26 N.Y.S. 169 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This is a proceeding for a mandamus under section 133 of chapter 680 of the Laws of 1892, which, among other things, provides as follows: “ The Supreme Court may, upon affidavit presented by any voter showing that errors have occurred in any statement or determination made by any county board of canvassers, make an order requiring such board to correct such errors, or show cause why such correction should not be made. Lf such board fail or neglect to make such correction, or to show cause as aforesaid, the court may compel such board by writ of mandamus to correct such errors.”
At the recent election, held on the seventh of November,
It is apparent that had the said female votes been excluded as the petitioner desired, he would have had a small majority over Mr. Hoffman, and would have been entitled to a declaration of election in his favor. His contention now is that the law under which the females were permitted to vote was unconstitutional, and, therefore, void; that the votes thus counted that had been given by the females were not votes ; that it was demonstrated to the board of canvassers by the returns made by the local inspectors just how many such votes there were, and for whom given, and, therefore, they had the absolute proof that the female votes were cast by persons not qualified to vote, and that they should not have counted them or included them in their canvass and determination of such vote, and that the court on this motion should correct this error, and direct the board to reassemble and issue a new certificate declaring the petitioner elected.
The reason given why such votes were void is that the statute referred to was unconstitutional and void, and the counsel for the petitioner boldly state that it was the duty of the canvassing board to have so declared, and passed upon the constitutionality of this statute.
This is a new question. While numerous authorities were presented to the court, covering almost every other question, none were produced affirming the principle that the canvassing board, being merely an administrative body, could exercise the high judicial function, the highest, perhaps, known to our jurisprudence, of determining the constitutionality of a statute of a state.
By chapter 214 of the Laws of 1892, entitled “ An act to determine those who have a right to vote for school commissioners,” it is provided by section 1: “ All persons, without regard to sex, who are eligible to the office of school commissioner, and have the other qualifications now required by law,
By chapter 9 of the Laws of 1880, it is provided that “ ETo person shall be deemed to be ineligible to serve as any school officer, or to vote at any school meeting, by reason of sex, who has the other qualifications now required by law.”
The first, question I will consider is, what is the power of the court in this summary proceeding, under the statute of 1892, given above ?
The statute provides that the court shall correct the errors of the board of county canvassers. Can the court go further than to place itself in the position bf the board as a ministerial body, without judicial powers, and say what it would have done in the place of said board, or had the right to do ? One of the learned counsel for the petitioner insisted that if the court reached the conclusion that the board erred upon the legal question as to whether the ballots cast by the women were valid that the court could direct the reconvening of the board and the certificate to the petitioner, for the reason that the act was unconstitutional, while the board itself might not have the power to pass upon the constitutional question.
This is a dangerous doctrine. There is no usurpation so great as judicial usurpation; and the doctrine, once permitted, that the .judge may substitute his judgment and will in the place of the canvassing board, and direct them to do what they had not themselves the power to do, we cannot tell where the mischief will end, in the tremendous contests and excitements growing out of the elections in this country. I think the judge can only correct such errors as the board itself made.
This leads to the inquiry as to the power of the board to pass upon the constitutionality of this statute. When was it ever heard or claimed before that a mere ministerial body, composed, not of lawyers, not of judges, but of supervisors of towns, and citizens not learned in the law, could assume to
The courts have spoken upon this question in no uncertain terms, and have held that a ministerial officer cannot refuse to perform a duty enjoined upon him by a statute on the ground "that the statute is unconstitutional. People v. Stephens, 2 Abb. Pr. 348; Smyth v. Titcomb, 31 Maine, 272, 285 ; Merrill Mandamus, § 66; People v. Salomon, 51 Ill. 39; Bassett v. Barbin, 11 La. Ann. 672.
The court, placing itself in the position of this board, must hold that the board could not raise this objection. It is no answer for a ministerial board to make, in refusing to perform a statutory duty, that the statute is unconstitutional, unless it has been so declared by the court of last resort in the state, or at least by an appellate court, after full consideration.
Assuming for the moment that an election board could pass upon the constitutionality of a statute, where would the mischief end ? Into what countless labyrinths and perplexities would it lead us ? These boards are not free from public excitement or political prejudice. In close elections the temptation would be very strong to make a constitutional objection a pretext for almost any wrong, and thus the security of the means by which our elections are declared and certified would be seriously impaired, if not overthrown.
The statute, as to counting and certifying the votes of electors for the various offices, is very plain and concise. The local inspectors must count the votes they receive and certify them; the county canvassing boards must, upon those returns, declare the result. They have power to have corrected clerical errors made by the local boards, or send for complete • returns under the statute, but the power is nowhere given in the statute for the canvassing board to reject any vote that comes to it certified in due form by the local inspectors as having been cast at the election.
If any other system prevailed endless controversies would arise before these ministerial boards, Avhich would impede the ■celerity with which those returns should be brought in and
But assuming for a moment that the court will award a mandamus where a statute is unconstitutional to prevent obedience to it, there must be a clear case; there must be no doubt of its unconstitutionally.
The question of the constitutionality of this law is not free from difficulty, and, in view of the importance of the question ■ involved, it may not be unprofitable to glance for a moment at this question without attempting to decide it.
The counsel for the petitioner present upon this argument the opinion of. Mr. Justice Williams In the Matter of the Cancellation on the Registry List of the Names of Certain Women, 5 Misc. Rep. 376, who were registered in the counties-of Onondaga and Oneida, and claimed the right to vote for school commissioners. - The learned judge, in a short opinion,, reaches the conclusion that the act of 1893, authorizing women to vote, is unconstitutional, and it is said that several other judges of this court have reached a similar conclusion, and that conclusion seems based upon the definition of an elector in section 1 of article 2 of the Constitution as “ Every male citizen,’5 etc., and the provision of section 2 of article X of the Constitution, which is as follows:
“ All county officers, whose election or appointment is not provided for by this Constitution, shall be elected by the electors of the respective counties or appointed by the boards of supervisors, or other county authorities, as the legislature shall direct. All city, town and village officers, whose election or appointment is not provided for by this Constitution, shall be elected by the electors of such cities, towns and villages, or of some division thereof, or appointed by such authorities thereof, as the legislature shall designate for that purpose. All other officers, whose election or appointment is
It being conceded that the office of school commissioner was created by the legislature after these constitutional provisions had gone into effect, it is assumed that it comes within the scope of the last portion of the section just quoted, “ all officers that are now or hereafter may be elected by the people.”
There is no doubt but what the school commissioner is an officer, and that he holds an office under the laws of this state, nor is there any doubt but what all the boards of education and trustees of schools and other school officers that are elected by the people at elections are officers, and if the position of the learned judge proves that the school commissioner is within this prohibition of article X, it goes much further, and affects all other school officers that have been elected at popular elections at which women have voted. The board of education, therefore, of the city of Lockport, which is elected by the voters of the city, women participating, and who appoint the trustees of the various school districts, and whose duties are simply that of school officers, are not legally elected if such election was contributed to by women.
It is a fact that the great educational interests of.this State, especially the common school or free school system of the state, the most important of all systems, the system by which our people are educated, is utterly ignored by the Constitution, except in a single paragraph, to be found in section 1 of article IX, which is as follows : “ The capital of the common school fund, the capital of the literature fund, and the capital of the United States deposit fund, shall be respectively preserved inviolate. The revenue of the said common school fund shall be applied to the support of common schools ; the revenue of the said literature fund shall be applied to the support of academies, and the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars of^lie revenues of the United States deposit fund shall
Why this significant omission ? The Constitution makers evidently designed that the whole common school system, should be left untrammeled, both as to its scope and existence, as to the creation of its officers, and as to the methods of educating the people, leaving it to the legislature, as “ the legislative power is absolute and unlimited, except as restrained by the Constitution.” Bank of Chenango v. Brown, 26 N. Y. 467; People v. Flagg, 46 id. 401.
It may be argued that the Constitution no more intended to cripple the legislature in providing the instruments to carry on the education of the people, to wit, its officers, than it had as to its means of raising money for that purpose or providing the general machinery by which the people were to be educated. Therefore; it is said that the officers mentioned to be thereafter elected, as provided by section 2 of article X of the Constitution, has no reference to school officers, but only to such officers as are created for the political relations and divisions of the state, and in regard to the subjects which the Constitution in and of itself takes away from the legislature, or takes control of in the limited manner indicated by the Constitution itself. A school officer in a city like Rochester, with 150,000 people, elected by the people, in which the women particij>ate, is quite as important an officer as a school commissioner in a rural district with half the population of that, city, and yet no question has been made but what women had the right to participate in the election of the city and village officers for school purposes. The duties of the school commissioner are as strictly confined to the school system and to-educational purposes as that of any other school officer, and are a paid of the system created by the legislature - for the management of the schools.
The Supreme Court of Michigan, in the case of Eva R. Belles v. William A. Burr and others, reported in 76 Michigan Reports, 1, in a case where a married woman brought ah
Now, the only difference between that condition and ours is that our Constitution, instead of providing that the legislature should provide a school system, has, by its omission to touch the subject at all, further than above stated, left the legislature free to act upon that subject. Therefore, this Michigan case is an authority for the position which was taken by the respondents in this proceeding, that the women were entitled to vote for school commissioner.
The same position, Avith a similar Constitution as that of Michigan, has been taken by the Supreme Court of Illinois, in Plummer v. Yost, decided January 19, 1893, and reported in 33 Northeastern Reporter at page 191.
A proceeding by action in which all the parties are interested can be brought, and the right to this office be tested and these questions fully and deliberately disposed of, is the proper place to determine this matter. The court will not, in this summary proceeding, do so.
The proceedings which elicited the opinion of Judge Wil
The application for a writ of mandamus to the canvassing board must be denied, and the proceedings of the petitioner dismissed, but without costs, as the questions are new, and an order may be prepared and entered accordingly.
Application denied.