199 N.Y. 382 | NY | 1910
Under the provisions of the County Law (§ 20) the Republican members of the board of supervisors of St. Lawrence county designated the "Courier and Freeman," a newspaper published in the village of Potsdam in that county, as the medium for the publication of the Session Laws and Concurrent Resolutions of the legislature for the year 1910. The publishers of the "St. Lawrence Republican," another newspaper published in the city of Ogdensburg in the same county, claimed that the latter should have been designated, and applied for a writ of certiorari to review the action of the supervisors. The writ was granted, and a return thereto was made by the respondents. The Appellate Division made an order annulling the determination of the supervisors, and thus, *384 in effect, decided that the relator, "The St. Lawrence Republican," should have been designated. From that order this appeal has been taken.
Section 20 of the County Law directs that the supervisors representing the two principal political parties into which the people of a county are divided, or a majority of them, "shall designate in writing a paper fairly representing the political party to which they respectively belong, regard being had to the advocacy by such paper of the principles of its party and its support of the state and national nominees thereof, and to itsregular and general circulation in the towns of the county." It is conceded that both the "Courier and Freeman" and the "St. Lawrence Republican" are papers which advocate the principles of the Republican party and support its state and national nominees, and it is, therefore, apparent that the learned Appellate Division based its order, annulling the designation of the supervisors, upon the ground that the "St. Lawrence Republican" had much the larger circulation in the county, for the undisputed figures in that behalf show that the circulation of the "St. Lawrence Republican" in the county was 5,848 as against 3,248 credited to the "Courier and Freeman." The statute, as we have observed, does not impose upon the supervisors the duty of designating the paper having the largest circulation, but only that regard shall be had "to the advocacy by such paper of the principles of its party and its support of the state and national nominees thereof, and to its regular and general circulation in the towns of the county." It is obvious that this very general and elastic direction invests the supervisors with a wide discretion which may be abused, but that is a matter with which the courts have no right to interfere by writ of certiorari unless the act sought to be reviewed is judicial in its nature.
The office of the writ of certiorari is to provide for a review of the judicial action of inferior courts, special tribunals, public officers and bodies exercising judicial functions. (People ex rel. Trustees of Jamaica v. Board of SupervisorsQueens Co.,
In the following year (1903) we had before us the cases ofPeople ex rel. Sims v. Collier (
The order of the Appellate Division should be reversed and the writ quashed, with costs to the appellants in both courts, upon the ground that the determination of the supervisors was an administrative act not reviewable by writ of certiorari.
CULLEN, Ch. J., HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur.
Order reversed, etc. *388