71 N.Y.S. 528 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
A member of the Kings County Republican general committee resigned, his-resignation was accepted, and thereupon a majority of the sitting delegates from the Assembly district in whose delegation such vacancy occurred, by a majority vote, selected George F. Elliott to fill the vacancy for the unexpired term, and that selection was ratified by the' county committee;
The relator concedes that the vacancy was filled pursuant to article 5 of section 1 of the rules and regulations made and adopted by •the Republican party of Kings county, but insists that so much thereof as provides that a vacancy can be filled in any way other than through the suffrages of the members of the party, exercised at the primary election on the annual primary day, is void, in that it is contrary to and inconsistent with the provisions of the Primary Election Law.
If any doubt could be entertained in regard to the right of a •board, association or officer to fill a vacancy in an elective office by appointment until the next election, it would be removed by a reference to section 5, article" 10 of the Constitution, which in express terms empowers the Legislature to provide for filling vacancies, and provides that in case of elective officers no person appointed to fill a vacancy shall hold his office by virtue of such appointment longer than to the commencement of the political year next succeeding the
No inference can properly- he drawn from -'the fact that the Primary Election Law does not in terms provide for filling a vacancy, that the rule and regulation of the Kings County Republican general committee, prescribing the method of. filling vacancies, is contrary to or inconsistent with any provision of that statute. All corporations and voluntary associations have a power, necessarily implied, of admitting members in the place of such as are removed by death or otherwise (Angelí & Ames on Corp. § 110), and the same reason exists for assuming that under the common law a general committee of a political party has the same power unless the statute has denied it.
There is no force in- the contention that the provision for holding unofficial primary elections at. the expense of the party holding them requires every vacancy in a committee to be filled by an election thereat. The purpose of an unofficial primary election is not declared by the statute, except that it shall be subject to the rules and regulations of such party. It may have been intended, among other things, for the purpose of nominating or electing delegates to nominate a candidate for a vacancy in an elective office to be filled at a special election pursuant to section 4, chapter 909 of the Laws of 1896, known as the Election Law In such a case the candidates must be nominated or the delegates elected on a day other than the annual primary day. However this may be, while it is true that a member of a committee may be elected at an unofficial primary election to fill a vacancy if the miles'and regulations of the party so provide, it is equally true that there is no provision of the Primary Election Law or any other law which in terms or by" implication requires it.
The counsel for the relator is driven to assume the position that a vacancy cannot be filled during the interval of time between the death or resignation of a member of the-committee and the election of members at the primary election on the next annual primary day, for if the statute is imperative in requiring an election of a member under all circumstances, it is equally imperative in requiring him to be elected “ at the primary elections on the annual primary day in the month of September.”' The language of the statute is not that
This case differs from the case of People ex rel. Coffey v. Democratic Committee (164 N. Y. 335), cited by the relator, where a member of a general committee was removed from office as a member of such committee by the committee itself. The mere fact that a committee, board or association cannot remove one of its members is no reason why either of them may not fill a vacancy that may have occurred from a cause not under its control. The right to remove an officer has never been held to be the test of the right to fill a vacancy created by his resignation.
There is no reason, rule of construction or precedent which requires us to construe the Primary Election Law as denying to the members of the Kings County Republican general committee the right to make and adopt the rule in question; and we entertain no doubt that, independent of the statute and the rule, they possessed inherent power to fill the vacancy.
For these reasons the order of the Special Term should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
All concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.