People Ex Rel. Stapleton v. . Bell

23 N.E. 533, 119 N.Y. 175, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1576
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 23 N.E. 533 (People Ex Rel. Stapleton v. . Bell) 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.

Bluebook
People Ex Rel. Stapleton v. . Bell, 23 N.E. 533, 119 N.Y. 175, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1576 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

Gbay, J.

The record before us shows that the question which it presents has received a careful consideration in the courts below, and we might leave the discussion there, if it were not a question which, as concerning the powers of inspectors of elections in holding state elections, affects the right of suffrage, and, therefore, is of public interest. The precise claim of the appellants amounts to this, that those officers are clothed with a discretionary power to reject the ballot tendered by a proposed elector; notwithstanding he may have satisfied the tests prescribed by law, by taking the oaths and fully answering the questions put to him, if they doubt his identity with the registered elector, whose name he gives at the polls. In other words, that they may act, nevertheless, upon their own private opinions and knowledge. That claim arrogates to them judicial powers, and support for it must be found in the law regulating elections, either in express words, or as implied, from being necessarily incidental to the office and to the proper exercise of its duties.

The right of suffrage is one of the most valuable and sacred rights which the Constitution has conferred upon the citizen of the state. About it have been erected many safeguards, with the object of securing to each qualified elector the fullest and freest exercise of his constitutional privilege, and, also, of obtaining the greatest protection against the perpetration of *179 frauds at the polls, which shall be consistent with a certainty that every person entitled to vote shall have his ballot received, deposited and counted. It may properly be observed in this connection that, in addition to the legal requisites, the public nature of the proceedings, through which the elector entitles himself to cast a ballot, and the public manner in which he presents himself to cast it at the polls, are features in our elections, which tend to minimize the possibility of false personations and of other fraudulent practices in elections.

I think it would be a far greater menace to the security of this constitutional right, if the' law regulating its exercise might prevent the vote of a citizen, duly qualified to east it, from being received and counted, than that some fraud might be practiced by a false personation. For, in the one case, there would be the disfranchisement of the elector; while, in the other, for the wrong done to the people, or to the individual, penalties and remedies are provided, and tribunals exist for their enforcement against a wrongdoer and for the establishment of the right.

There are no complex features in this case and it can be briefly stated. At the last general election in this state, the two relators and the two defendants composed the board of inspectors of election; the former being the Democratic and the latter the Republican members thereof. After the closing of the polls the inspectors counted the ballots which had been cast, and the results of the counting were thereupon, proclaimed. But to the election return, containing a statement of such results, the defendants refused to affix their signatures as required by law.

In opposition to the application of the relators for an order compelling them to sign the return, the defendants objected, in substance, that fraudulent votes were received during the election from persons falsely personating registered voters and who were not themselves registered; that upon their votes being offered their receipt was objected to; the “persons were challenged and sworn and their answers were unsatisfactory ;” that said ballots were not received by the board, or by amajority *180 thereof, hut were taken and deposited by the relators in the ballot boxes, contrary to the protest of the defendants. It does not appear, however, that any minutes or record were made of such attempts, or objections; although the affidavit of the defendants states, somewhat indefinitely, that at least seventy fraudulent votes were offered at the polls.” The allegation was not put in issue by any denial and we must take it to be true. The gravity of the offense cannot be overrated and calls for the severest expressions of condemnation. Such practices are as dangerous to the rights of citizens as they are odious; and, when suffered to go unnoticed and unpunished, reflect disgracefully upon the community. If unchecked by punishment the electoral franchise is subjected to further attacks by dishonest partisans, emboldened by past immunity to themselves, or others, to affect the result of elections by fraudulent personations and other devices. But we are confined in our discussion here, to the legal question of what exercise of powers is permitted under the existing laws.

We must assume that the person, whose right to vote was challenged, submitted to all the statutory tests prescribed by the law in such cases, for the appellants concede that he was “ sworn” and only allege that his “ answers were unsatisfactory.” They did not claim that his answers were not full, or that he was disabled by reason of any conviction. Their position is that they had knowledge that persons offered ballots, who were not the registered electors they claimed to be and were not registered at all, and their argument is that, notwithstanding those persons satisfied the statutory tests, such questions are always outstanding for the determination of the board ; which only a majority can make.

I must say, that, to my mind, this claim is as unreasonable, as it is absolutely lacking in support in the fundamental, or in statutory law. It is repugnant to fundamental principles and to authority. I may fairly premise what brief discussion I may feel bound to enter upon, in connection with the law regulating elections in this state, with the remark, that if these appellants are right in their contention, then a way is made *181 possible to perpetrate a great outrage upon the rights of electors. Under the present scheme of non-partisan boards of election inspectors, wherein the principal political parties in the state are intended to have equal representation, by a contumacious refusal of party adherents to sign an election return, based on the pretense that they were not satisfied in their.minds that all of the ballots taken were cast by qualified and registered electors, the disfranchisement of all the electors in the election district could be effected. They could prevent the reception of a ballot from a proposed elector, on their theory that a ballot is not finally received until by action of the majority of the board; for they would only have to oppose to the proofs required by the election law and made by the person, their mental convictions that, notwithstanding them, he was not the elector he swore he was. I do not, and cannot think such a result was ever intended, or can be fairly reached upon a consideration of the law. It is inconceivable that any such power should be lodged in election inspectors; or that they should be clothed with a discretion to reject a ballot offered by a proposed elector, whose qualifications, in case of challenge, are proved by the statutory methods.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.E. 533, 119 N.Y. 175, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 1576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-stapleton-v-bell-ny-1889.