In re Pearsall
This text of 146 N.Y.S. 1021 (In re Pearsall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[1] The question is whether the Nassau County Review, or the Owl, severally representative of the Republican and the National Progressive parties in the county of Nassau, shall be designated to publish the Session Laws and concurrent resolutions of the Legislature, pursuant to section 20 of the County Law (Laws of 1909, chapter 16, and chapter 11 of the Consolidated Laws). By peremptory writ of mandamus the clerk of the board of supervisors has been directed to file with the Secretary of State the designation of the Nassau County Review as one of the official papers for such publication, although he had already, at the direction of the two Democratic members of the board, who are a majority thereof, filed the. designation of the Owl and the North Hempstead Record, representing, the former the National Progressive, and the latter the Democratic party. The only other member of the board, a Republican, filed, with such clerk a written designation of the Nassau County Review to be filed with the Secretary of State. The same -condition exists in the board of supervisors of the county of Nassau as in the year 1912, when the supervisors by direction of the court designated the’Owl. People ex rel. Bonheur v. Christ, 208 N. Y. 12, 101 N. E. 846. At that time there had been an election at which presidential electors as well as state officers, including Governor, and county officers, were elected, and the vote in the county indicated the voting supremacy of the Progressive party. But in 1913 there was another election which subordinated the Progressive party to the Republican party in the numerical strength of the vote. The question, then, is whether the designation shall be determined by the vote of 1912 or by the vote of 1913. In other words, is the Republican or the National Progressive party one of the “two principal political parties into which the people of the county are divided”? It is the appellants’ contention that regard must be had to a general election involving candidates for Governor. In Matter of Troy Press Co., 94 App. Div. 514, 88 N. Y. Supp. 115, affirmed without opinion, 179 N. Y. 529, 71 N. E. 1141, it was considered that the designation was limited in duration to one year, inasmuch as meantime the minority party might become one of the two principal parties. If this view be accepted, it is evident that the annual designation should not be based on the expression of the views of the voters of the county for presidential electors, chosen once in each four years, or of the Governor, chosen once in two years. In 1913 two Judges of the Court of Appeals were chosen, but the elections of judges to that court come at uncertain periods. If, now, the expressions of Mr. Justice Chase-in Matter of Troy Press Co. are obligatory in the present determination, it would seem to be the duty to discover what vicissitude in opinion was found at the general election, which the Election Law, section 290, directs “shall be held annually” in the month of November.
[1023]*1023
The order should be affirmed, but, in view of the public importance of the matter and of the obscurity of the statute, without costs. All concur. ‘
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146 N.Y.S. 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-pearsall-nyappdiv-1914.