Stone v. Wyckoff
This text of 245 A.2d 215 (Stone v. Wyckoff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
KENNETH E. STONE; LOTTA C. BURKE; DAVID L. STOKES; AND M. GLORIA JANWICH, PLAINTIFFS-RESPONDENTS,
v.
FLOYD WYCKOFF, TOWNSHIP CLERK OF THE TOWNSHIP OF MARLBORO; GEORGE E. CREEVY AND ALFRED L. STORER, DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
*29 Before Judges CONFORD, LABRECQUE and HALPERN.
*30 Mr. Milton Kosene, argued the cause for appellant Floyd Wyckoff.
Mr. Herbert B. Bierman, argued the cause for appellants George E. Creevy and Alfred L. Storer.
Mr. James R. Minogue, argued the cause for respondents.
The opinion of the court was delivered by CONFORD, S.J.A.D.
This is an action in lieu of prerogative writs by four citizens of Marlboro to compel the township clerk to call for a recall election in respect of the two defendant-councilmen, pursuant to N.J.S.A. 40:69A-169 et seq. Defendants resisted the complaint in the Law Division on grounds of fraud in the preparation, and insufficiency of the recall petitions in various respects. Certain constitutional objections to the statute were also raised in the answers filed by defendants, but were not advanced at the hearings in the Law Division. These and some added constitutional points are nevertheless argued on the appeal.
The trial court after a hearing ruled against defendants on all points raised before it. We remanded for the taking of additional proofs and the making of further findings as to the genuineness of signatures on the two recall petitions. This has been done, and the final judgment entered in the first instance in favor of plaintiffs and against defendants on cross-motions for summary judgment and the first hearing of factual issues has been reaffirmed.
I
After the original hearing, the trial court found no evidence of fraud in the circulation and signing of the recall petitions, and we concur.
II
At the original hearing, a handwriting expert testified on behalf of defendants that in a considerable number of *31 groupings of signatures on both petitions a single person had signed all names in each of the particular groupings. As to most of these groupings of names plaintiffs offered the opposing testimony of individual purported signatories that all of the signatures in the particular grouping impugned were genuine. As to substantially all other groupings, the parties stipulated that persons were present in court, either signers or petition carriers, who would testify to the same effect. Since both sides agreed at the oral argument that the trial judge did not examine the signatures on the original petitions in appraising credibility, and because we did not deem such a stipulation a satisfactory method of weighing comparative weight and credibility, we remanded with directions that the "stipulated" witnesses appear and testify at a new hearing and that the judge examine the questioned signatures on the original petitions.
As noted above, these directions have been complied with (except as to 3 or 4 signatures where the witnesses could not be produced at the remand hearing), and the trial judge has made individual findings of genuineness of all questioned signatures. In each instance the judge indicated the specific factual basis for his findings, and we are satisfied that there is no ground for appellate interference with any of the determinations of fact thus made.
The supplemental brief of defendants makes only two points concerning the remand hearing. First, it is pointed out that one witness-signatory was concededly mistaken as to the identity of the petition carrier who obtained her signature, and that she was recalled to the stand to correct her testimony. This, however, was merely a circumstance going to credibility, and the judge was entitled to find that the witness was nevertheless truthful concerning the genuineness of the signatures of herself and her husband. Second, a point of comparable import is made with respect to the statutory affidavit of one of the petition carriers. The affidavit was to the effect that all signatures on the petition he carried were genuine whereas he admitted in his testimony that one signature *32 was produced out of his sight when a signing husband took the petition to a bedroom for his wife to sign also. Defendants ask that on the basis of the foregoing we invalidate all the signatures on the petition circulated by this particular carrier. The request is frivolous. The technical untruthfulness of the affidavit in the respect noted does not necessarily condemn the carrier's testimony as to the genuineness of all other signatures on his petition. The matter was one for disposition within the fact-finding function of the judge. As for the signatures of the husband and wife in this instance, the judge decided, on an inspection of the signatures on the petition and those of the same persons on the original voting records, that the signatures on the petition were genuine. There is no tenable basis for rejecting that finding.
III
It is contended that the trial judge "created an unfair climate in the courtroom and deprived defendants of a fair trial." We need not discuss the detailed allegations in this regard. We find the complaint without merit.
IV
Defendants argue that since the statute requires that where there are petitions for the recall of more than one officer their positions on the ballot should be in the order of the filing of the petitions, N.J.S.A. 40:69A-173, and since the township clerk could not determine the order in which the recall petitions had actually been filed, the petitions should be dismissed. The incongruity of any such construction of the statute, which would cripple the whole recall effort merely because the two petitions had been filed together, is manifest on the face of its statement. If the clerk is actually unable to determine the order of filing, he may position the names on the ballot in such reasonable manner as he chooses. As a rule of general procedure, however, the statutory intention should be subserved by the clerk requesting *33 a filer of more than one petition to specify the order in which it is desired that they be filed.
V
Defendants contend that a considerable number of signatures on the petitions are invalid because they do not satisfy the requirement of N.J.S.A. 40:69A-170 that the signer specify "his place of residence giving the street and number or other sufficient designation if there shall be no street and number." It is clear from the evidence that while every street or road in Marlboro has a name few if any dwellings have street numbers. For postal purposes there are R.D., and P.O. box, numbers. Defendants contend that the statute is not satisfied unless the petition signer gives the street name and P.O. box number (where there is no street number). They argue that a street name and an R.D. number are insufficient because in the absence of a box number "it would be practically impossible to locate the residence" of the person. This is not explained. Yet they also say that no one has both an R.D. and P.O. box number. By this contention, therefore, a voter without a box number would be unable to sign a recall petition. The unreasonableness of the position is manifest.
Election laws are to be liberally construed so as to effectuate their purpose. Wene v. Meyner, 13 N.J.
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245 A.2d 215, 102 N.J. Super. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-wyckoff-njsuperctappdiv-1968.