Flores v. Hodge

2025 NY Slip Op 25215
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Nassau County
DecidedSeptember 29, 2025
DocketIndex No. 620073/2025
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 25215 (Flores v. Hodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Nassau County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flores v. Hodge, 2025 NY Slip Op 25215 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

Flores v Hodge (2025 NY Slip Op 25215) [*1]

Flores v Hodge
2025 NY Slip Op 25215
Decided on September 29, 2025
Supreme Court, Nassau County
Knobel, J.
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports.


Decided on September 29, 2025
Supreme Court, Nassau County


Dorien P. Flores and KAITLYN DAGGER, Petitioners-Objectors,

against

James E. Hodge, Respondent-Candidate, and
NASSAU COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS, Respondent.




Index No. 620073/2025

Stephen Martir, Esq.
Counsel to Petitioners-Objectors
[email protected]
(516) 746-5599

James E. Hodge
Respondent-Candidate

Keith Corbett, Esq.
Counsel to Respondent Democratic Commissioner of Board of Elections
[email protected]
(516) 880-8492

John Ryan, Esq.
Counsel to Respondent Republican Commissioner of Board of Elections
[email protected]
(516) 328-1100

Matthew Rozea, Esq.
Nassau County Attorney's Office
[email protected]
516-571-3056

Michael Freeman, Esq.
Nassau County Attorney's Office
[email protected]
516-571-3056 Gary F. Knobel, J.

Papers Considered:

Petition (NYSCEF Doc. No. 1) 1
Petitioner's Exhibits A-G (NYSCEF Doc. No. 3-9) 2
Signed Order to Show Cause (NYSCEF Doc. No. 12) 3
September 25, 2025 Email from Counsel for Respondent 4

This special Election Law proceeding is not only a case of first impression in New York, but also, it seems, in the United States: can a missing person, who is a nominated candidate for public office and has not been declared legally deceased, be substituted on the certified electoral ballot after the completion of any primary election and before Election Day?

The missing person is Petros Krommidas, a candidate for the Nassau County Legislature representing the 4th Legislative District.[FN1] According to news reports (see, e.g., New York Post online April 28, 2025, Brandon Cruz byline), Mr. Krommidas has been missing since April 23, 2025, and was last seen wearing a camouflage shirt and gray sweatpants in Baldwin; his car was found in Long Beach with his clothing inside. Mr. Krommidas' family reported that he enjoyed walking on the boardwalk in Long Beach, and that he was training for a triathlon and perhaps went swimming. An extensive search was conducted by the police and divers, to no avail.

Mr. Krommidas' name remained on the Democrat Party primary ballot for the 4th Legislative seat and he won the primary on June 24, 2025. Petros Krommidas is slated to be on the November 4, 2025 Election Day ballot for the 4th Legislative District. He has not been located, his body has not been found, and there has been no legal declaration of his death or a proceeding commenced to that effect (see Estates, Powers and Trust Law § 2-1.7[a]).[FN2]

The petitioners-objectors herein, registered voters in the 4th Legislative District in Nassau County, seek an order setting aside and deeming null and void the "Certificate of Substitution by Committee to Fill Vacancies After Declination, Death, or Disqualification" which was filed by the Democrat Party on September 11, 2025, with the Nassau County Board of Elections, and substituted James E. [*2]Hodge [FN3] for Petros Krommidas as the candidate for the 4th Legislative District. Petitioners-objectors application is based upon three grounds: (1) that there is no vacancy, pursuant to the Election Law § 6-148, (2) that the certificate itself is facially defective, and (3) that only a party committee, not a committee on vacancies, can substitute a candidate after a primary has been held and a vacancy exists.

In opposition, during oral argument on September 25, 2025, counsel for the Democrat Commissioner of the Board of Elections [FN4] maintained that Mr. Krommidas' family believes that he is dead, and floated the creative theory that the Board of Elections role in this context is to review the substitution certificate for facial sufficiency only.[FN5] He argued that since the document states a statutory basis for substitution (i.e., death) there is no requirement for the Board of Elections to look into the underlying reason for the vacancy necessitating a substitution. In sum, counsel is asking this Court to ignore or rewrite the relevant Election Law, dddwhich is crystal clear on the subject of filling a vacancy for public office.

Election Law § 6-148[1] states that "[a] vacancy in designation or [*3]nomination caused by declination . . . death or disqualification of the candidate, or by a tie vote at a primary, may be filled by the making and filing of a certificate setting forth the fact and cause of the vacancy, the title of the office, the name of the original candidate, and the name and address of the candidate newly designated or nominated." (Election Law § 6-148[1] (emphasis added).

Election Law § 6-148(3) governs a vacancy in a nomination that has been made at a primary and the statute is explicit:

A vacancy in a nomination made at a primary . . . may be filled by a majority of the members, of the party committee or committees last elected in the political subdivision in which the vacancy occurs, present at a meeting at which there is a quorum present, or by a majority of such other committee as the rules of the party may provide; provided, however, that a vacancy in a joint nomination for the offices of governor and lieutenant governor made at a primary election, or a vacancy in joint designation or joint nomination for such offices caused by declination, death, or disqualification and not filled by the committee to fill vacancies, shall be filed by the appropriate committee or committees pursuant to this subdivision and party rules. A single certificate shall be filed pursuant to the requirements of subdivision four and five of this section to fill such vacancy (emphasis added).

A "missing person" status does not qualify as a vacancy which can be filled pursuant to the Election Law statutes.

Petros Krommidas is a missing person, and has not been legally declared deceased.

Consequently, the "Certificate of Substitution by Committee to Fill Vacancies After Declination, Death, or Disqualification" filed herein contained a material misrepresentation of the legal status of the person sought to be substituted.

Even assuming arguendo that there was a valid vacancy necessitating substitution, the substitution here was made by an improper committee, the Committee to Fill Vacancies, and not made by, e.g., a party committee, thereby making the substitution facially insufficient. When there is a vacancy made in a nomination after the primary election the committed named in the designating petition has no function and is without authority (Matter of Venditto v. Roth, 110 AD3d 908, 910 [2nd Dep't 2013] [citing Matter of Dillon v. Roberts, 193 Misc 6, 9, 85 N.Y.S.2d 228 [Sup. Ct. Albany County 1948]).

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Related

Dillon v. Roberts
193 Misc. 6 (New York Supreme Court, 1948)
New York State Committee of the Independence Party v. New York State Board of Elections
87 A.D.3d 806 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
2025 NY Slip Op 25215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flores-v-hodge-nysupctnss-2025.