Morgan v. Quackenbush

22 Barb. 72, 1856 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 59
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1856
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 22 Barb. 72 (Morgan v. Quackenbush) 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
Morgan v. Quackenbush, 22 Barb. 72, 1856 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 59 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1856).

Opinion

Harris, J.

An objection was taken upon the hearing, which I was at first inclined to think fatal to- this application. The action was commenced, as was stated, by the service of a summons, without complaint, and the motion is founded upon an affidavit. An injunction can only be granted when it appears by the complaint that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded, and such relief, or any part thereof, consists in restraining the commission or continuance of some act, the commission or continuance of which, during the litigation, would produce injury to the plaintiff. The objection is that there being no complaint, it cannot appear by the complaint that the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded. This is obviously so, button looking into the paper called an affidavit, I find that it contains all the requisites of a complaint. The ingredients of a complaint, as they are prescribed in the 142d section of the code, are all there. It contains the title of the cause; it specifies the name of the court, and the county where the plaintiff proposes to try the action, and the names of the parties. It then states the facts upon which the plaintiff relies to constitute his cause of action, and demands the relief to which the plaintiff supposes himself entitled. This makes a complaint. It is true, that instead of commencing in the form usually adopted in a complaint, it commences in form as a deposition. But, if the paper contains, as this does, every thing essential to constitute a complaint, the [77]*77form in which, it is presented furnishes no sufficient ground of objection. I proceed, therefore, to the examination of the case upon the merits.

The inspectors of an election for charter and ward officers in the city of Albany are required, upon the. completion of the canvass, to certify and declare the result, stating the number of votes given for each person for each respective office, and to file their statement and certificate in the office of the clerk of the common council within twenty-four hours. Their office is purely ministerial. They decide nothing. They merely declare the contents of the ballot-box. The next canvass is to be made by the common council.- The, statute declares that at its meeting thereafter,” the common council shall canvass such returns, and determine and declare the result. (Sess. Laws of 1851, p. 106, § 11.) The time of making this canvass is not fixed. The words “ at its meeting thereafter” are entirely nugatory. It is probable that the legislature intended to declare, as it had been provided in previous statutes, that the canvass should take place at the first meeting of the common council after the election. But if so, the word “ next” has been carelessly omitted in the sentence, and thus its effect is wholly destroyed. All that is now required is, that the common council shall canvass the returns and determine and declare the result. This, too, is a ministerial act. The common council are judges of nothing. They are not at liberty to receive evidence of any thing outside of the returns themselves. Their duty consists in a simple matter of arithmetic. They are to bring together the returns made by the inspectors of the several election districts, and ascertain, by computation, the aggregate number of votes given in the whole city for each person, for each office, and then declare the result by their certificate. If, in the first canvass, the common council received affidavits tending to show fraudulent practices at the polls, as it is well known they did, although the fact is not before me upon the motion, and, acting upon such evidence, omitted to canvass the votes of two election districts, they acted illegally. In doing so, they assumed to exercise a judicial power which the legislature has [78]*78never vested in them, or any other hoard of canvassers.f All that appears upon that subject, on this motion, is, that while the returns of the inspectors show the aggregate number of votes for the defendant, Quackenbush, to be 3382, the canvass allows him but 2172; and "while the aggregate number of votes for Mr. Perry, according to the returns, is 3309, the canvass allows him but 2990. But the common council did, on the 15th of April, assume the duty of canvassing the votes, and did determine and declare the result. Such determination was prima facie evidence that the person declared to be elected was entitled to the office. Assume that they transcended their authority, as they undoubtedly did, in rejecting a portion of the returns, could such illegal act justify the same body, when subsequently convened, in disregarding the first canvass altogether, and proceeding to canvass the votes anew ? I think not.

When the returns of the inspectors had been canvassed and the result declared, however illegally the common council may have acted, their power over the subject as canvassers was spent. They had no right to re-convene themselves as a board of canvassers, and assume the duty of determining anew the result of the election. As well might the common council who may be in office on the first Tuesday of May, 1857, take it upon themselves to revise the proceedings of the 6th May, 1856, and declare some other person elected to the office of mayor. It was a re-canvassing of the returns, and this was a thing the legislature had not authorized them to do. It was an attempt of the new board to revise the action and correct the errors of their predecessors, and this is not among the powers with which they were clothed by the legislature. It seems to me very clear, therefore, that the action of the common council in attempting to re-canvass the votes for mayor on the 6th of May, and to determine and declare who was elected to that office, was entirely unauthorized and void. Both boards have erred, perhaps equally—the first, in going beyond the returns of the inspectors, and constituting itself a judge of the validity of the proceedings at the election; the second, in undertaking to correct the error of the first, by re-canvassing the votes.

[79]*79The next inquiry relates to the effect of these proceedings upon the parties claiming the office. The first board did canvass the votes, illegally though it may be. They did determine and declaim the result. That determination, however erroneously, has furnished to Mr. Perry prima facie evidence of his election. He had a right to act upon that evidence and take possession of the office. Having qualified and entered upon the discharge of its duties, he became mayor de facto. He cannot, in my judgment, be displaced except by an action brought in the manner prescribed by law for that purpose, by some other person claiming to be entitled to the office. The law on this subject is distinctly declared by the court of appeals in The People v. Cook, (4 Seld. 67.) The title to an elective office is derived from the people through the ballot-box. Somebody must declare what is the will of the electors, as thus expressed. Canvassers are provided for that purpose. The certificate of a board of canvassers is evidence of the person upon whom the office has been conferred. Upon all questions a.rising collaterally, or between the party holding the certificate and a stranger, it is conclusive evidence. But in a proceeding to try the right to the office, it is only prima facie evidence. In such a proceeding, now regarded as a civil action, it is competent for the court to go behind the adjudication of the canvassers. The whole question is thrown open, and extrinsic evidence is allowed to show what was the true state of the votes.

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Bluebook (online)
22 Barb. 72, 1856 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-quackenbush-nysupct-1856.