People Ex Rel. McLaughlin v. . Ammenwerth
This text of 90 N.E. 973 (People Ex Rel. McLaughlin v. . Ammenwerth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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I think that the order granted below was right, which directed a peremptory writ of mandamus to issue, commanding the inspectors of election of the 16th election district, of the 4th assembly district, Queens county, to meet and to count certain 17 ballots, which had been "protested as marked for identification" and which the inspectors had not *Page 342 counted for any candidate, for the candidates whose names appear thereon for the office of Municipal Court justice of the 4th Municipal Court district, of the borough of Queens, to make a true return thereof and to correct their statement of the votes cast in said district.
If the effect of the proceeding had been to command a recount of ballots, already counted by the inspectors of election, it would be contrary to the law. (Matter of Hearst v. Woelper,
It is clear enough that no recount has been ordered of ballots, which were once counted, or which were included in any return of votes counted for the office of Municipal Court justice. The Election Law, (Secs. 370, 373; 2 Consolidated Laws, 962, 963), requires that all the ballots, which are protested as marked for identification, shall be counted, but must be separately placed in a sealed package, and section 381 provides for a judicial investigation of such ballots, in proceedings taken to obtain the writ of mandamus. As the result of such judicial investigation, any ballot, which the court determines to have been marked for the purpose of identification, is "to be excluded upon a recount of such votes".
It will not do to say that the court is without power, under the Election Law, to order the counting of these 17 ballots. While the power is expressly granted to order a recount of votes, where ballots are held to have been marked for identification and have been counted, and to exclude votes thereon, the power, necessarily, exists, also, to compel a compliance with the statute that all such ballots shall be counted by the inspectors "as if not so protested". (Election Law, sec. 370; 2 Consolidated Laws, 962.) The law assumes a compliance with its direction by the inspectors of election and makes provision for the judicial investigation and for a recount as to ballots questioned and counted, but held invalidated by the court. If the election officers have failed to perform their duty to count such ballots, a case arises where the court should, and may, compel them to perform such duty. If this were not true, there would result a disfranchisement of such voters. Voters, entitled by law to have their votes counted, would be remediless. It is one of the functions of the writ of mandamus to remedy an evil, which would result from the *Page 344
neglect to perform an official duty. (People ex rel. Smith v.Schiellein,
It is unnecessary to consider the appeal in the proceeding to compel the board of county canvassers to correct the certified statement of the result of the canvass of the vote cast at the late general election. I think the opinion of the Appellate Division sufficiently discusses the question involved in that proceeding.
I advise the affirmance of both orders appealed from.
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90 N.E. 973, 197 N.Y. 340, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 1073, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-mclaughlin-v-ammenwerth-ny-1910.