In re Order Directing the Resubmission of the Local Option Questions to the Electors of the Town of La Fayette

3 Liquor Tax Rep. 438, 45 Misc. 141, 91 N.Y.S. 970
CourtNew York County Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1904
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 438 (In re Order Directing the Resubmission of the Local Option Questions to the Electors of the Town of La Fayette) 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 Order Directing the Resubmission of the Local Option Questions to the Electors of the Town of La Fayette, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 438, 45 Misc. 141, 91 N.Y.S. 970 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Ross, J.

Section 16 of the Liquor Tax Law provides for the submission at each biennial town meeting held in any town in the State of four questions which enables the voters of the town to determine whether they desire liquor to be sold in the town. They are enabled to approve of any kind of traffic or reject any or all. Question IY relates to the sale by hotel-keepers, and this is the question in which the petitioners are interested.

Certain formal requirements are necessary as a preliminary to such submission. Ten per cent, of the voters at the next preceding election must request such submission, which request must be in writing and acknowledged, and must be filed with the town clerk not less than twenty days before such town meeting. The. town clerk must file in the office of the county clerk, within five days thereafter, a certified copy of such petition. He must also [439]*439at least ten days before such holding of the town meeting cause to be printed and posted in at least four public places in such town, notice of the fact that the local option questions will be voted on at such town meeting or general election. Said notice shall also be published at least- five days before the vote is taken, once in one newspaper published in the county in which such town is situate, which shall be in a newspaper published in the town, if there be one.” Each officer charged by law with the duty of preparing the official ballots for such town meeting or election shall prepare the same, and upon the face shall be printed in full the questions to be submitted. At the last general election held in the town of La Fayette on November 6, 1903, the local option questions were submitted to the electors of that town. The election was held and 159 votes were cast in favor of the fourth question relative to the sale of liquor by hotel-keepers and an equal number against. Such sale not being authorized by a majority of votes cast was lost.

Section 16, in question, provides: “ 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 clerk the petition aforesaid and an order of the Supreme or County Court, or a Justice or Judge thereof, respectively, which may be granted upon eight days’ notice to the Stale Commissioner of Excise, sufficient reason being shown therefor.”

And it is for such order that this application is made. Tne ground therefor is that the town clerk omitted to publish the required notice in a newspaper published in the county. The language of the statute relative to obtaining an order of this character assumes some discretion may be exercised. It requires such an order from a court or judge, which court or judge may grant such order upon sufficient reason. In other words, every irregularity in the submission of such questions is not jurisdictional. This was held by Mr. Justice Kellogg in Matter of O’Hara, 40 Misc. Rep. 355, in which the irregularity complained of was precisely the same as in this case. I quote from the opinion of the learned judge on p. 358: “ It does not seem that an election shall be declared void because a ministerial officer has neglected to perform a duty as to publishing a-notice, when it is [440]*440beyond question that the failure to perform that duty has not prejudiced any one or any cause.”

The facts in the O’Hara case were much stronger in favor of the exercise of such discretion than in this case. Three hundred and forty-eight votes was the largest number cast for any officer and the largest number cast upon any excise proposition was 347, showing that every elector except one who voted upon any question voted upon some of these propositions. In this case the largest number of votes cast for any officer was 402. The affi davits presented in the O’Hara case in opposition to the resubmission also showed a most thorough agitation and discussion of the questions prior to the election.

The case under consideration also presents a feature which did not exist in the O’Hara case. The affidavit of William J. Rowe, who states that he was qualified to vote at the general election in question, states that he did not know of the submission of the question of local option and did not vote on said question ; that if he had known of the submission of said question, he would have voted in favor of it. Such vote would have changed the result. In the case under consideration the commissioner of excise, through his attorney, presents the affidavits of Charles A. Gillette, N. M. Holmes and W. C. Newell.

Dr. Charles A. Gillette resides in the village of La Fayette, and has for over eighteen-years, and has a general store for the sale of merchandise, which store adjoins one of the hotels seeking a license. He says that prior to the town meeting in question, the temperance people of the town agitated the subject of local option, and owing to the conditions existing in the neighborhood, due to the manner in which the above-mentioned hotel had been conducted, there was plenty of talk about the village and in his store about the subject. That he does not belong to any temperance society, nor take any part in the campaign, but that the agitation was general in the neighborhood, not only amongst the people residing in the village, but among the townsmen as well. That if the hotel had a license and was properly conducted it would be beneficial to him.

Mr. Holmes conducts a general store in the village of Cardiff in the town of La Fayette, where he is also postmaster. He states that the matter was thoroughly agitated; that there was a full vote in said town, and that while he was strongly opposed to the continuance of the liquor business “ Because it had not [441]*441been conducted in a respectable manner ” but if a hotel could be conducted in an orderly manner, it would benefit the village, and I should favor a resubmission of the local option questions if the hotel in this village would be conducted in as orderly a manner as it was conducted from about the time of the last town meeting until the first of May.

Mr. Newell states that he was re-elected supervisor at the election in question. That previous to the said election a personal canvass was made among the electors of said town, and that every voter was interviewed by one or the other of the candidates for office, and that it was then known that the local option questions were to be voted upon again, and to deponent’s knowledge the subject was widely discussed; there being a bitter controversy between those objecting to the manner in which the hotel proprietor at Cardiff had conducted Ms business, and those favoring a continuance of traffic in liquor by the hotel keepers only, and on election day both those favoring and those opposing, had workers to get out the local option vote.” That he has heard of no one who did not know that the local option questions were to be submitted, and that he never before heard of any reason being urged as a ground for a new town meeting to vote upon said local option questions.

It also appears by the affidavit of Mr. James McManus, submitted by the commissioner of excise, that he was town clerk from 1898 until 1902, and at the town meetings in 1899 and 1901, when the local option questions were submitted, that no notices of such submission were published in any newspaper.

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Related

In re O'Hara
40 Misc. 355 (New York Supreme Court, 1903)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Liquor Tax Rep. 438, 45 Misc. 141, 91 N.Y.S. 970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-order-directing-the-resubmission-of-the-local-option-questions-to-the-nycountyct-1904.