137 N.Y.S. 387 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
The necessity of a prompt decision in this case renders it difficult for us to do more than briefly state the contentions of the various parties and our conclusions in respect to the same.
At the threshold of the case we are met with the contention that these proceedings are premature. The duty devolved upon the board of elections is to file certificates of nomination which are in conformity to the provisions of the last valid statute relating thereto, if any such exists.
Ho express demand to file any particular certificate has been
Considering the merits, we conclude:
1. That the provisions of section 62 of the act of 1911, amending section 122 of the Election Law of 1909, requiring the signatures of 1,500 voters to make a valid independent nomination of a candidate for public office other than municipal offices to be voted for in a district less than the whole State, but greater than a town or ward of a city, except that 800 voters or more of an Assembly district may make such nomination for member of Assembly to be voted for in such district, is invalid.
(a) The law is applicable to every such district within the State. If, therefore, in any such district the requirements of the statute are such as to unreasonably deny the electors equality of opportunity to cast their ballots for the candidate of their choice, or rather to unnecessarily discriminate against them in respect thereto, it violates their constitutional rights. The word “ district ” is a broad one. Included therein may be the judicial districts into which the State is divided, and also the territorial divisions designated as counties. In some of the “ districts,” as, for instance, in some of the judicial districts of the State, the requirement as to number may not be unreasonable. We do not decide that question. In some of the “ districts,” as, for instance, in some of the counties of the
Relators now ask us to go still further back in the history of
2. The provision of section 2 of the act of 1911 (Laws of 1911, chap. 649) which amends section 123 of the Election Law, and in effect requires a nominator to be registered as a qualified elector, is, in our opinion, a valid provision. It is true that the certificates of nomination must be filed in advance of some of the days of registration. They need not be filed in advance of all of them The days of registration this year are October eleventh, twelfth, eighteenth and nineteenth. All of the certificates may be filed as late as October eleventh, and some as late as October sixteenth. It is not an unreasonable requirement that the citizen who wishes to be a nominator should also register to enable him to make his nomination effective. As to all of the offices to he voted for at the coming election, the nominator has one day in which to register, and as to many of them, two. In such cases the evils suggested by relators resulting from possible sickness and death cannot follow to any appreciable extent. Within the doctrine of Matter of Burke v. Terry (203 N. Y. 293) the.act may be upheld. “ Independent nominators are not constrained” to delay registration until after the certificates of nomination are filed. Neither is there force in the contention that a certificate of nomination, valid when filed, may become invalid by the happening of a condition subsequent. Bather is it the case that a certificate of nomination becomes valid only when a sufficient number of the
3. The provisions of the same section, that when a political party has named a candidate for a public office no enrolled member of such political party shall be qualified to nominate the same candidate for the same office upon an independent certificate of nomination, are not unreasonable, and should be sustained. Some regard should be had to convenience of voting. This is not subserved by a ballot several feet in length. The object of the Election Law is to permit the placing upon the ballot of the names of those candidates for whom a reasonable number of electors desire to. vote and unite to express such desire. But when the name of such candidate appears once, the rights of the elector whose party thus has named him has been protected. No advantage accrues to him from having such candidate’s name appear a second time upon the same ballot. So much of the order as declares the clause of section 123, above referred to, invalid should be reversed.
Relators in their brief refer to a further provision of the same section of the Election Law, to the effect that “no person shall join in' nominating more candidates for any one office than there are persons to be elected thereto.” The learned court at Special Term construed this as operating only as a prohibition against the signing by the same person of two or more independent certificates of nomination for the same office. This is a reasonable construction, and should be preferred to that suggested by Mr. Justice Andrews in Matter of Commissioner of Elections (64 Misc. Rep. 620, 623). So construed, relators acquiesce in it: In view of the form of the order and of relators’ notice of appeal, it may be doubtful whether this question is properly before the court, but as reference has been made to it in the briefs we do not deem it amiss to express our opinion respecting the same.
Our conclusion, therefore, is that the order should be modified by providing: •
1. That defendants disregard as unconstitutional that part of section 62 of chapter 891 of the Laws of 1911 which purports to
2. That defendants shall not disregard so much of the provisions of section 123 of said Election Law, as amended, as is referred to in said order in these words: “ The name of no person signing an independent certificate of nomination shall be counted unless such person shall on one of the days of registration in such year be registered as a qualified elector, and in case a candidate nominated by an independent certificate of nomination be, at the time of filing the said certificate or after-wards, the candidate of a political party for the same office, the name of no person who is an enrolled member of such political party shall be counted.”
As thus modified the order should be affirmed, without costs.
All concurred, except Hirschberg, J., who dissented as . to the provision respecting registration, and Thomas, J., who dissented as to the provision relating to the number of nominators for member of Assembly and as to the provision respecting registration.
Order modified by providing: First, that defendants disregard as unconstitutional that part of section 62 of chapter 891 of the Laws of 1911 which purports to amend section 122 of the Election Law by increasing the number of signatures required for an independent nomination of candidates for public .office, other than municipal offices, to be voted for in a district less than the whole State but greater than a town or ward of a city both as to members of Assembly and as to the other candidates designated therein; second, that defendants shall not disregard so much of the provisions of section 123 of said Election Law as is referred to in said order, in these words: “The name of no person signing an independent certificate of nomination shall be counted unless such person shall on one of the days of registration in such year be registered as a qualified elector, and in
Order to be settled before Burr, J.