In re Booth

119 Misc. 243
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 119 Misc. 243 (In re Booth) 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
In re Booth, 119 Misc. 243 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Martin, Louis M., J.

The petitioner herein on August 22,1922, filed with the county clerk of Oneida county, the duly constituted board of elections of said county, what is known as a designating petition, for the purpose of having his name duly placed on the primary ballot as one of the candidates for the Bepublican nomination for member of assembly from the first district of Oneida county, N. Y. This petition was signed by 294 persons and was filed on the last day prescribed by law for filing the same. The said petition was rejected by the county clerk August 29, 1922, for the reason that it did not contain the requisite number of signatures of persons duly qualified to sign the same, and notice given to petitioner accordingly. Prior to this rejection, petitioner was allowed to draw for a position on the primary ticket with knowledge of the fact that the petition had not been regularly examined, and. that there was some uncertainty as to whether or not it contained the names of the proper number of qualified electors who had signed the same.

The petition herein asks for an order of this court requiring the county clerk of Oneida county, as the board of elections of said [245]*245county, to place on the official primary ballot the name of petitioner as a candidate for such member of assembly.

The fundamental question to be decided here is whether or not the petition filed contained the names of the requisite number of qualified electors authorized and empowered by law to sign the same.

Section 136 of tbe Election Law provides as follows:

2. A petition must be signed by not less than three per centum as determined by the preceding enrollment, of the enrolled voters of the party residing within the political unit in which the office or position is to be voted for, provided, however, that for the following public offices the number of signatures need not exceed the following limits: . * * * for any office to be filled by all the voters * * * of any assembly district * * * two hundred and fifty.”

The petition filed contained two hundred and thirty-four properly enrolled Republicans; thirty-five Republican electors, not enrolled; ten Republican electors enrolled in the second assembly district; one enrolled Republican elector in the third assembly district; ten Democratic enrolled electors; two blank, and two Republican electors signed the petition twice; or sixteen less than the number of enrolled Republican electors necessary to constitute a valid petition as prescribed by section 136 of the Election Law quoted above.

A duty devolves upon every person who becomes a candidate for a public office under the Direct Primary Law. He is given ample time to procure the proper signatures and check up the names on his petition, to see if they comply with the law before filing the same and thus avoid error. Failure on his part is his own default, and the consequences must be borne by the party himself. A failure to file a designating petition containing the names of a sufficient number of qualified electors invalidates the same, renders it null and void, and, therefore, inoperative and the candidate therein named is not regularly and duly designated. To hold otherwise would be to nullify the most important provision of the Direct Primary Law.

Contention is made by the petitioner herein that this designating petition should stand for the following reasons:

(a) That the county clerk was and is bound by the petition as filed, and had not the legal right to pass on the qualifications of the signers, and if so, that he must so investigate and pass on the same within three days after fifing.

(b) That the designation must stand as valid for the reason that no written objection was made to it and filed within three days as provided by section 142 of the Election Law.

[246]*246(c) That the county clerk, having allowed petitioner to draw for a position on the primary ballot, had recognized the petition as valid, and is, therefore, estopped from repudiating the same after said time.

The case of Matter of Board of Elections, 76 Misc. Rep. 33, cited for petitioner, does not hold that the board of elections (county clerk) has no power to inquire into the qualifications of the signers of such a petition, but on the contrary, clearly intimates that this could be done, Justice Blackmar stating as follows: “ I do not mean to decide that if the certificates are not sufficient on their face because * * * they contained signatures of persons not enrolled * * * the court cannot pass on them. Such questions involve the determination whether the board has properly performed its duty in filing them.”

That such a power exists and that it is the duty of the county clerk to determine this most vital question is clearly indicated by the Election Law. The portions of sections 102 and 142 of said law which apply are as follows:

§ 102. If the officer or board with whom or which are filed petitions or certificates of designation or nomination shall find that such petitions or certificates are in compliance with this chapter, the names of the candidates thereby designated or nominated shall * * * be printed upon the appropriate official ballot.”

“ § 142. When a determination of such objections is made, or, no objections having been filed, when a determination is made that a certificate or petition is insufficient, such officer or board shall give notice of the determination forthwith by mail to each candidate named in the petition or certificate, and, if the determination is made upon objections, to the objector.”

The power to find that such petitions or certificates are in compliance with this chapter,” and the power to hold the same “ insufficient ” and to reject, involves not only the right to investigate but makes it the mandatory duty of the county clerk to determine at any time before the printing of the primary ballot as to the validity of the petition; he is not bound by the three-day limit under section 142 of the Election Law. That limit applies only to a contestant filing written objection. A board of elections, or a county clerk clothed with its powers, with power to reject, must have the power to investigate the question as to whether or not the signatures to the petitions or certificates of designation are legal or illegal, for the reason that they could not intelligently pass on the question if they did not have such power so to act in the premises. The Election Law would be inoperative and void [247]*247in its most essential features if there was not some safeguard against illegal petitions or designations.

Reading the portions of section 102 and section 142 which apply to the question of the power and duty of the board of elections (county clerk) as a whole clearly indicates that this activity was contemplated by the legislature.

“ If the officer or board with whom or which are filed petitions or certificates of designation or nomination shall find that such petitions or certificates are in compliance with this chapter, the names of the candidates thereby designated or nominated shall * * * be printed upon the appropriate official ballot.” § 102. When a determination is made that a certificate or petition is insufficient, such officer or board shall give notice of the determination forthwith by mail to each candidate named in the petition or certificate, and if the determination is made upon objections, to the objector.” § 142.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 Misc. 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-booth-nysupct-1922.