Bloom v. Power

21 Misc. 2d 885, 193 N.Y.S.2d 697, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3088
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 21 Misc. 2d 885 (Bloom v. Power) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloom v. Power, 21 Misc. 2d 885, 193 N.Y.S.2d 697, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3088 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1959).

Opinion

James S. Brown, J.

The respondent, Manuel J. Steinberg, caused to be filed with the Board of Elections of the City of New York a designating petition containing 6,682 signatures to place his name on the Democratic primary ballot for the Democratic primary election, wherein he seeks to be elected as one of the' five candidates of that party for the office of Justice of the City Court of the City of New York, County of Kings.

After canvass by the Board of Elections 3,016, or 45% of the 6,682 signatures, were found to be invalid for various reasons, leaving 3,666 signatures which the Board of Elections has found valid.

This proceeding brings up for review the validity of those 3,666 signatures. Since the findings of the Board of Elections are presumptively correct, petitioners have the burden of proof.

The petition contains 753 numbered pages. As required by section 135 of the Election Law, each sheet bears the signature of an alleged subscribing witness.

The petitioner called more than 50 witnesses, including 18 subscribing witnesses. The testimony thus adduced destroyed entirely the credibility of those 18 subscribing witnesses as well as the credibility of 5 additional subscribing witnesses .who did not testify. It disclosed that many of them certified signatures not signed before them; that alterations were made after the signers signed; that many signatures certified by these subscribing witnesses were forgeries; that signatures were obtained [887]*887promiscuously without the subscribing witnesses knowing the people who signed; that petition sheets were handed around at random; that some subscribing witnesses’ statements were signed in blank before they were filled in; that many petitions were signed by the subscribing witnesses and delivered to the candidate’s headquarters and left there before the dates and district numbers were filled in, and that some of the dates were wrong. One of the subscribing witnesses even admitted that she did not sign her name either as a signer or as a subscribing witness but that someone else had signed her signature. Another subscribing witness encouraged a signer to sign his wife’s name while he was signing his own. Another subscribing witness, a sister of the candidate, who turned in 66 sheets with 655 names, admitted that she solicited and procured them in stores, banks, a hospital, a ferryboat, at the beach, at a golf course and on streets and avenues. When shown several sheets she could not recall where she obtained the signatures or how she came to know the people, although she insisted that she had been introduced to ‘1 many of them. ’ ’ It is interesting to note that 9 of the sheets of this subscribing witness all bear the date August 10,1959 alongside the signatures while 10 more have August 11, 1959 as the date when the signers signed, and the dates of her signatures as subscribing witness corresponded. The addresses of the signers on those 19 sheets are in many different Assembly Districts.

Another subscribing Avitness, not ImoAving that her own brother had testified the day before that he had procured 10 names for her and out of her presence, testified very definitely that she had obtained all the names on that particular sheet.

One Evelyn Strum, a member of the Candidates’ Committee on Vacancies, was called and testified that she had been at the campaign headquarters every night that it was open, which was five or six nights a week; that she took a most active part in processing petitions delivered or sent in by subscribing witnesses. She explained that Avhen a petition Avas received the subscribing witness was asked for the dates Avhen the signers signed. The dates were then filled in. The sheets were passed on to others to have the Assembly and Election Districts filled in. Then other workers took those sheets and checked them against enrollment records. She admitted that many changes were made after subscribing witnesses had subscribed and left. Her attention was called to various sheets whereon her initials ES ” appeared alongside corrections and she said that they probably indicated that the corrections were made after the subscribing witness had departed. She also admitted to making [888]*888corrections on petitions of subscribing witnesses whom she had never met or seen.

Albert Osborn, the handwriting expert, testified that after comparing the alleged signatures of two of the afore-mentioned 23 subscribing witnesses on petition sheets with their own valid signatures on their election enrollments, he was of the definite opinion that the signatures as subscribing witnesses were not theirs. Parenthetically, after inspection of the signatures that was all too obvious to the court, too. There was read to Mr. Osborn a list of 254 of the 753 pages of the petition and he testified that he had examined those pages, as well as many others. He then said that on each of those 254 pages, the dates written alongside the names of the signers were all written by one person and were all of the same date. For example, on one page the 10 names would have alongside each one the date ‘1 July 30th ’ ’ and each of those dates would be in identical handwriting. On another the dates would be “August 4th” and they too would all be in one handwriting; and on another ‘ ‘ August 11th ’ ’ and so on. This was true of 254 pages. He said that some of these dates appeared to be in the handwriting of the subscribing witness but that most were written by someone else. It taxes one’s credulity to believe that those dates were on when the signers signed or to believe that all 10 names were signed on the same date.

In going over all the 753 sheets the court found numerous other corrections and other initials besides those of Evelyn Strum or a subscribing witness. Such casual scrutiny also disclosed the interesting fact, previously found by the Board of Elections, that on 74 sheets each of the subscribing witnesses acted as the subscribing witness to his own signature; and at least two of them also signed other sheets of other subscribing witnesses, not bothering however to strike out their first signatures. Whether there were additional repetitions the court does not know.

Section 135 of the Election Law provides that a designating petition must set forth “ in every instance the full name of the signer, his residence * * * election district * * * and the date when the signature is affixed ’ ’ and in the City of New York it must also state the Assembly District. It also provides that ‘ ‘ A signer need not himself fill in the date, residence, ward, election district, town or city or assembly district.”

Said section also provides the form to be substantially followed and provides that the statement of the subscribing witness at the bottom of each sheet declare: “ I know each of the voters whose names are subscribed to this petition sheet containing [889]*889-signatures and each of them subscribed the same in my presence and upon so subscribing declared to me that the foregoing statement, made and subscribed by him, was true. ’ ’ Such a statement is at the bottom of each page of the petition in question.

Although the statute permits someone other than the signer to fill in the date and the district numbers, nevertheless those dates must be accurate and the signatures must be proved to have been signed on the dates set forth in the petition and any deviation from that,rule renders the petition invalid (Matter of Nunley, 258 App. Div. 746). See, also, New York Election Law by Lewis Abrahams (pp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Misc. 2d 885, 193 N.Y.S.2d 697, 1959 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloom-v-power-nysupct-1959.