Penta v. City of Revere

8 Mass. L. Rptr. 106
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1997
DocketNo. 976434
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Mass. L. Rptr. 106 (Penta v. City of Revere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penta v. City of Revere, 8 Mass. L. Rptr. 106 (Mass. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Garsh, J.

This matter comes before the court on plaintiffs request for injunctive and declaratory relief. Plaintiff, Richard Penta (“Penta”), asks the court to declare invalid the recount of a municipal election in the City of Revere for the office of City Councillor from Ward 1, to order that a Certificate of Election be issued to Penta, or, in the alternative, to order a new election. Penta claims that the counting of more ballots at the recount than there were either voters according to the “check-in” and “check-out” lists or ballots cast according to the voting machine count evidences fundamental error which requires that there be a new election. Penta also claims that the Board of Election Commissioners (“Commissioners”) made erroneous rulings on certain protested errors. Finally, Penta claims that the failure of fifteen persons, whose names were on the inactive list of registered voters, to have executed an affirmation of current and continuous residence demonstrates substantial noncompliance with the election laws requiring a new election.2

Hearings were held on December 18, 19, 22, and 23, 1997. Twenty-three witnesses testified. The parties stipulated to numerous facts. Each of the disputed ballots was reviewed de novo by this court.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Based on all the credible evidence and reasonable inferences drawn from that evidence, the court finds the following facts:

On November 4, 1997, a municipal election was held in the City of Revere. The plaintiff was a qualified candidate listed on the ballot for the office of Ward 1 City Councillor. The only other qualified candidate listed on the ballot for that office was Nicholas Maraño.

No one ran a “sticker campaign” for the office. As of May 30, 1997, eight persons with the surname Maraño, including the defendant Nicholas Maraño, resided in Cily of Revere. Five of the eight resided in the defendant Nicholas Marano’s household. None of the other Mara-nos in Revere have the first name of Nicholas; indeed, none have a first name that begins with N.

The voters used ballots that were processed through automatic, electronic, optical scanning voting machines. The logic and accuracy of the machines were tested a week before the election; the machines were determined to be in perfect working order and kept in a safe until election day. According to the automatic voting machines used on election night, a total of 2,496 ballots were cast. The machine counts all ballots that have not jammed — blank ballots, ballots with candidates written-in, absentee ballots, regularly completed ballots — and sorts them into bins, the front bin for blank ballots and those with write-in candidates, the rear bin for the remaining ballots. Each ballot that is counted is canceled; the cancellation consists of a red strip, located either on the front or back of the ballot, with the ward and precinct number, i.e. 1-2, being printed in red at intervals for the entire length of one side of the ballot.

If the voter uses a marker other than the one provided or makes an exceedingly light mark or a mark other than in the space between the two printed halves of the broken arrow, the machine may treat the ballot as a blank, but it will still be processed and counted. If a ballot jams at a certain point while a voter is inserting it into the machine, the machine will not process the ballot and will print out the following message:

BALLOT JAMMED WHILE READING

Remove Ballot and return it to voter.

(Voter may need new ballots)

***BALLOT HAS NOT BEEN PROCESSED!!!***

On election day at each precinct, the machine was set at zero before any ballot was inserted. When this suit was commenced, Penta alleged that the count of the number of voters who voted at the election pursuant to the official records of the City, including all persons who voted in person and by absentee ballots, totaled 2,493, three less than the number of ballots that had been counted by the machines. After careful review of the official records, all parties have stipulated that the check-in sheets, in fact, reflect that 2,496 voters cast ballots; exactly the same number of ballots were counted by the machines.3

Each voter received a ballot with the names of candidates printed on it. In addition, the ballot provided write-in spaces for each office equal to the number of people to be elected. Immediately above the space for writing in names, there appears the following statement: ‘To vote for a person whose name is not printed on the ballot, write the candidate’s name on the line provided and complete the arrow." Beside each name printed on the ballot and beside each write-in space is a broken arrow pointing toward the candidate’s name or write-in space. To vote for a candidate, the voter is instructed to complete the missing center portion of the arrow and is provided with a black marker to do so. The November 1997 election was only the second time that the residents of Revere voted using this system requiring arrows to be completed. It was first used during the primary election in September of 1997. There was no primary for Ward 1 Councillor.

As a matter of law, 950 CMR §54.04(4), (5), (7), and (8), policy, and practice, in order to obtain a ballot, an individual must state his or her name and address. The name is checked by a poll worker against the lists of registered voters and repeated. A red check is made next to the person’s name on the voting list and a ballot is handed to the voter. The poll workers also keep a running tally of the number of ballots that have been handed out. The poll workers followed these procedures in handing out ballots.

As a matter of law, 950 CMR§54.04(13)-(15), policy, and practice, after filling out the ballot, the voter repeats his or her name and address to another poll [108]*108worker who repeats it and checks off the name on a second duplicate list of registered voters. The voter then inserts the ballot into the scanner. The poll workers at Precincts 1, 2, and 3 in Ward 1 acted in conformity with these procedures. With the exception of the name of one voter, the poll workers in Precinct 4 complied with these procedures. I infer that the name of one voter, who was properly given a ballot after checking in, was inadvertently not checked off the check-out list at Precinct 4.

At each of the precincts, absentee ballots were fed into the machines by a Commissioner. At that time, pursuant to 950 CMR §54.04(27)(d), a red check was made on the voting lists.

There are two types of voting lists. One contains the list of active voters, namely all voters entered on the annual register; the other is a list of inactive voters. The list of inactive voters is by ward and precinct. It is organized by street name and contains, by street number, a name, party registration, and “inactive date.”

Affirmation forms of current and continuous residence with a warden’s certificate conforming to the requirements set forth in 950 CMR §54.04(6)(a) were provided by the Commissioners to each precinct and, in addition, one of the Commissioners conducted training sessions before the election explaining to the wardens and the clerks the requirement to secure affirmations from persons whose names appear on the list of inactive voters. The form, blanks of which were contained in the same envelope as the list of inactive voters for that precinct, states the following:

AFFIRMATION OF CURRENT AND CONTINUOUS RESIDENCE

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8 Mass. L. Rptr. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penta-v-city-of-revere-masssuperct-1997.