Court Opinion

ID: 9951098
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-15 16:16:54.614555+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:37:14.424430
License: Public Domain

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT                                                              CIVIL DIVISION
Windsor Unit                                                                   Case No. 23-CV-01360
12 The Green
Woodstock VT 05091
802-457-2121
www.vermontjudiciary.org

Erin Kehoe and Crystal Corriveau
       Plaintiffs

v.

Alex Beshay, Lisa Beshay, Chris Streker,
and the Town of Windham
       Defendants

                                  Decision on Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss

        At a traditional town meeting, the moderator presides over the meeting, regulates the
discussion, and conducts votes upon each warned article. 17 V.S.A. §§ 2658–2660. After the vote is
taken, the moderator announces the outcome of the public question, and the consideration of the article
is concluded.
        After that, voters are permitted to make a motion for reconsideration. If the motion is made and
seconded, the motion is then discussed and voted upon, and if the motion for reconsideration is
approved by a majority of the voters, the assembly then takes up anew the article that was previously
considered, as if the prior vote had not taken place. At a traditional Vermont town meeting, this
procedure is only available for a limited period of time: the motion for reconsideration cannot be made
“after the assembly has begun consideration of another article.” 17 V.S.A. § 2661(a). An experienced
town moderator, for this reason, typically pauses for a few beats after announcing the outcome of a
vote on a main article in order “to allow adequate time for a motion for reconsideration to be made
before taking up the next article.” See Vermont Secretary of State, A Handbook for Vermont
Moderators at 9 (2009) (copy in file).
        Votes conducted by Australian ballot do not occur within the context of an assembled meeting,
and so there is no opportunity for a voter to make a motion for reconsideration, nor for the assembly to
debate and vote upon such a motion. Instead, there are two different mechanisms that serve the same
purpose: either the town selectboard or the school board might decide to warn the article again and
conduct a new vote on the same article, 17 V.S.A. § 2661(a), or at least five percent of the registered
voters in the town may petition for reconsideration, 17 V.S.A. § 2661(b). Both of these methods result
in a new vote on the same article as previously considered, as if the prior vote had not taken place. The
new vote must use the exact same language as the original article. 17 V.S.A. § 2661(d)(1).

Order                                                                               Page 1 of 4
23-CV-01360 Erin Kehoe et al v. Lisa Beshay et al
        In other words, a petition for reconsideration that meets the criteria of § 2661(b) has the same
parliamentary effect as a successful motion to reconsider made from the floor: it results in a new vote
on the original public question.
         When former Governor Jim Douglas was Vermont’s Secretary of State, he wrote a treatise on
Vermont town-meeting law with his then-deputy secretary Paul Gillies. They discussed this issue in
their treatise, and explained that when a town receives a valid petition for reconsideration of a public
question that was voted on by Australian ballot, the town should schedule a new vote upon the original
question. As they put it, “[a] new vote on the article voted is automatic, without any need for a vote on
the question of whether to reconsider or not.” 1 Douglas & Gillies, A Book of Opinions at 476 (1992)
(copy in file). The court finds this analysis to be persuasive.
        In this case, on September 7, 2021, the voters of the town of Windham voted by Australian
ballot upon the following question:
                 Shall the Windham Elementary School be closed and all educational
                 operations at that location be terminated at the end of the 2021-2022
                 school year and shall the voters authorize the Board of School Directors
                 to provide for the education of the School District’s PK-6 pupils by
                 paying tuition in accordance with 16 V.S.A. § 21(a)(1)?
        A majority of the voters answered this question in the affirmative. As a result, the article was
approved, and the result of the public question was that the school should be closed. After that
outcome was announced, a variety of townspeople began circulating a petition for reconsideration, and
the petition garnered more than five percent of the registered voters. The petitioners then submitted
their petition to the town, and a new vote was warned for November 2, 2021.
        At the new vote on November 2, 2021, the article was worded exactly the same as the article on
the original vote, as required by 17 V.S.A. § 2661(d)(1). The voters of the town of Windham voted by
Australian ballot upon the following question:
                 Shall the Windham Elementary School be closed and all educational
                 operations at that location be terminated at the end of the 2021-2022
                 school year and shall the voters authorize the Board of School Directors
                 to provide for the education of the School District’s PK-6 pupils by
                 paying tuition in accordance with 16 V.S.A. § 21(a)(1)?
       This time, the outcome of the vote was that 139 votes were cast in favor of the article, and 142
votes were cast against the article. As a result, the article was not approved, and the result of the public
question was that the school should not be closed.
         Plaintiffs thereafter filed this election contest. Plaintiffs’ fundamental allegation is that three
voters participated in the election even though they were not then residents of the town. It has been
assumed throughout the case that all three voters cast ballots against the article. However, it appears to
the court that, even if these three votes were set aside, the result of the public question would be the
same: there would be 139 votes cast in favor of the article, and 139 votes cast against the article. As a
result, the article would not have received “a majority of the votes . . . in favor of the proposition,” and
so the article would not be approved, and the result of the public question would be the same: that the
school should not be closed. See 17 V.S.A. § 2681a(e) (explaining that, for public questions conducted
Order                                                                                  Page 2 of 4
23-CV-01360 Erin Kehoe et al v. Lisa Beshay et al
by Australian ballot, “[n]o public question shall pass unless a majority of the votes, excluding blank
and overvotes, is cast in favor of the proposition”).
        A court cannot grant relief in an election contest unless (1) there were errors committed in the
conduct of the election “sufficient to change the ultimate result,” (2) there was fraud in the electoral
process “sufficient to change the ultimate result,” or (3) for another reason, “the result of the election”
was compromised. 17 V.S.A. § 2603(b)(1)–(3). If an election contest does not present an issue of
sufficient magnitude to have “actually affected the election result,” the election contest should be
dismissed for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Paige v. State, 2024 VT 7, ¶ 11;
Luna v. City of Burlington, No. 21-AP-201, 2022 WL 424880 (Vt. Feb. 2022) (unpub. mem.); Putter v.
Montpelier Pub. School System, 166 Vt. 463, 467–69 (1997); Jackson v. Town of Castleton, No. 339-6-
15 Rdcv, 2015 WL 13021692 (Vt. Super. Ct. Nov. 25, 2015) (Teachout, J.).
        Here, for the reasons identified above, plaintiffs’ election contest does not identify an issue
“sufficient to change the ultimate result” or that “actually affected the election result.” The result of the
public question would have been the same regardless of whether the three challenged votes were set
aside.
        Defendants first raised this issue in a motion filed in December 2021. Over the months since
then, there have been several court rulings on a variety of motions, but this issue has never been
addressed nor decided by the court. It may be that confusion has persisted on the question of whether
the November 2nd vote was a vote on a motion to reconsider or instead a “reconsideration vote”—a
new vote on the original public question.* Plaintiffs have argued that the November 2nd vote was a
vote on a motion to reconsider, such that a tie vote meant that the motion to reconsider failed, and that
the result of the September 7th vote would stand. If that was a correct interpretation of the
parliamentary procedure, plaintiffs would have stated a valid election contest upon which relief could
be granted.
        But, as explained above, plaintiffs’ interpretation is not correct. It also does not reflect the
language of the actual vote taken. The voters were not asked whether they wanted to reconsider the
prior vote. The voters were instead asked—as required by § 2661(d)(1)—to vote on whether the
Windham Elementary School should “be closed and all educational operations at the location be
terminated at the end of the 2021-2022 school year.” This was a vote on the original public question.
The outcome was negative, regardless of whether the three challenged votes are included or excluded.
17 V.S.A. § 2681a(e). As such, plaintiffs’ complaint does not identify an issue that “actually affected
the election result” or upon which election-contest relief can be granted.

        * The term “reconsideration vote” is confusing, because it uses the word “reconsideration.” The term is

used by Douglas and Gillies in their treatise, supra, at 475, and by Judge Teachout in Jackson, 2015 WL
13021692, and in 17 V.S.A. § 2661(e). It refers to the new vote on the original public question that follows
either from a successful motion for reconsideration or from a successful petition for reconsideration. It does not
mean that the new vote is the parliamentary equivalent of a vote on the motion to reconsider. Douglas and
Gillies are clear that a “reconsideration vote” is a new vote on the original public question rather than “a vote on
the question of whether to reconsider or not.” 1 Douglas & Gillies, supra, at 476.
Order                                                                                        Page 3 of 4
23-CV-01360 Erin Kehoe et al v. Lisa Beshay et al
        Plaintiffs have argued that it is wrong for the court to rely upon the work of Douglas and
Gillies, because their treatise was published before amendments were made to the statutes in 1992. But
the court has reviewed those amendments and does not ﬁnd them to be relevant to either its analysis or
the analysis of Douglas and Gillies. If anything, the amendments reafﬁrm that, once a successful
petition for reconsideration has been ﬁled with the town, the new vote should be conducted on the
original public question, with the article stated “as lastly voted.” 17 V.S.A. § 2661(d)(1). In other
words, the amendment clariﬁes that the new article should be warned with the same language as the
original public question. The only way to interpret this amendment is that the “reconsideration vote” is
a new vote on the public question, rather than a vote upon whether to reconsider.

        Plaintiffs have also argued that the November 2nd election was invalid because the warned
article did not track the petition, citing Concerned Voters of Londonderry v. Prouty, 138 Vt. 442, 443
(1980). However, that case involved a petition for rescission (which is a different procedure, see l
Douglas & Gillies, supra, at 477—78) which the town reworded and warned as though the petition had
requested reconsideration. In that context, the recharacterization of the petition was determined to be
erroneous. Prouty, 138 Vt. at 443. Here, the petition requested reconsideration, and the town warned a
new vote accordingly. l7 V.S.A. § 266l(d)(l). As such, the court ﬁnds no error in the language of the
warning.
       As made clear by the court’s January 24, 2023 summary-judgment decision, the remaining
claims in this case derive from the authority of the court to grant “appropriate relief’ in the context of a
valid election contest under 17 V.S.A. § 2603. Because plaintiffs have not stated a valid claim upon
which this relief can be granted, the remaining claims in the case are hereby dismissed, the remaining
motions are denied as moot, and the case is closed.

        Electronically signed on Monday, March ll, 2024 pursuant to V.R.E.F. 9(d).

                                                                MCDIWW
                                                              H. Dickson Corbett
                                                              Superior Court Judge

                                                            Vermont Superior Court
                                                                    Filed 03/11 24
                                                                      Windsor nit

Order                                                                                  Page 4 of 4
23-CV-01360 Erin Kehoe et a1 v. Lisa Beshay et a1