Grimes v. Quimby
Grimes v. Quimby
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The facts in this case appear in the certificate of the trial judge as follows :
“ The respective parties having, by their attorneys, waived a jury and consented to the trial of this cause without a jury, I, the undersigned, a justice of the Supreme Court, holding the Morris Circuit for the Term of January, A. d. 1889, have-heard the respective allegations and proofs of the parties, and do now find the following facts to be established by proof, viz.::
“Second. The township of Hanover had been, prior to 1888, legally divided into election districts, called the Northern and Southern election districts.
“Third. The polling place in the Southern election district was the school house in Whippany, and in the Northern district, the Cobb Hotel at Parsippany.
“Fourth. The town meeting in said township should have been held on March 13th, 1888 (the day of the great storm, ■known as the “ blizzard ”), for the election of township officers, including the office of chosen freeholder.
“Fifth. On the 13th day of March, 1888, Edwin S. Wilson, the judge of election; William P. Kitchell, one of the inspectors, and C. M. Kitchell, the clerk of election, were present at the polling place in the Southern election district at seven o’clock A. M., the latter having there the Hall & Wood patent ballot box, as required by law. On account of the storm no one appeared before nine o’clock, when one person appeared, and no one else appeared before eleven o’clock, when several persons came; an effort was then made to open the patent ballot box, but it could not be unlocked and opened, so the old ballot box theretofore used in that district was sent for; as soon as the old ballot b.ox arrived H. C. Bleeker, a person duly qualified, was at once elected inspector by those present, and the election board so organized was duly sworn and opened the polls and began to receive votes about two o’clock, before which time no one voted. The board closed the polls at the hour required by law, and proceeded at once to canvass the votes cast and make out and sign a statement of the result, as required by law; the count of the votes showed that seventy-one votes had been polled in that district, of which number the relator received twenty-two, for the office of chosen freeholder, and the defendant received forty-nine for
“Sixth.- Said William H. Van Winkle, who claimed to be ■elected township clerk on said 13th day of March, and who had taken an oath of office before a justice of the peace of Morris township, obtained a rule from a justice of the Supreme Court, for Monroe Howell, the township clerk, to show by what warrant he claimed to have the- office of township clerk, and why leave should not be granted to said Van Winkle to file an information in the nature of a quo warranto, and why said Howell should not appear and plead and demur thereto, which rule, after argument of counsel for each party, was, at the June Term of the Supreme Court, 11888, discharged ; and the said Monroe Howell has continued to act as clerk of said township.
“Seventh. The polls in the Northern district were not opened at any time during the day of March 13th, the polling place itself was an unoccupied building and remained locked on account of the storm the entire day, and no election whatever was held in the Northern election district on that day.
“Mghth. At the organization of the newly elected board of chosen freeholders, held in May, 1888, the relator presented himself to be sworn in, but the clerk of the board refused to recognize him as the chosen freeholder of Hanover township.
“Ninth. The defendant has had possession of and has exe- ■ cuted the office of chosen freeholder since that time, and still ■ continues to hold and execute the same,- having been recognized and sworn in by the clerk of the board.
“And, being of opinion (in accordance with the opinion expressed by the ruling of the Supreme Court, in refusing leave to William H. Van Winkle to file an information in the-nature of a quo warranto against Monroe Howell, respecting-the office of township clerk in said township) that, upon said facts, said David E. Quimby was not elected to the office of chosen freeholder of the said county from the said township, on March 13th, 1888 :
“ I do thereupon find and determine, that said Quimby is-guilty of intruding into and usurping, and has and as yet does intrude into and usurp, the said office in manner and form as-charged in the pleading aforesaid.
“ Dated January 25th, 1889.
“W. J. Mague,
“Justice Supreme Court.”
But at the same time the said justice granted the defendant a rule to show cause why a new trial shall not be granted.
The rule, as laid down in McCrary on Elections, § 448, is not. controverted in this case. It is this: “ If the opportunity to-
Nor is it contended, that there may not be some deviation from the hours fixed by law for keeping open the polls, without rendering the election void.
I regard this case as a conspicuously exceptional one. No authority has been cited under which it can be even plausibly maintained that there was an election in Hanover township on the 13th of March.
The division of the township into two election districts shows that there were over six hundred legal voters in the township.
The polls were not opened at all in the Northern district, and no one appeared there to vote.
In the Southern district the polls were not opened until two o’clock in the afternoon, and only seventy-one votes were polled there.
The failure to vote was not due to the neglect of the inhabitants to exercise their franchise, but was occasioned, as the trial judge found, by their inability to reach the polling place on account of the unprecedented severity of the snow storm which prevailed that day. There was clearly no expression of the popular will on the 13th of March. There was no opportunity to express it; there was an obstacle in the way of doing so which the voters could not surmount.
The rule which will support this as a legal election will apply with equal force if but five of the six hundred voters of the township, by the exercise of superior fortitude and endurance, had succeeded in reaching the polls.
In my judgment, Hanover was one of the townships in which, by reason of the storm, no election was held on the day fixed by law, and the election subsequently held in pursuance of the act of March 27th, 1888, was a legal and valid election.
The facts found show that Hanover was one of the townships to which the said last mentioned act was intended to
The rule to show cause should be discharged.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE, WILLIAM H. GRIMES v. DAVID E. QUIMBY
- Status
- Published