25 N.Y.S. 381 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This is a proceeding instituted under the previsions of section 65 of chapter 680 of the Laws of 1892.
The applicant claims to be the regularly nominated candidate of the Democratic party for member of assembly in the second district of Monroe county, and insists that his name be printed, as such candidate, upon the official ballot to be voted at the ensuing election. The papers presented upon the hearing are exceedingly voluminous, and it is to be regretted that the limitations of time and opportunity render a more careful and deliberate examination of the same impossible. However, the essential facts of the case, and perhaps all which are material to its determination, are virtually conceded, and it may be well to recapitulate them in their chronological order.
Prior to the year 1892 the county of Monroe contained
It is also made to appear that at the county convention held in the year 1892 a resolution was adopted investing the county committee of the Democratic party with power to remove from office any and all ward and town, district and city committees, and to provide, by calling new caucuses, for the appointment of new committees, and to prescribe all rules of procedure of party committees in the organization of the party and its conventions. After the call for the convention of August thirty-first had been issued, and several ward caucuses had been held, and the fact had become sufficiently developed that the factional warfare in the district had assumed such proportions as to render two conventions prohable, the county committee was convened and the representatives of the contending factions were summoned before it, but the one which for the purposes of tins proceeding may be styled the Bendon faction refused to acknowledge any supervisory power as residing in the county committee and disregarded the summons. Thereupon the county committee took action and declared all' conventions and caucuses theretofore called invalid, and in an address to its constituents set forth what, it is claimed, were the reasons for its action, and also provided for the holding of a convention in each of the assembly districts, and, to that end, prescribed rules and regulations for new primary meetings. This action on the part of the county committee was apparently acquiesced in by the party in the first and third districts, but, as lias already been seen, the Bendon faction refused to surrender the advantage which it had gained, and, as a consequence, two conventions for the election of delegates
The wisdom of the legislature in imposing upon courts and judges the duty of determining the regularity of political nominations is something which may well be questioned, for it is almost impossible to reach a conclusion in such a case without subjecting the tribunal which renders it to a charge of partisanship, and when this charge is once made, however unfounded it may be, its inevitable tendency is to bring the courts and the bench into disrepute. The present case is perhaps as free from such embarrassment as any similar case possibly can be, but at any rate the duty is imposed, and it is, therefore, one which must be met and discharged with the same ability and impartiality as any other duty, disagreeable and distasteful though it may be.
The act under which this proceeding has been brought is
And so it will be found that in the 50th section of the act in question, provision is made for the conduct of political parties by means of conventions and primaries, and by such rules and regulations as those bodies may adopt. But, independent of said act, it is a fact so well known and of such long-continued existence as to entitle the same to judicial recognition, that political parties have their territorial divisions, and that while each division is within certain limitations a law unto itself, so far as the particular territory it assumes to represent is concerned, yet, by party usage, each of said divisions owes and yields allegiance to some higher power. To illustrate, it frequently happpens that a county committee prescribes times and regulations for the holding of primary meetings, and party usage requires that the rules thus prescribed shall be observed. In the same manner a state convention like our state legislature is the sole judge of the election of its own members, and when it has once passed judgment upon conflicting claims where questions
It follows that the applicant having received his nomination at the hands of a convention whose claims to regularity have been submitted to the supreme authority within the party in the state, and which have by that body been declared unfounded, cannot be. regarded as a regular nominee of his party, and is consequently not entitled to have his name
Application denied.