16-108 - Proceedings as to registration and voting.

§  16-108.  Proceedings  as to registration and voting. 1. The supreme  court, by a justice thereof within the judicial district, or the  county  court,  by  a county judge within his county, in a proceeding instituted  by any voter to whom registration has  been  unlawfully  refused,  shall  compel,  by  order, the registration of such voter, and, in a proceeding  instituted by any voter duly qualified to vote in this state, or by  the  state  board  of  elections, shall, by order, direct the cancellation of  the registration of any person who shall unlawfully be  registered,  and  shall  order  the  board of elections or other official charged with the  conduct of registration to carry out such order.    2. In any such proceeding the board of  elections  or  other  official  charged  with  the  conduct  of the election, in which it is claimed the  registration  of  the  voter  unlawfully  was  refused   or   unlawfully  registered,  shall  be  a  necessary  party and the person whose name is  sought to be stricken from the register shall likewise  be  a  necessary  party,  and  the  board and such person shall receive such notice as the  court, justice or judge shall direct.    3. Such court, in a proceeding  instituted  by  any  voter  unlawfully  denied the right to vote by the inspectors, shall, by order, direct that  he  be  allowed  to  vote  at  his  polling  place  and within the hours  established by law.  Such order shall, where necessary, direct the board  of  elections  to  complete  the  voter's  registration  and  enrollment  records.    4.  Such  court,  justice  or judge, in a proceeding instituted by any  voter unlawfully denied an absentee ballot or the application  therefor,  shall  compel,  by  order,  the  delivery  to  such voter of a ballot or  application.    5. An affidavit by any officer or employee of the board of  elections,  or  by  any police officer, sheriff or deputy sheriff, or by any special  investigator appointed by the state board of elections, that he  visited  the  premises  claimed  by  the  applicant  as his residence and that he  interrogated  an  inmate,  housedweller,   keeper,   caretaker,   owner,  proprietor  or  landlord  thereof  or  therein  as  to  the  applicant's  residence therein or thereat, and that he was informed by one or more of  such persons, naming them, that they knew the persons residing upon such  premises and that the applicant did not reside upon such premises thirty  days before the election, shall  be  presumptive  evidence  against  the  right of the voter to register from such premises.    6.  For  each  primary,  special  and  general election, the presiding  justice of the appellate division  of  the  first  and  second  judicial  department shall, and the presiding justice of the appellate division of  the  third  and  fourth  judicial  departments  may  assign  one or more  justices of the supreme court to sit at such offices  of  the  board  of  elections  and  such  other  locations  as may be designated to hear and  determine all cases arising under this chapter relating  to  eligibility  for voting of such election.