In re Peel

242 A.D. 264, 275 N.Y.S. 91, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6043

This text of 242 A.D. 264 (In re Peel) 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.

Bluebook
In re Peel, 242 A.D. 264, 275 N.Y.S. 91, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6043 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Davis, J.

The chairman and other officers of the City Fusion party and other interested persons seek by this proceeding to prevent [265]*265the use of the name and emblem of the party in the coming election by local district candidates, whose use thereof the executive committee does not approve. These candidates in general do not profess to have been organizers or staunch supporters of the party in any material way. They hold no official position and have maintained no visible identification with the party organization. There has been no demand by known members of the party or organization that these particular candidates should be its representatives in the election. All that they can claim is that, by the circulation of petitions on their own motion, they have induced a considerable number of persons of unknown political allegiance to put them in nomination pursuant to section 137 of the Election Law governing independent nominations. On such unsubstantial foundation of fact and reason they base their claim that the voters alone may determine that the name and emblem may be used, regardless of the determination of the chairman and executive committee. As to these officials, the proposed candidates seeking to utilize the name and emblem think it sufficient to characterize them as self-constituted ” and to argue that they are without power or authority to determine policies of the organization or exercise control of the party name and emblem; and that such authority resides only in the unknown members of the party who once voted the ticket or who now profess allegiance to its principles or to the fortunes of a particular local candidate. Such a position has been held to be basically unsound.

We have referred to the City Fusionists as a “ party ”—■ strictly speaking it is not a legally recognized party. (Election Law, § 2, subd. 5.) It is a group or movement organized for political purposes in a limited territory having the right to select a name and an emblem. (Election Law, § 137, subd. 3.)

The City Fusion party (originally organized in November, 1932, under another name) undertook to nominate certain candidates by petition in the municipal election of 1933. It had a separate, row on the voting machines. Chiefly its candidates were for offices to be filled by votes in the entire city or in the separate boroughs. As the strength of the movement developed, candidates in smaller districts sought to take advantage of the name and emblem, and except in one instance these candidates were approved by the party organization. That one withdrew his petition. The principal candidates of the organization met with a large measure of success in the election and a great number of votes were cast under its emblem. Naturally these facts have made the name and emblem of political value.

[266]*266The organization of this political movement and the group that had originated it were in 1933 in a measure incomplete and incohesive. It had its officers and its committee but their duties and the control they were entitled to exercise over general political policies were not well defined. In a somewhat similar case it was held that when no nomination had been made for a particular office, persons in sympathy with the independent movement and members of the same body had the right to file petitions nominating candidates for the omitted offices using the same name and emblem of the newly-created organization, whether the candidates were formally approved by the party committee or not. (Matter of Trosk v. Cohen, 262 N. Y. 430.) In that case the objections did not come from the new party but from the nominees of other parties. It was indicated in the opinion and also in a companion case decided at the same term that it was error to hold that the action of the executive committee should not be given weight in determining which of conflicting valid petitions should be recognized. (Matter of Marcus v. Cohen, 262 N. Y. 444.)

During the year that followed, the leaders of the City Fusion party constructed a permanent organization, with subordinate committees in each Assembly district in the city. It reorganized its committees and by resolution and constitution gave power to them to utilize its emblem and name in respect to candidates which it might nominate by petition or to the persons already candidates by regular party nomination who might also be nominated by petition as City Fusion party candidates; and to withhold and forbid their use by those whose candidacy it did not approve. This action was undoubtedly taken in anticipation of the situation presented here, that candidates without seeking the approval of the committees in authority, and without any assurance that they were in sympathy with the party principles, would attempt to become candidates and appropriate the party name and emblem. The purpose, very likely, was to prevent such use by interlopers and by those whose character and conduct would bring discredit to the organization, or who were not in good faith in sympathy with its principles or not of political availability as candidates.

The City Fusion party is actively interested in the present campaign, presenting 114 candidates for different offices in the city. In some districts candidates not approved have circulated petitions in conflict with approved candidates. There are other districts where the party presents no candidates for reasons which seem to the committee to be sufficient. It is "in those districts that in general candidates have come forward with petitions and make conflicting claims as to the use of the party name and emblem. [267]*267The committee disapprove of them all, saying in effect that they are not representative of the organization or “ party.” To these unapproved candidates, some of whom are named in this proceed-, ing, the committees are objecting and asserting that they have no right to use the party name and emblem. These candidates have had opportunity to establish to the satisfaction of the committees that they are truly representative of the party principles and in sympathy with its purposes, and that they have sought signers to the petition amongst those of like mind — but they have neglected to take such action.

As we have stated, the organization is not a political party in the legal sense, nor can it become one under the present statute, for it limits its political activity to the city of New York and does not and will not nominate a candidate for Governor. It, therefore, has no enrolled voters and it cannot identify the individual voters who have affiliated with it or determine the constancy of such affiliation. It must, therefore, determine its policies and maintain a measure of political discipline through a definite group in the form of an executive committee. This it has done, not by acts of a few “ self-constituted ” leaders, but by meetings and consultations, it appears, with district leaders and organizations. It has an organization in every Assembly district. It has achieved a permanence of organization which it is entitled to continue. Greater weight should now be given to the authority and determination of this committee than a year ago, when the organization was in its formative stage.

The Court of Appeals has indicated that the acts and preferences of such a committee, while by no means controlling, are entitled to great weight and consideration in determining which set of nominators fairly represent and are in sympathy with the general ticket. (Matter of Trosk v. Cohen, supra,

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Related

Matter of Marcus v. Cohen
187 N.E. 633 (New York Court of Appeals, 1933)
Matter of Trosk v. Cohen
187 N.E. 566 (New York Court of Appeals, 1933)
Matter of O'Brien
99 N.E. 1111 (New York Court of Appeals, 1912)
In re O'Brien
152 A.D. 856 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1912)
In re Straus
242 A.D. 789 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
242 A.D. 264, 275 N.Y.S. 91, 1934 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-peel-nyappdiv-1934.