Matter of Hughes v. Delaware County Bd. of Elections

217 A.D.3d 1250, 191 N.Y.S.3d 825, 2023 NY Slip Op 03431
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 26, 2023
DocketCV-23-0859
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 217 A.D.3d 1250 (Matter of Hughes v. Delaware County Bd. of Elections) 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
Matter of Hughes v. Delaware County Bd. of Elections, 217 A.D.3d 1250, 191 N.Y.S.3d 825, 2023 NY Slip Op 03431 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Matter of Hughes v Delaware County Bd. of Elections (2023 NY Slip Op 03431)
Matter of Hughes v Delaware County Bd. of Elections
2023 NY Slip Op 03431
Decided on June 26, 2023
Appellate Division, Third Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the Official Reports.


Decided and Entered:June 26, 2023

CV-23-0859

[*1]In the Matter of Elizabeth M. Hughes et al., Appellants- Respondents,

v

Delaware County Board of Elections, Respondent, and Stewart Cohen, Respondent- Appellant, et al., Respondents.


Calendar Date:June 5, 2023
Before:Garry, P.J., Lynch, Aarons, Ceresia and McShan, JJ.

Daniel R. Belzil, Fleischmanns, for appellants-respondents.

Amy B. Merklen County Attorney, Delhi (D. Jeremy Rase of counsel), for Delaware County Board of Elections, respondent.

Perillo Hill, LLP, Sayville (John Ciampoli of counsel), for Stewart Cohen, respondent-appellant.



Per Curiam.

Cross-appeals from an order of the Supreme Court (Brian D. Burns, J.), entered May 11, 2023 in Delaware County, which, among other things, partially dismissed petitioners' application, in a proceeding pursuant to Election Law article 16, to determine the validity of certain voter registrations for the election for public offices in the Village of Fleischmanns held on March 21, 2023.

On February 14, 2023, petitioner Todd Pascarella, a candidate for Trustee of the Village of Fleischmanns, Delaware County, in the March 21, 2023 Village general election, filed the first in a series of postregistration challenge affidavits (see Election Law § 5-220 [1]). The affidavits, the last of which were filed on March 17, 2023, challenged enrolled voters' qualifications to be registered voters in the Village on the ground that they are not residents of the Village within the meaning of Election Law § 1-104 (22). On February 17, 2023, respondent Delaware County Board of Elections began an investigation conducted by the Delaware County Sheriff's office to address the challenges to the registrations of the enrolled voters. That investigation ultimately encompassed challenges to the voter registrations of over 100 voters, 81 of whom applied for and submitted absentee ballots in the 2023 Village election.

Prior to the 2023 Village election, petitioners, candidates running for public office in that election, commenced this proceeding by order to show cause. The petition alleged that the challenged voters had been improperly registered to vote in the Village, and sought, among other relief, to direct that their absentee ballots be set aside unopened, and requested a stay of the certification of that election pending the results of the Board's ongoing investigation into the challenged voters' registrations.[FN1] The petition is premised upon the contention that the challenged voters, most of whom are members of a religious congregation that organized the congregants' voter registrations in the Village, are not residents of the Village for voting purposes in that they live elsewhere for most of the year and only spend summers and intermittent weekends or vacations in the Village. Petitioners alleged that most of the challenged voters stay in property owned or controlled by the congregation and lack the type of significant attachments to the Village required to qualify as a resident of the Village for voting purposes (see Election Law § 1-104 [22]). After issue was joined, and while the Board's investigation was ongoing, Supreme Court conducted an evidentiary hearing and took testimony addressing the challenges to the residency of the challenged voters. In a May 2023 order, the court partially granted the petition, concluding that six of the challenged voters who submitted absentee ballots were not residents of the Village for voting purposes and that their ballots should not be opened or counted, and otherwise denied relief as to the remaining challenged voters who cast [*2]absentee ballots, ordering that their ballots be opened and counted.[FN2] This appeal and cross-appeal ensued.

Petitioners challenge Supreme Court's order to the extent that it found that 58 of the challenged voters who cast absentee ballots qualified as residents of the Village for voting purposes and permitted their absentee ballots to be opened and counted.[FN3] The Board supports petitioners' challenge to the court's order. Respondent Stewart Cohen, a candidate for Village Trustee in the 2023 Village election, cross-appeals, contending, among other things, that the six challenged voters who the court found were not residents were validly registered and their absentee ballots should be opened and counted. Notwithstanding the foregoing contentions, as well as the citation to Election Law § 16-106 in the petition, a review of the petition's allegations discloses that this is not a direct challenge to the challenged voters' absentee ballots under that statute. Rather, petitioners are challenging the voter registrations of the challenged voters based upon nonresidency under Election Law §§ 5-220 and 16-108.

The petition — filed before the 2023 Village election and prior to the submission of some of the challenged voters' absentee ballots, many of whom did not ultimately submit absentee ballots, and during the Board's ongoing investigation into pending voter registration challenges — repeatedly alleges that the voters at issue were "improperly registered" (emphasis added). The petition, like the Board's ongoing investigation, was premised upon and supported by Pascarella's postregistration challenge affidavits challenging the voters' registrations. The petition also noted that, because of the 10-day period between the voter-registration deadline and the election date for the 2023 Village election, it would be impossible for the Board to complete its investigation prior to the actual election.[FN4] In view of this truncated time frame, the primary relief requested in the petition is "to stay certification of the 2023 Village [e]lection pending the results of the [Board's] ongoing [registration] investigation," and an order directing respondent Diane Rossman, the Village Clerk, to set aside the unopened absentee ballots of the voters whose residency is being challenged pending the Board's investigation.[FN5] Although petitioners also seek an order striking the absentee ballots of any voter deemed to be improperly registered to vote, this requested relief is ancillary to a ruling that the challenged voters were not properly registered as voters and does not transform this proceeding challenging voter registrations into a challenge to the absentee ballots (compare Election Law §§ 5-220 and 16-108, with Election Law §§ 9-209 and 16-106).

Given our conclusion that petitioners are challenging the voter registrations of the challenged voters, petitioners were required to name, as necessary parties, the voters whose registrations were being challenged — i.e., "the person[*3][s] whose name[s] [are] sought to be stricken from the [voter] register" (Election Law § 16-108 [2]; see CPLR 1001 [a]; Matter of Fingar v Martin, 68 AD3d 1435, 1436 [3d Dept 2009]; see e.g. Matter of Maas v Gaebel, 129 AD3d 178, 180 [3d Dept 2015]; cf. Matter of Meyer v Whitney

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Bluebook (online)
217 A.D.3d 1250, 191 N.Y.S.3d 825, 2023 NY Slip Op 03431, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-hughes-v-delaware-county-bd-of-elections-nyappdiv-2023.