158 N.Y.S. 490 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1916
The relator is seeking a writ of mandamus directing that the secretary of state certify to it, to be published in the Utica Herald-Dispatch, which it publishes, the session laws and concurrent resolutions of the legislature required by law to be published in the county of Oneida in a Republican newspaper for the year 1916.
It áppears that said Utica Herald-Dispatch had been duly designated in February, 1914, to publish such
The board of supervisors of the county of Oneida for 1914 was composed of forty-eight members, twenty-two of whom were elected upon the Democratic ticket and twenty-six upon the Republican ticket. On November 11, 1914, twenty-two of the twenty-six Republican supervisors pursuant to section 20 of the County Law (Laws of 1909, chap. 16; Consol. Laws, chap. 11) designated the Boonville Herald to publish the session laws and concurrent resolutions required by law to be published in a Republican newspaper in Oneida county for the year 1916 and a duly certified copy of such designation was filed by the clerk of the board of supervisors in the office of the secretary of state on the 13th day of September, 1915, and such designation has not been revoked.
The principal claim of the relator in this respect is that such designation was void because it was made in 1914 for a publication to be made in 1916. Reliance for that, claim is based upon the authority of Matter of Troy Press Co., 94 App. Div. 514, affd., 179 N. Y. 529, where it was held that it was not permissible to make a designation for a period exceeding one year in advance. In that case the Democratic members of the board of supervisors of Rensselaer county undertook to designate a newspaper to publish the session laws and concurrent resolutions for two years in advance. It was thought if such a designation could extend for more than one year there might be no limit
In the case we are now considering the designation was only for a single year and not for two years and while it was made in November, 1914, for a publication that would not be commenced for a little over a year thereafter, it presents a somewhat different situation than existed in the case referred to. Section 20 of the County Law does not prescribe the time when the designation shall be made. The supervisors who took part in this designation were elected at the annual election in November, 1913, took their offices January 1, 1914, and held the same for two years until December 31, 1915. They were the ones who made the designation in November, 1914, and were the same persons who would be called upon to make a designation, if the need therefor existed, at any time during the year 1915. ■ On November 22, 1915, over a year after the designation was made, the clerk of the board of supervisors reported the same to that body and it was received and ordered filed without protest. More than this, in December, 1914, when the claim was made to the board of supervisors by the owner of the Utica Herald-Dispatch that the designation of the Boonville Herald for 1916 was void, that board made some investigation of the matter but did not so far as appears take any affirmative action in relation thereto, except, to ascertain the paid circulation in the different towns of the county of each paper. All this- shows no disposition on the part of the members of the board who- joined in the designation to recede therefrom, but rather- to- adhere to it, during the entire year.
But it may be conceded, without deciding, that such designation was void, as there is another feature of this case which stands in the way of granting the writ asked for, provided the Boonville Herald possesses the other qualities for designation required by the statute and that is this •— twenty out of thirty of the Republican members of the new board of supervisors who took office January 1, 1916, in a certificate bearing date February 1, 1916, designated the Boonville Herald to publish the session laws and concurrent resolutions for 1916, which certificate was sent to the secretary of state February 3,1916. This was several days before any session law or concurrent resolution passed by the legislature of 1916 had been received and filed in the office of the secretary of state and, of course, prior to the time when any such laws or resolutions could have been sent forward for publication. If there was no legal designation of a Republican paper for 1916 prior to that time, I think this designation was effective to end the claim of the relator that it lawfully held over and for that reason was entitled to publish the laws for that year. This is emphasized
The claim is also made that the Boonville Herald does not possess the qualifications which make it eligible for designation for the purposes mentioned.
Section 20 of the County Law provides that in designating a paper for such purpose regard must be had first ‘ ‘ to its advocacy of the principles of its party and its support of the state and national nominees ” and, second, ‘ ‘ to its general and regular circulation in the towns of the county.”
It is evident from the papers before me that the members of the board who made the designations in question did have regard both to the political principles and to the circulation of each of those papers, but how much regard was given to circulation and how much to the political principles of the respective papers does not appear. Nor is it necessary that it should as long as regard was had to both features in making the designations. It appears that these members knew that the Utica Herald-Dispatch had much the larger circulation in the county than the Boon-ville Herald, but it also appeared that the latter paper had a regular and general circulation in each town of the county. But the statute does- not require the designation of the paper having the largest circulation. People ex rel. Republican & Journal Co. v. McCarthy, 134 App. Div. 761; People ex rel. R. & J. Co. v. Wiggins, 199 N. Y. 382, 384. The law is very elastic and it leaves a very large discretion to the supervisors. Their acts in this respect are not judicial but are administrative. People ex rel. Elmira Advertiser Assn. v. Gor
It is also urged that because the county treasurer is required to publish notices of delinquent sales for unpaid taxes twice each week in the same newspapers which are designated to publish the session laws and concurrent resolutions (Laws of 1902, chap. 559) and because the Boonville Herald is a weekly newspaper, that paper was for that reason improperly designated. The defendant’s answering affidavits show that, it is his intention to publish a semi-weekly edition of the Boonville Herald during the period when such notices are required to be published and to send the same to all its subscribers. This, it • seems to me, will fully satisfy the requirements of the statute with respect to a publication of notices of tax sales twice in each week.
The writ asked for is aimed at the defendant, the secretary of state. It is not apparent on the papers before me that he has disregarded or intends to disregard any provision of law regulating his official conduct. He has on file in his office a notification by the clerk of the board of supervisors of the designation of the Boonville Herald as the Republican newspaper in Oneida county for the publication of the laws and concurrent resolutions for 1916 which is regular on its face and which designation, if the views I have expressed are sound, is valid in law. He is bound,
Application denied, with ten dollars costs.