2 No. 57
In the Matter of Larry Delgado,
Respondent, v. Carolee Sunderland, &c., et al.,
Respondents,
Glen Hockley,
Appellant.
2002 NY Int. 25
March 14, 2002
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before
publication in the New York Reports.
Adam T. Bradley, for appellant. John Ciampoli, for respondent Delgado.
PER CURIAM.
In this dispute over the November 6, 2001 general
election for three seats on the City of White Plains Common
Council, petitioner Larry Delgado commenced this Election Law
article 16 proceeding by order to show cause initially seeking
the impoundment of all voting machines and ballots used in the
election, and a recount. After the recount, the Westchester
County Board of Elections determined that Glen Hockley was the
third place finisher, 47 votes ahead of Delgado. On November 15,
Delgado moved by order to show cause for new relief, pursuant to
Election Law § 16-106, seeking to be declared the winner or,
alternatively, a new election. He alleged that a voting machine
in the City's 18th Election District jammed, costing him scores
of votes and placing Hockley's election in doubt.
Hockley moved to dismiss the proceeding, arguing that a
quo warranto action, through which the Attorney General
challenges an officeholder's title, was the sole procedure for
contesting the results, and that Supreme Court lacked
jurisdiction under the Election Law to look behind the canvass
and adjudicate Delgado's claim of machine error in a summary
proceeding. Supreme Court denied the motion to dismiss, sua
sponte converted the Election Law proceeding to a declaratory
judgment action, and ordered a new election in the 18th District
only between Delgado and Hockley. The court also rejected
Hockley's argument that the proceeding should be dismissed
because Delgado was required, and failed, to purchase a new index
number and file the second order to show cause with accompanying
papers before serving them upon respondents. The Appellate
Division modified, directing a new City-wide election between
Hockley and Delgado. One Justice dissented on the issue of
filing and service. We now reverse.
Any action Supreme Court takes with respect to a general
election challenge "must find authorization and support in the
express provisions of the [Election Law] statute" (Schieffelin v
Komfort, 212 NY 520, 535 [1914][citation omitted]; see alsoMatter of Hogan v Supreme Court of State of New York, 281 NY 572
[1939]). In a summary proceeding under Election Law article 16
respecting the conduct and results of a general election,
"[Supreme Court's] only powers are (1) to
determine the validity of protested, blank or
void paper ballots and protested or rejected
absentee ballots and to direct a recanvass or
correction of any error in the canvass of
such ballots * * * and (2) to review the
canvass and direct a recanvass or correction
of an error or performance of any required
duty by the board of canvassers"
(Matter of Corrigan v Board of Elections of Suffolk County, 38
AD2d 825, 827 [citation omitted], affd without opn , 30 NY2d 603
[1972]; seeElection Law § 16-106[1], [2], [4]).[1]
Supreme Court found, and it is not disputed, that a
voting machine malfunctioned in the 18th Election District. The
effect of that malfunction, however, remains a disputed issue of
fact which cannot be resolved merely by recanvassing. Under
these circumstances, the proper vehicle for challenging the
results and contesting title to the public office of the
purported winner is a quo warranto action, now codified in
Executive Law § 63-b (seePeople ex rel. McLaughlin v Board of
Police Commissioners of City of Yonkers, 174 NY 450 [1903]). The
power to commence a quo warranto action is vested in the Attorney
General, to be used only after the alleged "usurper" has taken
office (seeExecutive Law § 63-b). In exercising this power, the
Attorney General performs an investigative and screening function
on such challenges (seeMorris v Cahill, 96 AD2d 88, 91
[1983][Mem by Levine, J.]), and is presumed to afford a claimant
a full opportunity to assert a legal right, if any exists (seeMatter of Gardner, 68 NY 467, 470 [1877]). The exclusivity of
quo warranto in these circumstances also avoids the risk of
leaving the contested office vacant for possibly a protracted
period while the election result is being litigated through the
courts to a final conclusion (seeMatter of Hearst v Woelper, 183
NY 274, 284 [1905]; Seavey v Van Hatten, 276 App Div 260, 262
[1949]).
Challenges to the outcome of a general election based
upon alleged voting machine malfunctions necessarily fall within
the purview of quo warranto. In Matter of Hogan, where a voting
machine jammed resulting in a possible loss of hundreds of votes
for one candidate in a close election, this Court held that under
the election statute in place at the time, Supreme Court lacked
jurisdiction to extend the summary remedy authorized by the
Legislature and receive testimony of electors to establish the
number of votes cast for the candidate on the defective machine.
Subsequently, in Matter of Mullen v Heffernan (298 NY 785
[1948]), this Court reaffirmed the Hogan rule regarding the
singularity of the quo warranto remedy for challenging general
election results based on an allegedly defective voting machine.
Our cases do not support the conclusion of the courts
below that a declaratory judgment action is available to
challenge title to a public office before the ostensible winner
has taken office. Indeed, our cases support the contrary
conclusion. In Mullen, Supreme Court held
"The remedy for a failure of a voting machine
to record votes cast * * * is vested solely
in this court in a plenary action brought by
the People of the State, at the instance of
the candidate who has been injured by the
failure of the machine to record the
expressions of the voters. * * * [The
candidate] has a remedy in quo warranto and
it is [the] only remedy" (emphasis supplied)
(Matter of Mullen v Heffernan, 193 Misc 334, 340 [1948][quoting
Matter of Bonacker v Clark, Sup Ct, Rensselaer County, March 11,
1938, Bergan, J., affd 254 App Div 801 (1938)]). As noted above,
this Court affirmed on the ground that Supreme Court lacked
jurisdiction under the Election Law to resolve the questions
raised concerning voting machine malfunctions (see 298 NY, at
786).
Delgado and Supreme Court below relied on Matter of
Felice v Berger (182 AD2d 795, lv denied , 79 NY2d 758 [1992]), in
which the Appellate Division converted an Election Law article 15
proceeding into a declaratory judgment action, declared the
election invalid and ordered a new election because of a
defective voting machine. In converting the proceeding, the
Felice court, however, relied on dicta from Matter of Corrigan,
which in turn, relied on dicta from other lower court cases (seeCorrigan, 38 AD2d, at 826-827 and cases cited therein).
The only other authority that arguably supports the
availability of a declaratory judgment action as an alternative
to quo warranto is Sheils v Flynn (252 App Div 140 [1937]). In
Sheils, however, unlike this case, quo warranto was not available
because the declared officeholder had died and the aggrieved
candidate, who sought to establish the term of the office, had
been appointed to fill the vacancy. Irrespective of the validity
of Sheils, the Corrigan dicta should not be read as supporting
the availability of a declaratory judgment action, commenced
before the declared winner has taken office, to resolve a
challenge such as the one raised here. Delgado nonetheless urges that, entirely independent of
quo warranto, when there are circumstances such as those
presented here, the courts should determine whether the
irregularity affected the election process and be empowered to
order a new general election. We do not find such authority
under the statute (seeby contrastElection Law § 16-102[4]) or
decisional law. If such authority is to be accorded the courts,
it should be by act of the Legislature.
In sum, quo warranto is the appropriate remedy in this
case. We need not determine at this time whether a declaratory
judgment action might lie as an alternative remedy where quo
warranto has ceased to be available to the aggrieved candidate
because the Attorney General has declined to act (seeMatter of
Dekdebrun v Hardt, 68 AD2d 241, 248 [Cardamone and Simons, JJ.,
dissenting], lv dismissed , 48 NY2d 608 [1979]; Antisdel v Tioga
County Bd. of Elections, 85 Misc 2d 174, 176 [1976]). Nor need
we address Hockley's remaining arguments.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should
be reversed without costs and the petition dismissed.
Footnotes
1 Within the limited authority afforded under article 16,
Supreme Court has jurisdiction over allegations of certain
serious irregularities in the conduct of a general election,
including allegations of voting machine tampering between a
canvass and recanvass (see, e.g., Matter of Rice v Power, , 19 NY2d 474 [1967]; Matter of Stella v O'Rourke, 58 Misc 2d 1041 [1968],
affd on opn below 31 AD2d 798 [1969]), and challenges to absentee
ballots based on nonresidency (seeMatter of Dorman v Scaringe,
245 AD2d 949 [1997], lv denied , 91 NY2d 813 [1998]).