234 A.D. 170 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1931
The petition of George Oliver recites that he was a candidate for supervisor in the town of Summit, Schoharie county, N. Y., at the general election held on November 3, 1931, and that one Arthur Smith was the opposing candidate; that there are two election districts in the town; that the inspectors of election filed the returns with the board of town canvassers “ and such board of town canvassers claimed to have made a canvass of the votes cast at the said general election for the candidates for the office of supervisor * * *; that from said canvass it appears that Arthur Smith, the republican nominee for said office, received 211 votes * * * and that your petitioner * * * received 210 votes for said office.” The petitioner also states it to be his belief that such canvass is inaccurate and incorrect, specifying the particulars. Upon this petition and the subsequent proceedings, two orders were made at the Columbia County Special Term of the Supreme Court, one dated November 11, the other November 20, 1931. This appeal is from those orders.
From the facts alleged in the petition and those appearing at the hearings, the court would have been justified in granting the relief authorized by Sections 330 and 333 of the Election Law. The order of November eleventh directed in substance that the inspectors of election of the two districts of the town “ convene as the board of inspectors of election of said election districts respectively at the Trial Term of the Supreme Court, Part Two, in the County Court House in the City of Albany on the 16th day of November, 1931, at four o’clock in the afternoon,” and that the four justices of the peace and the town clerk of said town “ be and they hereby are directed to convene as the board of canvassers of said town ” at the same time and place, and the persons having possession of the ballot boxes of the two election districts with all ballots contained therein, were required to produce them at the same time and place,
Judge Hiscock, writing in a town election case (Matter of Tamney v. Atkins, 209 N. Y. 202), says (at p. 206): “ It is well settled that this proceeding may not be entertained by virtue of any inherent powers of the court, but must find authorization and support in the express provisions of the Statute.”
Section 67 of the Town Law is entitled “ Town meeting at time of general election.” It provides for the canvass of the votes “ in the same manner as the votes for other candidates cast at the general election are canvassed ” and the delivery of the returns to one of the justices of the peace of the town, and that on the Thursday following the election, “ such votes shall be recanvassed * * * as provided by section sixty-five of this chapter.” Section 65 of the Town Law requires that the justices and town clerk of the town “ shall then and there recanvass such votes from the statements of the inspectors of the several separate or joint election districts so delivered to them.” Section 67 further provides, “ In case of a
The broad and liberal powers granted to the court in the opening paragraph of section 330 are limited to “ the subjects set forth in this section.” The only ballots which are therein mentioned are the 11 protested, wholly void or blank ballots shown upon the statement of the canvass.” These, under the statute, are to be placed by the inspectors in a separate sealed package (Election Law, § 226) and filed with the board of elections of the county. (Election Law, § 228, subd. 2.) The court may pass upon such ballots and direct a change in the returns to reflect its ruling thereon, if the count of such ballots by the inspectors was erroneous. Subdivision 5 of section 330, as earlier stated, has no reference to ballots or ballot boxes, but to an inspection of the returns made by boards of inspectors or canvassers. The power granted the courts to “ summarily determine ” concerning certain named subjects and the direction that the section should be “ construed liberally ” does not grant general equity powers to interpret the will of the voters, neither does it abrogate the ancient writ of quo warranto or repeal the statutes of procedure and availability to test the title to a public office.
Section 333, a part of section 374 of the former Election Law, authorizes an order for an examination of the ballots in the ballot boxes and the preservation thereof. It has been construed several times as not authorizing a recount or recanvass of the ballots. (People ex rel. Brown v. Freisch, supra, 369; Matter of Hearst v. Woelper, 183 N. Y. 274; People ex rel. Brink v. Way, 179 id. 174.) An inspection of the ballots under section 333 (formerly section 374) cannot be merged with subdivision 4 of section 330 (formerly a
The inspectors of election of Summit did not return the protested, wholly blank and void ballots to the board of elections. These ballots, without distinguishing marks, were mingled with the other ballots and returned to the ballot boxes on election night. Later, in one district, the ballot box was opened by an inspector and one of this class of ballots removed. “ In all cases where the petition does not disclose that ballots canvassed as void or protested are so marked or identifiable as to permit the inspectors to immediately select said ballots from those in the box, the court is confined in the examination of the protested, void and wholly blank ballots to such ballots as are found in the envelopes.” (People ex rel. Brown v. Freisch, supra, 373.)
The court had no authority in this proceeding to determine that two of the unprotested ballots were void, or to require the boards of inspectors and canvassers to change their earlier returns except in respect of “ protested, wholly blank or void ballots shown upon the statement of the canvass in the election district.” (Election Law, § 330, subd. 4.) Authority as to such ballots existed only if they had been filed with the board of elections (Election Law, § 228), or, if erroneously returned to the ballot box with the unprotested ballots, if they were “ so marked or identifiable as to permit the inspectors to immediately select said ballots from those in the box.” (People ex rel. Brown v. Freisch, supra.)
The order of November eleventh should be reversed on the law, with costs, except in so far as it permits an inspection of the ballots. The order of November twentieth should be reversed on the law and all the acts done by the inspectors of election and the board of canvassers under such orders should be vacated and annulled.
All concur.
Order of November eleventh reversed on the law, except in so far as it permits an inspection of the ballots.
Order of November twentieth reversed on the law, and all the acts done by the inspectors of election and the board of canvassers under such orders are vacated and annulled.