misc. 261, 100 N.Y.S. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-burrell-nycountyct-1906.