People ex rel. Hodgkinson v. Stevens

5 Hill & Den. 616
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1843
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Hill & Den. 616 (People ex rel. Hodgkinson v. Stevens) 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. Hodgkinson v. Stevens, 5 Hill & Den. 616 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1843).

Opinion

Nelson, Ch. J.

The defendant was appointed by the com mon council of the city of Brooklyn, clerk of the board for the year ending the first day of May 1843, and until another should .be appointed in his place. (Sess. L. of ’34, p. 94, 117, §§ 14, 76.) The principal' question in the case is, whether the relator has been appointed for the! ensuing year. If not, then the de- ■ fendant holds over, and is entitled to retain the custody of the books and récords of the office.

The relator was undoubtedly appointed at the first meeting , of the new board in May 1843, if John A. Cross is to be regarded as having been elected,one of the aldermen for the seventh ward at the previous annual election in April. Without the vote of Albert H. Osborn, who claimed to hold over as one of the old aldermen of that ward on the ground of a failure to elect one in his place, the relator had the majority of votes, and was duly appointed to the. office.

. Was John A. .Cross then legally elected one of the aldermen of the ward.in April. 1843? For if he was, his election and subsequent qualification effectually displaced Osborn on the first pf May, after which he had no more right to a seat in the new [621]*621board than any other stranger who might obtrude himself upon its notice and claim to participate in its proceedings.

In order to determine this point we must recur to the result of the election as declared and published by the board of city canvassers. For I admit that, on a proceeding by mandamus ' involving a dispute as to which of two persons has been elected to an office, and indeed in every other proceeding involving the like enquiry, except quo warranto, the regular determination of the board of canvassers is to be déemed conclusive upon the parties. The original merits, by which I mean the- question arising upon a canvass of the votes, cannot be thus reviewed; but the result as finally certified and declared by the board is controlling. (The People ex rel. Van Voast v. Van Slyck, 4 Cowen, 297; The People ex rel. Yates v. Ferguson, 8 id. 102; The People ex rel. Platner v. Jones, 17 Wend. 81; The People ex rel. Benton v. Vail, 20 id. 12; Ex parte Heath, 3 Hill, 43, 47, 8.)

Under the act of 1842 (Sess. Laws of 42, p. 109,113) the seventh ward of the city of Brooklyn was divided into two election, districts, called the first and second, in each of which three inspectors of election are chosen. By the charter of the city these in-spectors are required, immediately after the election, or on the next day, to canvass the votes “ in the same manner and under the regulations prescribed by the revised statutes as to general elections ;” and on the day of completing the canvass, or the next day, they aré to deliver the statements, of the results to the clerk of the common council, who- is to file the same forthwith. (Sess. Laws of ’34, p. 94, § 12.) The charter then provides that the common council shall form the board of city canvassers, and shall, as soon as conveniently may be, and within eight days after the statements of the inspectors are received and filed, de- . .clare and publish the result of the election. (Id.)

- The returns of the inspectors in this case were made and filed on the next day after the election, and they showed that John A. Gross received in the two districts composing the ward, 447 votes; viz.- in the first district 201 votes, and in the second 246 votes. Theyiurther showed that Zebulon Chadbourne received [622]*622ill the first district 272 votes, and in the . second 173 votes; making in all 445. According to the returns of the . inspectors, .therefore, it is plain that Cross was elected alderpian of the ward by two majority.

After these returns were thus made out and filed. with the clerk in pursuance of the charter, but how long after .does not appear, two of the inspectors of the first district again met and made out a supplementary statement, in which they .set forth that six of the 201 votes counted for John A. Cross, were in the following, form: For Alderman—J Cross.” This supplementary statement, it is said, must be taken as a part of the return previously made and filed on the day succeeding the election. The revised statutes, however, referred to in the chapter of the city as regulating the duties and powers of the ,inspectors, provide, that after their returns shall be made out, signed and filed, “ the poll lists and ballots, excepting such ballots, as shall have been rejected by the inspectors as imperfect, shall then be destroyed, and the board of inspectors shall be dissolved.” (1 R. S. 138, § 50, 1.) The act of 1842 authorizes the several boards of county canvassers to have certain formal and clerical errors in the returns corrected, but guards expressly .against a phange or alteration of any decision before made by them. (Sess.. Laws of 42, p. 125, § 15.)

There can be no doubt, therefore, that this supplementary statement of the two inspectors was an unauthorized and very unwarrantable attempt to interfere with and change the legal pffect of the official return previously filed: and it is entitled to, no more consideration than if made by any other two respectable citizens of the ward. It must be regarded as if expunged from the proceedings, or rather as if it had never been annexed to them.

If the above view of the returns of the inspectors be correct, and I confess it appears to me too plain to admit of doubt or. Controversy, we have then a simple and direct statement on their part that John A. Cross received 201 votes in the first district, and Zebulon Chadbourne 272 votes; and these,, when added.to [623]*623the Votes given in the second district, clearly establish the election of Cross.

Let us now advert to the proceedings of the board of city canvassers. According to the charter of the city, as we have seen; they are required, as soon as conveniently may be, and within eight days after the statements of the inspectors shall be received and filed, to declare and publish the result of the election. What result? Obviously, the result as derived from the returns legally made and filed in pursuance of the statute. The city canvassers are to ascertain it from the facts thus made known to them, and to declare and publish it accordingly.

Following out the statute, the city canvassers have declared that, according to the statements delivered to and filed with the clerk, John A. Cross received for alderman in the first district 201 votes, and Zebulon Chadbourne 272 votes; and that, in the second district the former received 273 votes, and the latter 173. This shows a majority in favor of Cross. But on the facts embraced in the supplementary statement made by the two inspectors of the first district, the city canvassers have sought to change the result as derived from the official return previously filed, saying they could not satisfactorily determine that either of the two candidates was elected; and they have, therefore, declared that neither was elected.

Now the obvious answer to the matter thus put forth to qualfy the clear result of the election is, that it has no foundation in the official statements or returns of the inspectors—the only legitimate source whence the result can be ascertained.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Hill & Den. 616, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hodgkinson-v-stevens-nysupct-1843.