Mazzotti v. Swezey

199 Misc. 987, 103 N.Y.S.2d 956, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1697
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1951
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 199 Misc. 987 (Mazzotti v. Swezey) 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
Mazzotti v. Swezey, 199 Misc. 987, 103 N.Y.S.2d 956, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1697 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1951).

Opinion

Pette, J.

This application is brought by the petitioner for an order cancelling, revoking and nullifying the motions and resolutions of the board of trustees of the Village of Patchogue, made on or about March 23, 1951, insofar as same attempted to declare the petitioner ineligible for the office of trustee of the Village of Patchogue, and insofar as such motions and resolutions declared the respondent, Mapes, elected to the said office, and restraining the board of trustees of the Village of Patchogue from taking' any further action in relation to the election held in the village of Patchogue on March 20, 1951, and particularly from determining the eligibility of any candidate, and restraining the respondent, Mapes, from taking any part in the matters and affairs of the Village of Patchogue as a trustee on and after 12:00 o’clock noon of April 2, 1951.

The petitioner alleges that at the village election of the Village of Patchogue held on March 20, 1951, at which three trustees of the said village were to be elected, the petitioner was one of the three highest candidates out of the six who contended for the said three offices. He alleges that following the election on March 20, 1951, the hoard of trustees of the Village of Patchogue met as a board of canvassers but that, in addition to canvassing the votes cast, the said board of trustees proceeded to hold that the petitioner is ineligible to hold public office as such trustee by reason of the fact that he was not the owner of record of real property within the village, as required by section 42 of the Village Law; that the said board of [989]*989trustees, after declaring the petitioner ineligible, declared the respondent Mapes elected as such trustee. Petitioner charges that the respondent Mapes received six votes less than did the petitioner and that, accordingly, the action of the board of trustees in declaring the said Mapes elected was contrary to the election returns. Petitioner alleges that prior to and since March 20, 1951, he was and is the owner of property within the village of Patchogue and is actually a taxpayer of such property and that the action of the board of trustees in declaring him ineligible and in declaring the respondent Mapes elected, was contrary to law and constituted an assumption of power which the said board of trustees did not possess under the law. He accordingly asks that an order be made revoking and nullifying the action of the board of trustees in declaring him ineligible and in declaring the respondent Mapes elected, and asks that this court restrain the respondents, constituting the board of trustees of the Village of Patchogue, from taking any further action relating to the election aforementioned and particularly restraining it from determining the eligibility of any candidate elected, and restraining the respondent Mapes from continuing to act as trustee after 12:00 o’clock noon of April 2, 1951.

All of the respondents excepting the respondent Payne moved to dismiss the petition on the ground that the court has no jurisdiction of. the subject of this proceeding; that the petitioner has no legal capacity to sue, and that the petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause for the relief demanded.

By another notice of motion the said respondents move to strike out paragraphs 13 ” and “ 14 ” of the petition as being sham, frivolous, irrelevant and impertinent.

This proceeding is, therefore, essentially one seeking a review of the action of the board of trustees of the Village of Patchogue in passing upon the eligibility of the petitioner and in declaring a minority candidate elected. It-is contended by the petitioner that the board of trustees exceeded their power in going beyond the task of canvassing the votes cast at the election.

Section 53 of the Village Law provides that the inspectors of election shall, immediately upon the closing of the polls -of each annual election, proceed to canvass the votes cast thereat and shall complete such canvass without adjournment. They shall, before nine o’clock in the forenoon of the following day, file with the village clerk their certificates setting forth the holding of the election, the total number of votes cast for each office, the number of votes cast for each person for such office, and if the village contains more than one election district, the [990]*990board of trustees of such village is required to meet at its usual place of meeting, not later than eight o’clock in the evening of the next day after the election; that the village clerk shall produce at such meeting the returns of the inspectors of election, and the board of trustees shall canvass such returns and file in the office of the village clerk a certificate declaring the result.

The trustees of the village, under section 53 of the Village Law, become a board of canvassers with their duties clearly defined and limited only to canvassing the returns and filing a certificate declaring the result.

Section 69 of the Village Law provides that “ the general provisions of the election law shall apply to all elections held under the provisions of this article and not inconsistent therewith ”. Under the provisions of the Election Law, the power of a canvassing board is limited to ascertaining that all the returns, with tally sheets, if any, containing the statement of canvass received from inspectors of election, have been received, to canvassing the votes cast and to correct any omissions or mistakes which appear on the face of the returns (Election Law, § 273).

Upon the completion of the canvass, the canvassing board is required to make statements thereof, showing separately the result as to each office. The statement shall set forth all votes cast for all candidates for each office, the name of each candidate, and the number of votes so cast for each. (Election Law, § 275.)

The canvassing board is required to determine what person has, by the greatest number of votes, been elected to each such office. (Election Law, § 276.)

“ The board of canvassers acts in a ministerial capacity only.” (Matter of Funkhouser, 157 Misc. 400, 403.)

In People ex rel. Derby v. Rice (129 N. Y. 461, 465-468) the Court of Appeals said: “No judgment, which proceeds upon direct methods of reasoning, and which guides itself by the written law of the state, can fail to reach the conclusion that the office of these boards of canvassers is purely a ministerial one. Upon them devolves by statute the obligation to fulfill precise functions. They are charged by the statute with absolute and certain duties. What those duties are to-day, they have always been since the legislature, acting under the authority of the Constitution of the state, undertook to direct the manner in which elections by ballot should be conducted. Citing the words of the law, the board shall, upon the certified copies of the statements made by the boards of county canvassers, proceed to make a statement of the whole number of votes given at [991]*991such election for the various offices; each of which statements shall show the names of the persons to whom such votes shall have been given for either of the said offices, and the whole number of votes given to each * * *. They shall certify such statements to be correct and subscribe the same with their proper names. * * * The statements returned by the county boards cannot lawfully contain anything save the whole number of votes given in each town and district, the names of the candidates and the number of the votes given to each.

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Mapes v. Swezey
199 Misc. 997 (New York Supreme Court, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
199 Misc. 987, 103 N.Y.S.2d 956, 1951 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mazzotti-v-swezey-nysupct-1951.