Lester v. Gruner

205 Misc. 67, 127 N.Y.S.2d 272, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2556
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 205 Misc. 67 (Lester v. Gruner) 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
Lester v. Gruner, 205 Misc. 67, 127 N.Y.S.2d 272, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2556 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1953).

Opinion

Bookstein, J.

Petitioners were the regular Democratic nominees for the offices of justice of the peace and school director, respectively, of the Town of Lloyd, Ulster County, [69]*69New York, at the last general election. Their Republican opponents were William Gruner and Joan Hasbrouck, respectively. One Lorin Callahan was the nominee of both parties for town clerk. The Liberal party had no candidates for any office, State, county or town. The Republican candidates were on row A; the Democratic, including the petitioners, on row B. Row C belonged to the Liberal party.

Since row 0 had no candidates on the ballot, the law required that each and every lever or knob on row C should be locked, so that they could not be operated. (Election Law, § 248, subd. 1.)

Prior to the election, the Republican and Democratic machine custodians, with the aid of the town clerk, the candidate of both parties, proceeded to arrange the voting machines in the four election districts of the town so that same would be set properly, pursuant to law, in order to be in perfect working order, when the polls should open on Election Day. Apparently, the work was supervised by the town clerk. The Democratic party representative was present but the Republican one was not. The first three knobs on row 0 were locked; the balance were not. This was not due to any oversight. When the machines were tested, one of the custodians called attention to the situation. The town clerk told him that it has been the custom to lock only the first three knobs and not the rest and the custodians acquiesced in leaving all knobs on row 0, except the first three, open. Thus, we had an absolute failure to perform a simple duty commanded by law. This failure can only be charged to neglect or ignorance or both, since petitioners expressly disclaimed on the oral argument and in their brief any claim or intimation of fraud.

When the machines were opened, it was found that a substantial number of votes were cast on row C on the lines of the ballot which contained the nominations for various town offices. The number varied for the different offices. In all cases, except those of the petitioners, the Democratic town candidate received total votes on row B in excess of the combined totals cast on rows A and C and was declared elected.

In the cases of the petitioners, their respective opponents received more votes on row A than did petitioners on row B and the votes on row C were returned by the inspectors as blank votes. On the face of the returns, therefore, the respondents Gruner and Hasbrouck appear to have been elected. Had the votes for the hvo offices in question which were recorded on row 0 been credited to petitioners, the result would be their [70]*70election. Protest was made to the inspectors in behalf of the petitioners against returning the votes cast on row C as blank and claim made that they should be credited to petitioners, on the theory that they were closest in proximity to row C; that the votes cast on row C were intended for them; and that they were inadvertently east on row C, which could not have occurred had all of the knobs on row G been locked as required by law.

The respondents board of elections and board of canvassers, also treated the votes cast on row C as blanks.

Petitioners ask for a review of the protested ballots ” pursuant to subdivision 4 of section 330 of the Election Law.

The difficulty with that proposition is that in the nature of things there cannot be a “ protested ballot ” with respect to a vote cast on a voting machine.

Protested ballots are ballots to which an objection is made at the time of a canvass of the votes. Usually the objection is based on some marking of the ballot which identifies it and therefore may identify the voter who cast it. Obviously an objection to a ballot could only be made to a paper ballot, so that it is placed in a separate envelope, where it may be judicially reviewed. (See Election Law, §§ 111, 204, 213, 219. See, also, People ex rel. White v. Aldermen, 157 N. Y. 431, 436-437 and People ex rel. Brown v. Freisch, 215 N. Y. 356.)

Petitioners argue that since subdivision 4 of section 330 of the Election Law confers summary jurisdiction on the court to determine any question of fact or law arising as to protested ballots, it necessarily refers to protested ballots on the voting machine as otherwise the reference thereto would have been eliminated in the enactment of that section and the subsequent amendments thereof. This contention clearly overlooks the fact that, despite the machine age and the voting machine, we still have paper ballots, such as absentee ballots and war ballots. With respect to these, they can be effectively protested and thus marked and placed in the envelope and their identity retained for later judicial review. As to a ballot cast on the machine, obviously it cannot be protested, for there is no way of identifying any individual ballot. Each vote is swallowed in the total shown on the tabulator in the back of the machine; there is no way of protesting and marking for future judicial review any particular vote cast, as its identity has been lost forever in the total shown on the machine. Petitioners ’ contention that certain official’s objection to counting as blank the votes cast on row C constitutes protested ballots is fallacious. No one knows who cast the ballots on row C. All one knows is that some voters [71]*71did so. But the ballots are not protested ballots within the meaning of the Election Law. The objection of petitioners is not to the ballots as such but to the action of the election inspectors in canvassing them as blank ballots.

The word “ ballot ” as used in connection with voting machines is defined in subdivision 2 of section 266 of the Election Law, and such definition clearly excludes any such thing as a “ protested ballot ” on a voting machine, within the meaning of that term as employed in subdivision 4 of section 330 of the Election Law and the other sections of the Election Law in which that term is employed.

Petitioners maintain that since the votes cast on row 0 which had no nominees were in closest proximity to row B, on which their names appeared, it is logical to infer that those who cast their votes on row C did it by error in that they pulled down the knobs under the names of petitioners instead of the names over them. Practical experience has demonstrated that there may be much force in that argument. Nevertheless, it is not the only inference to be drawn. No one knows what voters cast their votes on row C. If it were done by error, rather than by design, then not even the voters who did so, could now so state, since they are probably without knowledge that they did so. There is no way of telling whether those who cast their votes on row C did so designedly, because they had no intention of voting for either of the two major parties’ nominees. Moreover, the court is without power to take oral testimony of the voters to ascertain their intention. (Matter of Hogan v. Supreme Court, 281 N. Y. 572.)

“ A canvassing board is without judicial or quasi-judicial powers; it serves only in a ministerial capacity and must count the votes shown on the returns before it, make the necessary computation therefrom, and thereupon determine which candidate has, by the greatest number of votes, been elected to the office.” (Matter of Ingamells v. Board of Elections of Oswego Co., 259 App. Div. 36, 41.)

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Bluebook (online)
205 Misc. 67, 127 N.Y.S.2d 272, 1953 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lester-v-gruner-nysupct-1953.