309 A.2d 347 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1973
The within matter was brought by the plaintiff, pursuant to the provisions of §
At the time of the hearing before the court, the parties entered into a written stipulation alleging in essence that (1) there was no evidence of any intent on the part of any of the election officials to alter, change, defraud, deface or in any way affect the *255
counting of the absentee ballots; (2) the borough clerk failed to comply with the provisions of §
The parties also orally stipulated that the plaintiff received 424 of the votes recorded on the voting machines at the election and the defendant Harry E. Downey received 422 of the votes recorded on the machines.
By allowing all of the absentee ballots to be cast in accordance with the figures recited, the moderator declared the defendant Harry E. Downey to be elected warden by a plurality of 14 votes. The plaintiff claims that all of the absentee ballots should have been declared invalid, and, therefore, asks the court to certify his election as warden by reason of his two-vote plurality in the votes cast on the voting machines.
Since the parties had not agreed as to whether any timely challenge was made to the aforementioned absentee ballots at the statutorily permitted recanvass, or whether such a challenge was even *256
necessary, the court, on its own motion, on May 29, 1973, ordered the hearing on this matter reopened for the purpose of taking evidence and hearing arguments concerning the question of timely challenge. At that further hearing, the evidence indicated that the plaintiff, the plaintiff's counsel, and a counter representing the Democratic party were present at the time of the recanvass; that the moderator refused to permit the Democratic party representative or the plaintiff's counsel to see any of the envelopes in which the absentee ballots had been sent; and that the plaintiff's counsel advised the moderator of his intention to take the matter to court under the provisions of §
It is clear from a reading of §§
The first of those omissions was an omission which was not violative of the statutory legislative policy to prevent voting frauds, nor did the omission make it difficult to ascertain the wish of the elector casting the ballot. Our Supreme Court has stated a number of times that "a voter should not be disfranchised because of the error or mistake of another," which mistake does not contravene the legislative policy against voting frauds. Dombkowski
v. Messier,
The failure to prepare the affidavit required by §
Judgment, accordingly, may enter for the defendants, without costs to any party.