69 Conn. 335 | Conn. | 1897
This is an appeal from a judgment denying an application for a peremptory writ of mandamus. The substance of the application and of the alternative writ, may be stated as follows:—
At the annual town meeting of the town of New Canaan, held on the first Monday of October, 1896, pursuant to legal notice to that effect, a vote by ballot was taken to determine whether any person should be licensed to sell spirituous and intoxicating liquors in said town. The respondent Bossa was the moderator of said meeting, and the respondents Noble, Kirk, Hoyt and Weed were the counters of said ballots. Of the legal ballots cast at said meeting, there were 264 against, and 265 in favor of, the issue of such licenses. “ The said counters did unlawfully count and make return of two illegal ballots in favor of ‘No License,’ one of which said two ballots was a double ballot, and the other of said ballots was a ballot which by the person voting the same was placed in a small sealed envelope, and with said small sealed envelope was placed in the official envelope, and so deposited in the ballot box, and was by reason of said fact so marked as that the person who cast the same could easily and readily be identified. The said two illegal ballots were by said counters added to and counted with the 264 legal ‘ No License ’ ballots aforesaid, and the result of said balloting was by said moderator declared to be 266 ballots in favor of ‘No License’
The alternative writ required the counters to return to Bossa, the moderator, “the lawful result of said balloting, namely, 265 ballots in favor of ‘License,’ and 264 ballots in favor of ‘No License ’”; it required the moderator “to certify said result to said town clerk ” ; and it required the town clerk to “ receive such certificate from said Bossa, and transmit the same to the Secretary of State and the county commissioners of Fairfield County,” or that the respondents should signify cause to the contrary to the court, on or before December 11th, 1896.
The respondents filed a motion to quash the alternative writ, the substance of which motion may be stated as follows: The facts alleged in the alternative writ and in the application therefor, show (1) that the respondents are not by law authorized or required to do what they are in the alternative writ required to do; (2) that the counters counted the ballots and certified the same to the moderator, who in turn received said certificate and certified the same to the town clerk, as required by law; (3) that the two ballots counted in favor of “No License ” “ were not illegal ballots under the
One of the decisive questions in this case is whether the two so-called illegal ballots were rightfully counted in favor of “No License.” If they were, the decision of the court below must stand, and all other questions in the ease become of no importance upon this appeal. Section 9 of Chap. 267 of the Public Acts of 1895, p. 619, concerning elections, provides that “ if more than one ballot containing the title of the same office, or for the same educational purpose, shall be found in any envelope, neither of such ballots shall be counted for any person, or for such purpose, and all such ballots shall be returned as rejected for being double ballots ”; and further, that “if any envelope or ballot shall contain any mark or device so that the same may be identified in such a manner as to indicate who' might have cast the same, the ballot so marked, or the ballot contained in any envelope so marked, shall not be counted, but shall be kept by the moderator and returned to the town clerk in a separate package from the ballots which are counted at such election.” Counsel for the appellant claim that these provisions are, by Chap. 308 of the Public Acts of 1895, p. 648, made applicable to the ballots cast for or against license, chiefly because that Act provides (§ 4) that “ the license votes thus cast shall be counted and returned as now provided by law.”
We are of opinion that this claim is not well founded. From 1874 until the passage of the Act of 1895 contained in Chap. 308 aforesaid, the law only required that the vote upon the question of license or no license should be taken by bal-, lot, without providing otherwise, specifically and expressly, how such vote should be taken. General Statutes, § 3050. Under this law it was held, in the case of Donovan v. County Commissioners, 60 Conn. 339, that the provisions of the Act of 1889 concerning elections (Chap. 247, Public Acts of
The foregoing is the substance of the material parts of the entire Act, and among them we find nothing that, either expressly or by necessary implication, makes the provisions of the election law relating to the invalidity and rejection of double ballots or marked ballots, a part of this Act, or makes such provisions at all applicable to license ballots. As before intimated, the clause mainly relied upon by counsel for the appellant in support of their contention, is the one which provides that the license votes shall be counted and returned “ as now provided by law.” Their claim, in substance, is that this should be so construed as to make all the provisions
Such, in a general way, was the law governing license ballots when the Act now in question (Chap. 308 of the Public Acts of 1895), was passed. That Act did not specifically provide how the license votes should be counted, it simply provided that they should be counted, and counted “ as now provided by law.” The appellant claims that the clause, “ as now provided by law”, here means “ as now provided by the general election law ”; but, looking at the entire Act in the light of the previous legislation on this subject, we think it means that the license votes shall be counted in the same way as the law “ now ” requires such votes to be counted. In other words the Act expressly requires, as the former law did not, that a count shall be made, but it does not change the mode of making it. The license ballots are to be counted as they have theretofore been counted.
This seems to be the plain, apparent meaning of this Act upon the point in question, and the construction contended
As this is decisive of this appeal it becomes unnecessary to consider the other questions raised upon the record, and upon them we express no opinion.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.