Madden v. Board of Election Commissioners

146 N.E. 280, 251 Mass. 95, 1925 Mass. LEXIS 983
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 146 N.E. 280 (Madden v. Board of Election Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madden v. Board of Election Commissioners, 146 N.E. 280, 251 Mass. 95, 1925 Mass. LEXIS 983 (Mass. 1925).

Opinion

Rugg, C.J.

This is a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the respondents to certify the election of the petitioner to the office of a representative in the General Court for the Fifteenth Suffolk District. The case is submitted on agreed facts. They show that the voters of the Fifteenth Suffolk District were entitled at the election on November 4, 1924, to elect two representatives to the General Court. The names of William A. Canty and Joseph M. Ward and no others were printed on the official ballot, each name being followed by the word Democratic.” William A. Canty died early in the morning of the day before election. That fact was generally known throughout the district and notices of his death were prominently printed in the newspapers of that day. The specimen annexed to the record shows that there was headline announcement covering six of the eight columns of the first page of the newspaper and that an obituary filled more than one fourth of a column of the first page running onto a later page. On election day stickers carrying [97]*97the name of the petitionerwere distributed. He was a member of the democratic party and was generally known to be such by the voters and residents of said district. The supporters of the petitioner, knowing that the name of William A. Canty was still on the official ballot and for the purpose of making certain that no votes should be cast for him in ignorance of the fact that he was not living, stationed two persons near each of the eleven polling places in the district. These persons were instructed to inform each voter approaching the polling booth of the fact that William A. Canty had died. These persons would testify that each voter going to the polls was so informed. The result of the balloting was that five thousand three hundred and seventeen votes were cast for Joseph M. Ward, two thousand nine hundred and forty-two votes for William A. Canty, one thousand one hundred and sixty-five votes for the petitioner and a much smaller number of votes for several others. The petitioner, who contends that Joseph M. Ward and himself were elected representatives, caused the respondents to be notified of the fact that William A. Canty died on November 3, 1924, the day before election. The respondents, knowing of the fact of Mr. Canty’s death, refused to certify that the petitioner was elected but did file a certificate with the Secretary of the Commonwealth to the effect that at the election on the fourth day of November, 1924, William A. Canty 430 Centre St. Boston and Joseph” M. Ward 38 School St. Boston were elected ” as representatives to the General Court from the Fifteenth Suffolk District.

It is plain from these agreed facts that in general the voters of the district knew and those who went to the polls had in addition specific notice that William A. Canty had died on the day before election. He had ceased to exist before election day. He had vanished as a possible participant in human affairs.

One who has died before election cannot be a candidate for an office or elected to an office. Valid votes for election to an office cannot be cast for one who is not longer alive. It is equivalent to throwing away a vote knowingly to cast it for one who has passed from earth to the great beyond. It is [98]*98of no more effect than to deposit a blank ballot, or one marked with a fictitious or historic name. This is not a doubtful question. It requires no discussion of legal principles. No process of reasoning is necessary to convince the intelligence. It is axiomatic. It is not open to debate. It is obvious to everybody.

It is equally plain that the respondents were doing a vain thing and asserting an impossibility in certifying that William A. Canty was elected to the office of representative in the General Court. They were required to make a certificate to the Secretary of the Commonwealth of “ election of the persons appearing to be elected.” G. L. c. 54, § 128. The word “ persons ” means living human beings. Sawyer v. Mackie, 149 Mass. 269. The respondents ought to have stated in their certificate to the Secretary the fact as to the decease of Mr. Canty before the day of election as they knew it indisputably to be.

The question is whether the election for the second representative from the Fifteenth Suffolk District was a nullity or whether the petitioner was elected. It was said in the opinion in People v. Clute, 50 N. Y. 451, 461: “It is the theory and the general practice of our government that the candidate who has but a minority of the legal votes, cast does not become a duly elected officer. But it is also the theory and practice of our government, that a minority of the whole body of qualified electors may elect to an office, when a majority of that body refuse or decline to vote for any one for that office. Those of them who are absent from the polls, in theory and practical result are assumed to assent to the action of those who go to the polls; and those who go to the polls, and who do not vote for any candidate for an office, are bound by the result of the action of those who do; and those who go to the polls and who vote for a person for an office, if for any valid reason their votes are as if no votes, they also are bound by the result of the action of those whose votes are valid and of effect. As if, in voting for an office to which one only can be elected, two are voted for, and their names appear together on the ballot, the ballot so far is lost. The votes are as if for a dead man or for no man. They [99]*99are thrown away; and those who cast them are to be held as intending to throw them away, and not to vote for any person capable of the office. And then he who receives the highest number of earnest valid ballots, is the one chosen to the office. . . . They who, knowing that a person is ineligible to office by reason of any disqualification, persistently give their ballots for him, do throw away their votes, and are to be held as meaning not to vote for any one for that office.

. . . [¡At page 466.] We think that the rule is this: the existence of the fact which disqualifies, and of the law which makes that fact operative to disqualify, must be brought home so closely and so clearly to the knowledge or notice of the elector, as that to give his vote therewith indicates an intent to waste it. ” This is a succinct and clear statement of the law. Amplification will not elucidate it. It is precisely applicable to the facts here disclosed. It is agreed that the death of Mr. Canty on November 3, 1924, was on that day generally brought home to the knowledge of the voters of the Fifteenth Suffolk District. That is a district in the city of Boston, where numerous daily papers are printed and widely circulated. The attention of every voter who went to the polls on election day was directed specifically to the fact of the death of Mr. Canty. Therefore there is no room for doubt that the votes nominally cast for Mr. Canty were deposited in the ballot box with the knowledge that he had died the day before the election day. The motives of those who thus cast ballots are not revealed on this record. We assume that they were unexceptional as humane sentiments. It may have been done as a tribute of respect to his memory or as some expression of sorrow for his decease. Elections are not held for any such purpose. Purity of motive cannot clothe with vitality an act which is in its very nature a nullity.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.E. 280, 251 Mass. 95, 1925 Mass. LEXIS 983, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-board-of-election-commissioners-mass-1925.