Cronin v. Lee

103 A. 401, 91 N.J.L. 443, 6 Gummere 443, 1918 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 23, 1918
StatusPublished

This text of 103 A. 401 (Cronin v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cronin v. Lee, 103 A. 401, 91 N.J.L. 443, 6 Gummere 443, 1918 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 74 (N.J. 1918).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Bergen, J.

Petitions were filed in each of the above-stated cases with the clerk of the city of Bayonne requesting him to call an election to determine whether the voters of the city desired the recall of the prosecutor in each of the four cases, according to the provisions of “An act relating to, regulating and providing for the government of cities, towns, boroughs and other municipalities within this state” (Pamph. L. 1911, p. 462), and the supplements thereto and amendments thereof, the prosecutors having been previously elected as members of the board of commissioners of the city and then being in office. Although the proceeding against each prosecutor was distinct, the substantial questions involved are the same and theuases were argued together.

The undisputed facts are that after the petitions were filed ' the city clerk determined that they did not conform to the statute and presented his objections in writing to the justice of the Supreme Court assigned to hold the Circuit Court in the county within which tire city was located, who, after examining the petitions, sustained certain of the objections and made air order “that because" of such objections the names of signers of said petition hereinafter set forth are hereby' rejected from the petition.” As the names thus rejected reduced the number of petitioners below the number required by statute.* the justice also ordered “that as to the further objection which reads as follows: ‘That 712 names appear on the petition where signers of affidavits have not been [445]*445registered,’ such objection was not passed upon or considered because it was unnecessary.” The petitions were thereupon returned by the cleric to the agent of the petitioners. Subsequent to this the petitioners secured additional signers, on separate papers, and attached them to the original petitions and refiled both the original and the additional petitions with the clerk who determined, hut not within the ten days fixed by the statute, that the petitions were still insufficient, but did not return the petition to the petitioners or make a report to the justice who, on the 31st day of January, 1918, made an order in each case that the city clerk immediately proceed to call an election, for the recall of each oí the commissioners, and, evidently being of opinion that the right to make the orders under the conditions present debatable, immediately allowed a writ of certiorari in each case to review the respective orders, the allocaturs containing a stay.

The defendants are William P. Lee, city clerk, and Robert 0. Ring, agent for the petitioners.

The proofs taken in support of the writ of certiorari show that between the original filing of the petitions and the refiling of them as amended, a. general election had taken place; that there was a new registry list, and that a considerable number of the signers of the additional petitions were not registered voters at the last previous election. On the argument the insufficiency of the petitions was not seriously contested, the principal, if not the only, ground upon which the defendants rely, is that the amended petitions were new petitions, and that the city clerk not having filed any objections with the justice of the Supreme Court within ten days after the filing, the prosecutors are estopped to deny their sufficiency, and for want of such exceptions by the city clerk the orders under review are final, and the sufficiency of the petitions is not subject to investigation by this court.

Assuming that these petitions when last filed by the city clerk were new petitions, and that the clerk did not determine them to be insufficient within the time limited by the statute, or file with the justice of the Supreme Court any objections to them, the question is presented whether the neglect of the [446]*446clerk-justifies such justice in making the orders under review without any determination that the petitions conform with' the law.

If this be answered in the affirmative, then it is within the power_of the city- clerk to- procure the calling of such an election upon an illegal petition by refusing to perform his legal duty to determine its sufficiency. The statute requires the city clerk to determine either that the petition does comply with ,the statute or that it does not. If he decides that it does, he must call the election; if lie decides that it does not, he is not required to call it unless the justice of the Supreme Court acting, not as a judicial officer, but as the agent of the state in aid of its election machinery, overrules his objections, in which case, it being determined that the petition is in compliance with the law, it becomes his duty to so decide and call the election; in either case he must make a determination, and his refusal is the non-performance of a legal duty enforceable by mandamus only. The justice of the Supreme Court in the performance of his duty under this’statute has no power to order an election called unless it can be implied from section 12 of the supplement to the statute (Pamph. L. 1915, p. 622), to be later considered, for his power is limited in section 11 to sustaining or overruling any or all objections of the city clerk. If the clerk is sustained then there is no proper petition, but if he is overruled, then there is a petition which complies with the law and he must act accordingly. His legal duty being established, its performance can be enforced by mandamus.

The defendants rely upon section 12 of the act of 1915 to sustain their position that the justice of the Supreme Court may make an order requiring tire clerk to call the election prayed for in the petition without any determination by him, if the clerk fail to file objections to the petitions, and that such .order is final.

If the section be given this broad construction, then the justice can order such an election without the determination by the city clerk either for or against the sufficiency of the . petition, all that is required is non-action by the clerk. This [447]*447section does not go to this extent. It provides that in order to carry out the spirit of the law and prevent the failure of the recall election, “by reason of any conflict of laws or inadequacy of laws, dispute, misunderstanding or other canse, the justice of the Supreme Court holding the Circuit in which the municipality is located, shall have power, upon complaint of the agent, city clerk, incumbent or nominee, to make any order or regulation which in his judgment is necessary or convenient to enable a fair and impartial recall election to be held, and such order or regulation shall be final.”

This language manifestly relates only to the conduct of the election after it has been (¡ailed “to prevent the failure of the recall election,” for the order ho is to make is “to enable a fair and impartial recall election to be lield,” not to provide for the holding of the cl eel ion; for if this be not so, the justice would have the power to order an election without a legal petition being filed should the clerk fail to perform his duty.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 A. 401, 91 N.J.L. 443, 6 Gummere 443, 1918 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cronin-v-lee-nj-1918.