Fatata v. Phillips

52 Misc. 3d 701, 32 N.Y.S.3d 855
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 Misc. 3d 701 (Fatata v. Phillips) 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
Fatata v. Phillips, 52 Misc. 3d 701, 32 N.Y.S.3d 855 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Richard M. Platkin, J.

Petitioners Linda Fatata and Claudia Tenney bring this special proceeding pursuant to Election Law § 16-102 seeking an order: (1) declaring invalid the designating petition filed with respondent New York State Board of Elections (SBOE) purporting to designate respondent George Phillips as a candidate for the Republican Party in the primary election to be held on June 28, 2016 for the public office of Member, U.S. House of Representatives, 22nd Congressional District (office); and (2) restraining the SBOE from printing and placing the name of the respondent candidate on the ballot as a candidate for the office.

The order to show cause in this proceeding was made returnable on May 5, 2016. The respondent candidate filed an answer admitting certain of the factual allegations of the petition.1 An evidentiary hearing was held on the return of the petition, post-hearing submissions were received on May 9, 2016, and this decision, order and judgment follows.

Background

The relevant facts are straightforward and essentially undisputed. A candidate seeking designation to the office must file a petition containing at least 1,250 valid signatures. The designating petition filed by the respondent candidate contained 1,885 signatures.

Petitioner Linda Fatata filed general and specific objections to the respondent candidate’s designating petition, alleging that two of the signatures were not signed by the voters themselves. Specifically, Fatata objected to the signatures of Anne Haynes (sheet 17, line 8) and Anthony Roma (sheet 38, line 20). According to affidavits submitted with the specific objections, Anne Haynes’s name was signed by her daughter, [703]*703Paula Haynes, and Anthony Roma’s name was signed by his wife, Mary Roma. As these signatures were collected and witnessed by the respondent candidate, Fatata claimed that the SBOE should invalidate the entire petition due to fraud.

In a determination dated May 4, 2016, the SBOE “rendered] no determination relative to the issues raised in [Fatata’s] objection,” stating that “allegations of fraud . . . require findings of fact and consideration of attendant circumstances [that] generally are beyond the ministerial scope of board review.”

Petitioners in this proceeding make essentially the same allegation of fraud. In an answer filed on May 4, 2016, the respondent candidate admitted that Paula Haynes signed for Anne Haynes based upon Anne’s representations that she was unable to sign and that her daughter held a power of attorney for her. The respondent candidate similarly admitted that Mary Roma signed on behalf of Anthony Roma based upon her representations that Anthony was incapacitated and that she held a power of attorney for him.

At the hearing, the respondent candidate was the only witness called to testify, and the records of the SBOE were the only documents received into evidence.2 The respondent candidate testified that, while in the presence of both Anne and Paula Haynes, Anne stated that she wanted to sign the petition, but physically was unable to do so. Anne represented to the respondent candidate that her daughter held a power of attorney (POA), and she asked her daughter to sign the petition for her. There was no indication on the petition that the signature was made by Paula Haynes pursuant to a POA, and no copy of a POA was presented to the respondent candidate or annexed to the petition.

With respect to the Romas, the respondent candidate testified that he stopped at their home to encourage them to support his candidacy. After some discussion at the doorstep, Mary Roma indicated that both she and her husband wanted to sign his petition. After looking over at her husband, who apparently was within earshot and in close proximity, Mary Roma advised the respondent candidate that her husband was unable able to sign because of an incapacity. She further represented that she [704]*704held a POA that gave her the legal right to sign the petition for her husband and requested to do so. Mary Roma then signed her husband’s name to the petition without referring to or attaching the POA.

The respondent candidate further testified that he read and signed the statement of witness at the bottom of both petition sheets. In so doing, he attested that “[e]ach of the individuals whose names are subscribed to th[e] petition . . . subscribed the same in my presence on the dates above indicated and identified himself/herself to be the individual who signed th[e] sheet.” According to the respondent candidate, it was his understanding that a person holding a POA was legally entitled to affix the signature of the person who gave the POA, and it was as if the person who gave the POA were personally present before him signing his or her name to the petition.

Thus, based upon his understanding of powers of attorney, the respondent candidate maintains that he believed the witness statements to be true and correct when he signed them. While not an attorney, the respondent candidate testified that he had held a POA for a seriously ill family member and, in that connection, had received legal counsel regarding the “awesome power of a power of attorney.”

Analysis

“A court will invalidate a designating petition where the challenger establishes, by clear and convincing evidence, that the entire petition is permeated with fraud or that the candidate participated in, or can be charged with knowledge of, fraudulent activity” (Matter of Mattice v Hammond, 131 AD3d 790, 790 [3d Dept 2015] [internal quotation marks and citations omitted]). “[T]he fraud need not permeate the entire petition if the candidate was involved with or knew of the fraud, and the petition may be invalidated even if it contains a sufficient number of valid signatures independent of those fraudulently procured” (Matter of Valenti v Bugbee, 88 AD3d 1056, 1057 [3d Dept 2011] [internal quotation marks omitted]; cf. Matter of Felder v Storobin, 100 AD3d 11, 16 [2d Dept 2012] [“a single instance of fraud by a candidate does not necessarily require the invalidation of an entire otherwise-sufficient designating petition as a matter of law”]).

In alleging that the respondent candidate engaged in fraud, petitioners focus on his attestations that the signers “subscribed to th[e] petition ... in [his] presence . . . and identified [705]*705himself/herself to be the individual who signed the sheet.” Petitioners argue that the admissions made by the respondent candidate in his answer and at the hearing establish the falsity of his representation that Anne Haynes and Anthony Roma signed the petition in his presence.3 Petitioners also rely upon authorities holding that a “mistaken belief” regarding the authority of a person to sign for another cannot excuse a fraudulent witness attestation (Mattice, 131 AD3d at 791; see also Valenti, 88 AD3d at 1058).

While a finding of fraud in the designating process “does not require proof of a ‘nefarious motive’ ” on the part of the candidate (Mattice, 131 AD3d at 791, quoting Valenti, 88 AD3d at 1058), it does require proof of a knowingly or intentionally false statement (see Mattice, 131 AD3d at 791 [“(candidate) signed the witness statement . . . despite knowing that such statement was false”]; Valenti,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Misc. 3d 701, 32 N.Y.S.3d 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fatata-v-phillips-nysupct-2016.