207 A.D. 419 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1923
The court at Special Term granted an application directing the board of elections to receive a certificate of declination of the petitioner as a candidate for member of the Democratic county committee of the ninth Assembly district, fifty-second election district, and to refrain from printing his name as such candidate upon the primary ballot.
The record does not show the date on which the certificate of designation of the petitioner and other candidates for membership on the committee was filed, but inasmuch as the Election Law, section 140, requires that it be filed not later than a certain day, which would be in the current year August 21, 1923, that must be taken as the latest date on which it could be filed. The same section designates, through fixation of a day certain for its filing, August twenty-fourth as the last day on which such a designation may be declined. The moving papers show that the petitioner did not learn of his designation until August thirtieth, on which date he executed a declination. The precise date upón which it was tendered to the board does not appear, except as it may be inferred from the recital in the order that it was within three full business days after this knowledge had been obtained.
The papers also allege, upon information and belief, that thirty-five other candidates had attempted to file similar certificates of
While the question is an academic one, it should be decided upon the merits as of great public interest and of likely recurrence in subsequent primary elections.
In Matter of Cuddeback (3 App. Div. 103) an application was made for an order to require the county clerk to receive certain certificates of nomination after the time prescribed by law. The appeal was not heard until after the election. The court said (at p. 109): “ Whether courts will decide a case involving a question which has ceased to be of practical interest to the parties seems to depend upon whether the question involved is one of public importance. The question in this case is one of great public interest, affecting the rights of all of the electors in this State, and, I think, the courts should determine it.”
We think the board of elections properly refused to accept the declination.
Up to the year 1922 there was no provision of law requiring the affirmative consent of a candidate before his designation for nomination to a public office or election to a party position at a primary. The Legislature of 1922, in order to remedy the situation, in the revision of the Election Law enacted the following sentence at the end of section 135: “ Appended to the petition and filed therewith, shall be the affidavit of one of the signers to the petition, or of a member of the committee to fill vacancies, that he communicated personally or by mail or by telephone or telegraph, as the case may be, with the person designated for the office or party position and that such person then expressly consented to be designated for such office or position; and such an affidavit shall be so appended and filed as to each candidate named in the petition.”
Thereafter this method of procuring consents of candidates provoked litigation over the question of the proof of the authenticity of the consents, and the Legislature, by chapter 597 of the Laws of 1923, repealed this sentence, thus restoring the law to the same form in which it had always been, except during the year preceding.
A certificate of designation was filed nominating the petitioner and others without their consent. As appears by the moving papers, thirty-one of these persons filed declinations within the next three days, which were accepted by the board of elections. When, however, the petitioner attempted to file his declination twelve days later, on September fifth, he was informed that it was too late,
The board of elections had no power to relieve the petitioner from the provisions of that section, and, therefore, properly refused to accept his declination. There was no duty upon the board to send notice of his designation for a party position to the petitioner, as that duty is limited to nominations to public office and appears at the end of section 141 of the Election Law, as follows: “ Forthwith upon the filing of a petition designating a person or persons for nomination to public office, such officer or board shall mail notice thereof to each such person.”
A county committee membership is a party position and not a nomination "for a public office. Subdivision 9 of section 2 of the Election Law says: “The term ' party position ’ means membership in a party committee or the position of delegate or alternate to a party convention.”
The board was then by the statute under no duty to notify the applicant of his designation for a party position.
The scheme of the Election Law is mandatory in respect of time limitations for the filing of the various certificates therein provided for, and unless there is shown some excusable inadvertence, mistake or default, which in the discretion of the court may be relieved by directing acceptance of a certificate which has not been filed in time, but which certificate was prepared and under course of being filed within the period limited, the legislative rule of time for declinations must be followed.
In Matter of Halpin (108 App. Div. 271) the rule was plainly pointed out that no such relief would be granted. The learned court, stated: “As we understand the argument of the learned counsel for the petitioner he contends that these facts present a situation neither contemplated nor provided for by the statute, and, therefore, constitute a casus omissus, and justify the court in making and promulgating an appropriate rule of law to fit the case and. carry the legislative intent, not expressed, into effect. We think the course suggested is fraught with great danger. We cannot peer into the future and foresee all conditions that may arise and the various phases in which, by certain exigencies, cases may be presented for a construction of the Election Law that may justify or require a strained construction of the statute to prevent the disfranchisement of electors or enforce the just claims of political parties or candidates. We shall, therefore, refrain from expressing
We find the matter now presented to bear a close analogy to the related circumstances of the Halpin case. The petitioner desires to decline a designation to a party position after the period during which the Election Law permits the official body having the filing of such declination in charge to receive his declination. There was no attempt within the time to complete the requirement for filing, which has been frustrated by some unforeseen casualty, and without such ground for the court's exercise of discretion there is no remedy for the petitioner's situation. If it be said arguendo that many unauthorized designations may be made of persons who are absent and unable to acquaint themselves with their being placed upon party committees without their consent and may thus be forced into the apparent position of supporting factions to which they are opposed, it is a complete answer that for any such evil consequence of the present enactment there must be found a legislative remedy to prevent its occurrence. The courts cannot be looked to for the correction of every detail in the administration of the election machinery where there is claimed to have been a legislative lapse in the provisions made for certain exigencies.
The order directing the board of elections to receive the certificate of declination of petitioner should be reversed, and the application denied.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Finch and Martin, JJ., concur.
Order reversed and motion denied.