In re Perry

84 N.Y.S. 406

This text of 84 N.Y.S. 406 (In re Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Perry, 84 N.Y.S. 406 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

CHASE, J.

The petitioner and one Hall were rival candidates for school commissioner in the First Commissioner’s District in the county of Sullivan at the general election for 1902. This appeal arises from a controversy relating to ballots alleged to have been protested as marked for identification, and ballots alleged to have been rejected by the inspectors as void.

Section hi of the election law (chapter 909, p. 963, Laws 1896) provides as follows:

“Upon the completion of the canvass the board of inspectors' of election shall make, and sign an original statement thereof showing the kind of election. * * * At the end of the last detailed statement of votes cast for candidates, they shall add a statement of the number of general ballots protested as ‘marked for identification,’ which ballots shall be endorsed by the inspectors ‘Protested as marked for identification,’ specifying the mark or marking to which objection is made over their signatures, and all of which shall be counted for the several candidates voted for thereon. The inspectors shall also make as a part of their original statement a return of the number of' void ballots rejected by them; and on such ballots no vote can be counted for any candidate. Each such ballot so declared void by the inspectors shall [407]*407be indorsed upon the back thereof with the specific reason for such rejection. Such void ballots shall, together with the ballots which were protested as being marked for identification, be secured in a separate sealed package, which shall be indorsed on the outside thereof with the' names of the inspectors, the designation of the election district and the number and kind of ballots contained therein. • Such package shall be filed by the chairman of the board of inspectors with the original statement of the canvass. * * *”

The original certified statement of the result of the canvass and the sealed packages of void and protested ballots are within 24 hours after the completion of such canvass to be filed by the chairman of the board of inspectors with the county clerk of the county in which the election district is situated. Section 113, p. 965, Laws 1896. As soon as the board of county canvassers shall have been organized, the county clerk is required to deliver to such board of canvassers all the original statements of canvass received from inspectors of election for districts within the county for which such board are canvassers, and the board of county canvassers from such original statements must proceed to canvass the votes cast in such county at such election. Section 131, p. 968, Id.

After said general election the original certified statements of the result of the canvass in the several election districts in said commissioner’s district were filed with the county clerk of the county, and the board of county canvassers from such original statements canvassed the votes for school commissioner, and determined that said Hall was elected school commissioner by a plurality of five votes, and a certificate of election was issued to him accordingly. The petitioner then made an application to the court for a writ of mandamus, pursuant to the provisions of section 114, p. 966, of said election law. In his petition he states that void and protested ballots were returned from certain specified election districts, and that they have been opened pursuant to an order of the court, and that it appears that 73 ballots were held void by the various boards of inspectors, and not counted. The petition also states:

“(6) That a great majority and preponderance of said ballots so held void and not counted, and which were good and lawful ballots, entitled to be counted, were in favor of your petitioner for the office of school commissioner in and for the First Commissioner District of said county.
' “(7) That in a great majority of cases, in the cases of ballots so held void and not counted, the grounds upon which said ballots were so declared void were not indorsed upon the back of said ballots according to law, and that your petitioner is therefore unable to state or specify the grounds upon which the respective boards of inspectors may have acted in the premises in a. great number of cases referred to.”

The petition also states that certain ballots protested as marked for identification were counted for Hall, when they should have been excluded.

On said petition an order was obtained directing the board of canvassers to show cause why they should not count the ballots returned by them as void. Said Hall was by an order of -the court made a party to the proceeding. In his answering affidavit he states:

“That on Friday, November 14, 1902, the clerk made a search in his office for the void and protested ballots, for the purpose of producing them at a hearing before Judge Bush, as referee, who was by an order of the Supreme [408]*408Court directed to open the packages for the purpose of inspection. That the county clerk found among a conglomerate mass of other election papers piled upon the floor of the office, and within easy access of any person desiring to •handle or examine them, bundles, packages, sealed and unsealed, purporting to be the said void and protested ballots. That at the time of finding said bundles and packages none of them had any writing or indorsement thereon made by the clerk, showing that they had been filed with said- clerk. That many of the ballots thus found and produced before the referee as the marked and protested ballots were done up in a roll with string or rubber bands around them, others in sealed packages, without being indorsed on the outside with the names of the inspectors, the designation of the election district, and the number and kind of ballots contained therein. Those purporting to have been returned from the First District of Bethel, One of Forestburgh, One of Highland, and Third of Mamakating were not in sealed packages, nor indorsed in the manner and style aforesaid, and that ballots purporting to be void, and also those purporting to be marked for identification, or protested ballots, were found in the same packages, not indorsed as the law directs. That many of the ballots thus found and produced, and now sought to be counted for and allowed to the petitioner in this proceeding, and generally referred to in paragraph 5 of the petition, show, upon inspection thereof, that they are good and valid ballots, but have no writing or indorsement upon the backs thereof, made by the inspectors, that said ballots were declared void, nor are there any reasons, specific or otherwise, written thereon, for their rejection, nor is there any indorsment on the backs, ‘Objected to because marked for identification,’ or words to that effect, over the signatures of the inspectors, and there is no statement written thereon; of any kind, showing or from which to. infer whether said ballots were counted or rejected on the canvass thereof. That with this class of ballots, if considered void or protested, there has been a total failure on the part of the inspectors of election to perform the duty required of them by law with reference thereto.”

The answering affidavits also state that certain of the ballots so returned as void were actually counted by the inspectors for the petitioner.

The court decided that the petitioner was entitled to a peremptory mandamus, and proceeded to an examination of the ballots, and also examined witnesses as to the identity of some of the ballots, and as to whether the same had or had not been counted by the board of inspectors.

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Related

People Ex Rel. Feeny v. . Bd. of Canvassers
50 N.E. 425 (New York Court of Appeals, 1898)
People Ex Rel. Corrigan v. . the Mayor, Etc.
43 N.E. 554 (New York Court of Appeals, 1896)
People ex rel. Maxim v. Ward
62 A.D. 531 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1901)
In re the Application of Stiles
69 A.D. 589 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.Y.S. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-perry-nyappdiv-1903.