Matter of Hearst v. . Woelper

76 N.E. 28, 183 N.Y. 274, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 626
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 76 N.E. 28 (Matter of Hearst v. . Woelper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Hearst v. . Woelper, 76 N.E. 28, 183 N.Y. 274, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 626 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinions

Gray, J.

The learned justices of the Appellate Division appeared to have been swayed from their contrary convictions by the decision of the Second Appellate Division in Matter of Stiles, (69 App. Div. 589), and by an observation in the prevailing opinion in this court, later, in People ex rel. Brink v. Way, (179 N. Y. 174). In Stiles case, errors were alleged in the tally sheet and it was held that they were such as to require *279 the re-con veiling of all the election officials, under the provisions of section 84 of the Election Law. It was said in the opinion that “ the law required a ‘recount.’ It does not appear that this was done, and, therefore, the court may and should order it to he done. And the recount required by the mistake on the tally sheets implies that there shall be a count, whether merely a re-reckoning or, if necessary, a re-canvast prescribed by law. That the poll clerks as well as the inspectors are necessary officials * * * and the court may order them to be brought in.” It was, .further, ordered that the election officials, upon re-convening, should proceed in conformity, “ in every respect, so far as possible, to the procedure prescribed and required by the statute to be done on the day of election, in view of the provisions of section 84 thereof,” etc. In People ex rel. Brink v. Way, a writ of peremptory mandamus had issued, upon the application of a defeated candidate for the office of supervisor of the town of Ulster, at the general election of 1903, requiring the town board of canvassers to re-con vene and to re-can vass the vote cast. The application was not based upon section 84 of the Election Law; nor did the facts alleged bring the case within it, as the opinion expressly declared. It was held, in effect, that no provision of the Election Law conferred the authority upon the court to issue such a writ. In the course of the discussion, the provisions of section 84 were referred to as authorizing a re-count of ballots, where a discrepancy exists between the ballot clerks’ return and the statement of the tally sheet. That re-count, however, as the opinion asserts, was the duty of the board to make “ on their own motion upon their attention being called to violations of the statute by some one or more members,” and it was, further, said that “ in the event of a failure to make such a re-count the court may by mandamus compel it; ” referring to “ a mistake in the count,” as shown by the discrepancy between the tally sheet and the ballot clerks’ return. That was an unnecessary, and a too broad, statement in the opinion. Possibly enough, when taken by itself, it would go very far towards indicating the belief in the *280 existence of tlie power to require a re-count; but it is not to he so taken. It is apparent from the rest of the opinion that the learned judge, who delivered the opinion, had in mind what might be done before the canvass and inadvertently expressed himself upon the subject. When, subsequently, (p. 179), discussing the provisions of section 111 that, after the completion of the canvass and the proclamation of the result, the ballots should be re-placed in the box, to be securely locked and sealed and deposited with the board, or officer, furnishing the same, where it is to be “preserved inviolate for six months after such election,” it was said that the authorization of the court, or the judge, to open the box did not extend so far as to direct a re-count; only “to open the box and to permit its contents to be examined.” It was then pointed out that the best evidence was thus preserved for use in. jirocecdings in the nature of quo warranto to try the title to office. “ The language of section 111,” he says, “ considered in connection with section 114 makes it very clear that the legislature does not intend to permit the court to order a re-count of the votes in the box. * * * The" power is conferred to the end that it might be used in judicial proceedings pending, or about to be commenced. * * * The purpose of the legislature in so framing the Election Law as to continue the policy of preventing the judiciary from sitting in review of the ministerial work of the board of canvassers may, without difficulty, be conjectured,” (pp. 180, 181), and that purpose is explained in the necessity, in the public interest, that the canvass “ should be promptly carried on ” and not delayed by a procedure in court. Too broad an inference from the opinion, in that case, is checked by the repudiation of any power in the court, or the judge, to review the ministerial work of the election officers, or to permit aught else than an examination of the contents of the sealed ballot box in judicial proceedings. So that, with reference to these two cases, which have been regarded as controlling the judgment of the learned Appellate Division below, I think we should hold that the Stiles case erroneously construed the Election Law and that the *281 Brink case did not sanction the conclusion of the court; whether in what was actually decided, or from the opinion read as a whole. The Stewart Case, (155 N. Y. 545), has no application in what was decided there.

This case is important, not so much because of the question of which candidate is entitled to the particular office, as because of the principle to be declared in the construction of our law regulating elections to public office. -The legislature has seen fit to provide a plan for voting at elections, whereby the elector casts a secret ballot. The design was to counteract the vicious influences exerted, whether by political leaders, or by others, to control the elector’s will and to protect him in the free exercise of his right'of suffrage. . It was the object of the Election Law, which was enacted in 1896, to permit a secret ballot, to secure an honest count and to preserve, for a reasonable time, the best evidence in the event of judicial, or of legislative, proceedings, instituted, after the election was closed, for the purpose of criminally convicting the unfaithful election officer, or of trying the title of a person to the office, to which he claims to have been elected, or of an inquiry conducted by the Federal, or by the State, legislature, to determine the right to a seat in the body. Whether the Election Law accomplishes all of the promises of its defenders, or whether the directions for the mode of casting a vote have proved to be the wisest, or the rnost practical, about which opinions may well differ, it is not for the court to pronounce. The provisions of the law are to be given the fullest effect which they permit of; but, in my opinion, no construction by the courts is justified, which permits of judicial interference with, or revision of, elections beyond what is plainly found to be authorized by the statute. That the courts may enforce provisions of the law and compel obedience to its commands may be true ; but I do not believe that the legislature intended that the court, or a judge, should sit in review of the ministerial work of the election officers and I do not find any provision of this law which goes so far. It is not a question of whether they should have the power, but of whether the legislature has conferred it. *282 There is no room for the play of sentimental opinion.

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.E. 28, 183 N.Y. 274, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-hearst-v-woelper-ny-1905.