In a proceeding pursuant to Election Law § 16-102, inter alia, to invalidate a petition designating Dov Hikind as a candidate in a primary election to be held on September 13, 2012, for the nomination of the Conservative Party as its candidate for the public office of Member of the Assembly, 48th Assembly District, the petitioner appeals from a final order of the Supreme Court, Kings County (Pesce, J.), dated August 9, 2012, which, after a hearing, denied that branch of the petition which was to invalidate the subject designating petition.
Ordered that the final order is reversed, on the law, without costs or disbursements, that branch of the petition which was to invalidate the petition designating Dov Hikind as a candidate in a primary election to be held on September 13, 2012, for the nomination of the Conservative Party as its candidate for the public office of Member of the Assembly, 48th Assembly District is granted, and the Board of Elections in the City of New York is directed to remove the name of Dov Hikind from the appropriate ballot.
Election Law § 6-130 provides that “[t]he sheets of a designating petition must set forth in every instance the name of the signer, his or her residence address, town or city (except in the city of New York, the county), and the date when the signature is affixed.” The requirements of this statute “must be strictly complied with, as it is a matter of prescribed content” (Matter of DiSanzo v Addabbo,
Although a subscribing witness may insert any required information other than the signature itself (see Election Law § 6-134 [7]), here, since the subscribing witness inserted an incorrect residence address for the signer in connection with the signature at issue, that signature should have been invalidated (see Matter of Stoppenbach v Sweeney,
