People ex rel. Platt v. Rice

26 N.Y.S. 345, 81 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 179, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 546, 74 Hun 179
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 26 N.Y.S. 345 (People ex rel. Platt v. Rice) 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. Platt v. Rice, 26 N.Y.S. 345, 81 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 179, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 546, 74 Hun 179 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinions

HERRICK, J.

After the state election in 1891, a controversy -arose in the county of Dutchess over the canvass by the board of [346]*346county canvassers of the vote for state senator. The county clerk, as secretary of the board of canvassers, refused to sign the statements of canvass as made by the board of canvassers, and said board thereupon by resolution appointed John J. Mylod, one of its members, secretary pro tern., and directed him as such to sign and! attest said statements, which he did, and such statements, so signed by him, were transmitted to the governor, secretary of state, and comptroller, to be canvassed by the defendants herein as the state-board of canvassers. Proceedings were thereupon instituted against the defendants, composing the state board of canvassers, to prevent their canvassing the statement or return signed by Mylod, and on December 7, 1891, at a special term of the supreme court, an order was granted containing the following provision:

“It is ordered that a writ of peremptory mandamus issue out of and under the seal of this court, commanding and requiring the said state board of canvassers that they issue a certificate of election to the office of senator in the fifteenth senatorial district of this state, disregarding the so-called return of the board of county canvassers of the county of Dutchess, which is signed by John Mylod, as secretary of said board pro tem., and is not signed by the county clerk of Dutchess county, or certified under the seal of said county clerk, but that instead thereof they consider only such return from the county of Dutchess as may hereafter be filed, containing the signature of the county clerk of. the county of Dutchess and the chairman of said board of county canvassers, and issued under the seal of said county clerk; and in their certificate of election the said state board of canvassers certify and declare that the person who appears upon the certified returns and statements made by the boards of canvassers of the counties of Columbia, Putnam, and; Dutchess, in pursuance of the statute and the order of the comet, to have received the greatest number of votes, was duly elected senator from the said fifteenth senatorial district.”

This order was affirmed by the general term, and was then taken to the court of appeals. See People ex rel. Daley v. Rice, 129 N. Y. 449, 29 N. E. 355.

It appears from the opinion of Judge Peckham that two grounds were urged in the court of appeals for sustaining the order in question,—one that the return of the county canvassers referred to in said order was not certified by the county clerk, and the other that the county canvassers illegally threw out votes that had been counted for Mr. Deane by the inspectors of election, and illegally transposed votes canvassed by said inspectors,—votes counted for Mr. Deane were given to Mr. Osborne; that the board of county canvassers illegally canvassed the returns from the inspectors of election in- the whole county, and made up their own canvass in-opposition to such returns. As to the first ground, the court held that it was not necessary that the returns of the board of county canvassers should be signed or certified by the county clerk, and jin disposing of that question the court said:

“We think that under all the facts the steps taken to certify and authenticate the statements were valid, and the proceedings by which they were sent to and received by the secretary of state and other state officers were-sufficient to entitle them to be filed and considered by the board of state canvassers as the properly certified result of the canvass of the board of county canvassers. The other ground for directing the state canvassers to-omit to canvass this return remains to be considered.”

[347]*347The court then, after reciting the facts as to the second ground of objection to canvassing such return, proceeds as follows:

“Upon, these facts, standing uncontradicted, we think the court below, in its proper branch, would have the power to command the state canvassers to canvass without regard to such a return. As it contained the result of an illegal and erroneous canvass by the board of county canvassers in excess of its jurisdiction, and which thereby would alter the result of an election, the court should not permit it to be canvassed. * * * If another return should be duly sent to the board, properly authenticated, and containing the result of the legal action of the board of county canvassers, the state board could canvass it. We think, as a result, that the order for the writ, and the writ itself, should be modified by striking out the provisions requiring a return to be certified by, and to come "from, the county clerk of Dutchess county, and issued under his seal, and, as so modified, the order is affirmed.”

The remittitur of the court of appeals upon such decision was as follows:

“It is ordered and adjudged that the order of the special term herein, dated December 7, 1891, and the order of the general term affirming the same, and the same writ itself, be modified by striking out the provision requiring a return to be certified by, and to come from, the county clerk of Dutchess county, and issued under his seal, and that the said order so appealed from, as so modified, be affirmed, without costs.”

Striking out the provisions in the order of the special term requiring a return to be certified by, and to come from, the county clerk of Dutchess county, and issued under his seal, the order issued by the special term would read as follows:

“It is ordered that a writ of peremptory mandamus issue out of and under the seal of this court, commanding and requiring the state board of canvassers that they issue a certificate of election to the office of senator in the fifteenth senatorial district of this state, disregarding the so-called return of the board of county canvassers of the county of Dutchess, which is signed by John Mylod, as secretary of said board pro tern., but that instead thereof they consider only such return from the county of Dutchess as may hereafter be filed; and that in their certificate of election the said state board of canvassers certify and declare that the person who appears upon the certified returns and statements made by the boards of canvassers of the counties of Columbia, Putnam, and Dutchess, in pursuance of the statute and the order of the court, to have received the greatest number of votes, was duly elected senator from the said fifteenth senatorial district.”

Whatever other return the board of state canvassers might canvass, they were thus expressly forbidden, by an order of the special term of this court, affirmed by the general term and the court of appeals, to canvass the so-called “Mylod” return; yet, in the evening of the same day that the opinion of the court of appeals was handed down, and after the same had been read by counsel for the defendants, and, as appears from the case, communicated to at least some of the defendants, but, I infer, before the filing of the remittitur and the entry of an order making the judgment of the court of appeals that of the supreme court, the board of state canvassers met and canvassed the votes for senator in the fifteenth district, and in doing so they failed to disregard the Mylod return. They used that return in making their canvass. Without discussing the question whether or not there was a corrected return before the board which they could and should have canvassed, it is sufficient to say that [348]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.Y.S. 345, 81 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 179, 56 N.Y. St. Rep. 546, 74 Hun 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-platt-v-rice-nysupct-1893.