99 N.Y.S. 783 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
This is an appeal from an .order made at Special Term granting an application made by respondent, as State Superintendent of
The act provides in section 1 that “The counties of New York, Kings, Queens, Richmond and Westchester are hereby constituted a metropolitan elections district for the purpose of all elections for State officers hereafter to be held therein.” The original act was passed at the extraordinary session of the Legislature in 1898. At that time "Greater New York had been constituted, and a portion of Westchester county, though still belonging to the county of Westchester, had been annexed to the city of New York, so that voters residing in said annexed portion voted for borough and city officials, of the city of New - York, but for an Assemblyman and a Senator for the county of Westchester and for justices of the Supreme Court in the second judicial district. The county of Westchester has three incorporated cities — Yonkers, Mount Yernon and New Rochelle. The district so constituted, as its name imports, is in fact a metropolitan district, with an enormous population and a considerable territory. It has peculiar features. Being composed of five counties, it has five sets of county officials; having four cities, it has four sets of city officers; in one of its cities it has five sets of borough officers, and in the county of Westchester there is not only a full set of county officers, but there are as well numerous villages with their officials. The act further provided that the Governor should appoint an officer, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, to be known as the State Superintendent of Elections for the
The appellant claims that this act violates the home rule provisions of section 2 of article 10 of the State Constitution. If the act does violate them it is null and void, and this court would not hesitate so to declare. In my opinion this act was a valid exercise of the legislative power under the last clause of section 2 of article < 10 of the Constitution, which reads as follows: “ All other officers whose election or appointment is not provided for by this Constitu, tion, and all officers whose offices may hereafter be created by law-shall be elected by the people or appointed as the Legislature may direct.”
The office of State Superintendent of Elections for the metropolitan elections district was not an office provided for by the Constitution, and his office was created by law after the adoption of the Constitution. He is not a county officer, because his jurisdiction extends over five counties of the State. He is not a city officer, because his jurisdiction, is not coterminus with any city, but includes four cities. He is not a village official, because, while there are many villages within his jurisdiction, he is not confined to any one of them. There was, therefore, no local authority, city, county, town or village, vested with the power or authority to appoint such an officer. It was a new'office. There were given to the State Superintendent powers possessed by no other officer and from no other officer were any powers. taken by his appointment. Ho man was ousted of his office, lessened in his authority,
The statute at bar does not come within the class condemned as above pointed out, for the office is not local, and it is not nearly so close to the line as in the first group of cases cited declared to be constitutional, because, as pointed out above, none of the powers and authorities of local officers are interfered with by this statute.
Of the case strongly relied upon by the appellant (People ex rel. Bolton v. Albertson, 55 N. Y. 50) Judge Vann said, that the act there under consideration “ which established a police district consisting of a city with a police force already organized and ‘ three small patches of sparsely settled territory, in all less than a square mile,’ was held unconstitutional as an obvious attempt to evade the restrictions relating to.home rule, because it ivas designed for the city only, and the outside fragments could have been brought into the city if it was deemed necessary to extend police protection to them.”
I am convinced after careful examination of the cases that this act cannot be condemned as unconstitutional. In the first place, there was no obvious intent to avoid the principle of home rule by the joining together of a small slice of sparsely inhabited territory to a city, and under that pretext to oust an already organized police force, but there was a joining together of five counties in which conditions exist ivhich warranted the legislation uniting them for proper administration of the Election Law and an entirely new office was created, interfering with no other, and vested with powers possessed by no other and impossible to be exercised by any one local officer throughout the district created. ,
If I am right in my conclusion that the act is constitutional, the order appealed from should be affirmed.
O’Brien, P. J., McLaughlin and Houghton, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, J., dissented.
Order affirmed. Order filed,