In re of Bertrend

40 Misc. 536, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 121, 82 N.Y.S. 940
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 40 Misc. 536 (In re of Bertrend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re of Bertrend, 40 Misc. 536, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 121, 82 N.Y.S. 940 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Houghton, J.

The applicants are proprietors of hotels in the villages of Potsdam and Norwood, situated in the town of Potsdam, St. Lawrence county, and make this application to set aside the return and canvass of the vote of the town on the local option questions voted upon at the last annual town meeting. No point is made but what the various propositions, as provided by the Excise Law, were properly submitted and voted upon by the electors of the town.

There were 1,868 excise ballots cast, in the aggregate, in the three election districts in the town. In district No. 3 there were three spoiled ballots, not voted, which are not included in the above total. The town board certified that there was a majority of 112 against the selling of liquor by hotel-keepers, and 183 majority against saloons selling liquor to be drunk on the premises, and 221 majority against the selling of liquor not to be drunk on the premises. The pharmacist proposition was voted affirmatively. Out of the total number of ballots, there were returned as totally blank, in the first district 30, in the second district

[538]*5387, and in the third district 9, making 46 in all. Some of the ballots were blank as to certain propositions, and marked properly for or against other propositions. In district Eo. 1 there were either 72 or 74 ballots, and in district Eo. 2 there were 12 ballots, upon which the voter had voted both ways on some one proposition, and these ballots were treated by the inspectors as void ballots and were not counted for or against any of the propositions which were correctly voted. The inspectors did not mention these ballots in the figures of their returns, nor does it specifically appear that they were marked with the reasons for rejection and placed in a separate package as required by the Election Law. The original returns of the inspectors in district Eo. 1, presented to the town board, certified that on question Eo. 1 the total number- of votes was 1,100; on question Eo. 2, 1,002, and on question Eo. 4, 1,024. The tally sheet and all of the affidavits show that in this district there were 30 totally blank ballots. On presentation of the return to the town board for the purpose of canvass, one of the inspectors, against the protest of the other, substracted these 30' blank ballots from the totals given, making new figures and crossing out the old ones certified to by the inspectors. In place of 1,024, opposite question Eo. 4, the figures 974 appear. It is plain that this number should be 994, for all the affidavits agree that what the inspector did was to subtract the 30 blank ballots from the totals given; besides, the vote, is stated to be in the affirmative 467, in the negative 527, which make a total of 994 and leave a majority of 60 against, as stated.

The town meeting was held on the 10th of February, 1903, and the count and declaration of the vote by the town board were made on the following day. The ballots were placed in a box and remained in the custody of the town clerk for about a month, when some unknown person burglarized the town clerk’s office and opened the box, and it is supposed tampered with the ballots. Without inspection, however, the box was sealed, and now remains in the condition it was after the burglary.

The applicants had a month in which to make an application for a recount, and the present application was not made until the fourteenth of April, about a month later. If the ballots had not been tampered with, I would order a recount; but it is apparent that that would do no good at the present time for there would [539]*539be no certainty that the ballots remained as they were at the count. On the contrary, the presumption is that the ballot-box was broken open for the purpose of tampering with the ballots, either by abstracting some, or substituting others, or remarking them.

A recount being useless and impossible, it must be determined whether the original canvass shall stand, or whether it shall be set aside and a new submission of the excise questions ordered.

Rotice was served by the applicants upon the State Excise Commissioner, as the law requires, and the court has permitted the town board to intervene, and in its behalf opposing affidavits have been submitted.

It is urged that the town board, which was the canvassing board, -is not a proper party to these proceedings. I think the board as a board is a proper party, and that the board as individuals are proper parties. It cannot be that it was the intention of the Legislature to say that no one except the State Commissioner of Excise should have a right to be heard on an application of this character. While it is proper for him to be notified of the situation, and of what is transpiring with respect to license or no license, it is the community which has the right of local option that is interested. The applicants are interested in the decision of that question because they have property which is adversely affected by a vote of no license. Each citizen of the town also is interested as well, and has the right to have any questions arising submitted to the court.

It is claimed by opposing counsel that the court has no power to order a resubmission of the excise questions because no petition for a resubmission and a new town meeting has been filed in the town clerk’s office. Section 16 of the Liquor Tax Law (L 1901, ch. 640, § 3) provides that no special town- meeting shall be called until an order of the court for a resubmission shall be filed as well as such petition. Rotwithstanding intimations in decisions ‘to the contrary, I think the provision of the statute is so plain that I must overrule that objection and hold that the applicants in that respect are regular.

The applicants insist that the changing by one inspector of the returns from the first district, by subtracting 30 from each total certified and putting into the return such reduced total, nullifies the return and makes the subsequent canvass by the town [540]*540board void. While this act was wholly unwarranted, and a thing which the inspector had no right to do, yet I do not think it had the effect of nullifying the return. Ho question is made but what on the fourth proposition, in district Ho. 1, 46Y electors of the town voted in favor of a license to hotel-keepers, and 52Y electors voted against it; and so of the other propositions as stated in the different numbers in the return. Any act of one inspector, or even the board of inspectors, after a count could not disfranchise these voters. Their wishes had been expressed by their ballots, and the result ascertained, and no negligent, or careless, or vicious act of a town official could override it.

In People ex rel. Hirsh v. Ward, 148 N. Y. 146, Chief Judge Andrews says: “Each voter received his ballot from the inspectors, marked it with .the cross under the party name and emblem and returned it to the inspectors, by whom it was deposited in the box and subsequently counted. We can conceive of no principle which permits the disfranchisement of innocent voters for the mistake or even the willful misconduct of election officers in performing the duty cast upon them. The object of elections is to ascertain the popular will and not to thwart it. The object of election laws is to secure the rights of duly qualified electors, and not to defeat them.”

In People ex rel. Maxim v. Ward, 62 App. Div.

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Related

People Ex Rel. Hirsh v. . Wood
42 N.E. 536 (New York Court of Appeals, 1895)
People ex rel. Maxim v. Ward
62 A.D. 531 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)
Thacher v. Lent
71 A.D. 483 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)
People ex rel. Guersney v. Pierson
35 Misc. 406 (New York Supreme Court, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Misc. 536, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 121, 82 N.Y.S. 940, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-of-bertrend-nysupct-1903.