People ex rel. Hayes v. Edwards

42 Misc. 567, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 299, 87 N.Y.S. 618
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Misc. 567 (People ex rel. Hayes v. Edwards) 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
People ex rel. Hayes v. Edwards, 42 Misc. 567, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 299, 87 N.Y.S. 618 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1904).

Opinion

Davy, J.

This is a motion under section 16, chapter 112, Laws of 1896, known as the Liquor Tax Law, for an order directing a special town meeting of the town of Galen, Wayne county, for the resubmission of the four liquor tax questions set forth in said section, which the relator claims were improperly submitted to the voters at the biennial town meeting held November 3, 1903.

The principal questions involved upon this motion are:

First, that the petition set forth in the moving papers-herein was not sufficient to authorize the town clerk in proceeding thereon.
Second, that the election notice printed by the town clerk was insufficient.
Third, that the ballots issued and used by the electors did not conform to the requirements of said act.

Section 16 of the Liquor Tax Law provides that in order to ascertain the will of the qualified electors of each town, certain questions shall be submitted at each biennial town-meeting hereafter held in any town in this State, provided* the electors of the town to the number of ten per centum of the votes cast at the next preceding general election shall' require such submission by written petition signed and ac[569]*569knowledged by such electors before a notary public or other officer authorized to take and acknowledge or administer oaths, which petition shall be filed not less than twenty days before such town meeting with the town clerk of the town.

It appears from the motion papers that the town clerk of the town of Galen acted upon the petition which was filed within the time and in the manner provided by law, and notice was given, pursuant to section 16 of the Liquor Tax Law, that the four questions provided for by said section would be submitted to the electors of the town of Galen at the election to be held Hovember 3, 1903.

Ho irregularity of the petition was urged upon the argument, and I am unable to discover wherein it fails to comply with the requirements of the statute. So that the only questions involved and urged upon this motion are, whether the election notice posted by the clerk and the ballots used at the election conformed to the requirements of the statute. The notice which is set forth in the moving papers contains a statement of the four questions to be submitted in the exact language of the statute, except that the language of the caption which was stated only once was not repeated.

Section 16 provides that whenever such questions are to be considered under the provisions of the Liquor Tax Law, it shall be the duty of each officer charged with the duty of preparing the official ballots for such town meeting or election to have prepared, at the time fixed by law for preparing the official ballots for such town meeting or election, the ballots required by the election law for voting upon any constitutional amendment, proposition or question in the form of and the number required by the Election Law, upon the face of which shall be printed in full the said questions.

The ballots used in this case were furnished by the town clerk and were regular in form and complied with the requirements of the statute, with the exception that the ballots did not contain the caption to the questions; but the questions were printed verbatim et literatim in the language of the statute.

[570]*570The different questions to be voted on were separately numbered on the ballot and separated by a broad line one-eighth of an inch wide. Opposite and before each question so submitted were printed two square inches inclosed in rude lines, one above the other. Preceding the upper one of such squares was printed “Yes,” and preceding the lower one of such squares was printed “Ho.” At the top of each of the ballots immediately above the perforated line was printed in brevier capital type the following words only:

“HOTTOE TO ELECTORS. FOR AH AFFIRMATIVE VOTE UPOH AHY QUESTIOH SUBMITTED UPOH THIS BALLOT, MAKE A (X) MARK IH THE SQUARE AFTER THE WORD ‘ YES.’ FOR A HEOA-TIVE VOTE, MAKE A SIMILAR MARK IH THE SQUARE FOLLOWIHO THE WORD ‘ HO.’ ”

It was impossible for any voter to be misled if he read the questions printed upon the ballots. The intention of the voters was clearly expressed at the polls and admits of no doubt. Each one received his ballot from the inspectors and marked his ballot in favor of or against granting a license to sell liquor and returned it to the inspector by whom it was deposited in the box and subsequently counted, and a clear majority of the voters of the town was opposed to granting a license to any corporation, association, co-partnership or person to traffic in liquor under the Liquor Tax Law, except as to pharmacists on a physician’s prescription, which received a májority of the votes therefor. Hotiees were posted and public meetings were held, and the subject of license or no license was fully discussed. How then can it be consistently asserted that any ballot was deposited by the voter in ignorance of its contents?

To hold that these ballots were invalid defeats, the will of a majority of the qualified voters of the town, based upon a narrow, technical construction of the statute. It opens the door for fraud upon the innocent voters which would be far reaching in its effects. It is not claimed that any but qualified voters voted at the election. It was conducted quietly, honestly and fairly so far as the motion [571]*571papers disclose, without any suggestion that the ballots did not comply fully with the requirements of the statute. To order a special election under such circumstances and for such a technical error would be doing great injustice to the innocent legal voters of the town who were not at all responsible for the preparation and printing of the ballots. A mere inadvertent mistake of the town clerk in printing the ballots ought not to work such a harsh penalty as to defeat the will of the innocent voters and put the town to the unnecessary expense of calling and holding a special town meeting for the express purpose of giving the defeated parties another chance at the polls. In the absence of an affirmative declaration of the statute that these ballots are void and should not be counted, I am not willing to hold that a slight error of the town clerk in construing a doubtful provision of the statute as to how the ballots should be printed shall disfranchise a large number of voters who are not in any way responsible for the error or mistake. While the law is mandatory in the sense that it requires the town clerk in the preparation of the ballots to strictly comply with all its provisions, it is not mandatory, however, in the sense that a voter’s right to cast his ballot shall be lost because some technical mistake occurs in printing the ballots. Such a construction of the statute would not only render an election invalid on account of an honest mistake in printing the ballots, but it would open the door to fraud. It would place the power in the hands of a dishonest official to defeat the will of the people at the polls. The election should not be declared invalid on the ground that the officer having charge of the printing of the ballots made an honest mistake or some slight omission in the printing of the ballots, unless they are fraudulent or affect the results of the election or render it uncertain. When a statute is open •to construction it should receive such an interpretation as will secure, if possible, the object of its enactment.

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Related

In re Merow
112 A.D. 562 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
42 Misc. 567, 3 Liquor Tax Rep. 299, 87 N.Y.S. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hayes-v-edwards-nysupct-1904.