In re Timmerman

51 Misc. 192, 100 N.Y.S. 57
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 51 Misc. 192 (In re Timmerman) 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 Timmerman, 51 Misc. 192, 100 N.Y.S. 57 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Marcus, J.

This proceeding is instituted to obtain a writ of peremptory mandamus directed to the board of supervisors of Erie county, requiring them to promptly reconvene and apportion Erie county into nine assembly districts, as required by the Constitution of the State of Hew York and the statute of said State, as nearly equal in num[194]*194her of inhabitants, excluding aliens, as may be, of convenient •and contiguous territory in as. compact form as practicable, and, in effect, to annul the apportionment heretofore made by said board, because of its illegality in failing to comply with the constitutional provision.

It appears that, on' May 22, 1906, the board of supervisors adopted a resolution assuming to apportion the county of Erie into nine assembly districts, containing respectively the following number of inhabitants, viz.: First district, 46,730; second district, 48,977; third district, 60,483; fourth district, 49,476; fifth district, 47,342; sixth district, 49,310; seventh district, 45,813; eighth district, 51,984; ninth district, 48,462.

In view of the fact that the greater part of the population of Erie county is embraced within the city of Buffalo, which is divided into city blocks, and of the general geographical situation of this city and the towns of said county, all of these conditions admitting of substantially equal apportionments of assembly districts .as regards population, the wide discrepancy between the number of inhabitants appearing in the attempted' apportionment itself affords a serious objection to its constitutional validity, though the consideration of the question before the court need not rest alone on this numerical variance, as other and more serious objections present themselves.

It will be observed that the largest difference exists between the seventh and eighth, two contiguous districts in the same senatorial' district, the former having a population of 45,813 and the latter 51,984, making a difference of 6,171.

The most serious objection urged against the validity of this apportionment, however, is that it violates that provision of the Constitution which requires the assembly districts to be “ in as compact form as practicable.” A glance ■ at the maps presented at once conveys the impression of a gross departure from the requirements of this constitutional provision, which is confirmed by a careful examination of the geographical contour of these proposed districts. The first district, as proposed by the board of supervisors, commences. on the westerly margin of the city and runs thence [195]*195along its westerly bounds in .a southeasterly direction one and three-quarter miles, having an average width of one-half a mile. It then takes an abrupt turn to the north for one and one-half miles with an average width of one-quarter of a mile, and with some further turnings it runs westerly for half a mile, having an average width of a quarter of a mile, and then turns southeasterly for three-quarters of a mile, having a width at some points of but two city blocks. It then turns at right angles and in a northeasterly direction for three-quarters of a mile, concluding its convolutions at a point one and one-quarter miles east of Main street — six city blocks west of Fillmore avenue. This district, as proposed, has thirty sides or faces and is between five and six miles in length, with a width in many places of less than one-quarter of a mile. The second proposed district ■ is likewise most capricious in outline, angles and recesses and follows, in a general way, the northerly line of the first district and has thirty-one sides or faces, the Tines of which divide five wards' of the city; and its lines run in a half circle about the northerly portion of the first district.

As both of these large districts lie wholly within the city of Buffalo, there would appear to be no reason why they could not have been made more compact, or at least reasonably compact, which they obviously are not.

The remaining districts in the county as apportioned by the board do not appear to be seriously objectionable as regards compactness; but the departure in those respects as regards the first and second assembly districts appears to be excessive and unnecessary and, therefore, not justified by the situation which the city, county and senatorial districts present, especially as these two districts are wholly within the city of Buffalo in which there was great facility for a proper and compact adjustment by reason of the city blocks.

It is claimed in justification of this arbitrary apportionment that there were street-car facilities within each of these districts, ' making access to all parts thereof convenient; but it is equally clear that, with the comprehensive streetcar facilities of the city of Buffalo, there would be equal [196]*196or greater convenience and shorter distances resulting from a more compact outlining of the assembly districts, • as in that event every part of a given district would be nearer a common center. -These principles are recognized by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Smith v. Board of Supervisors, 148 N. Y. 187, where a consideration of greater convenience for the inhabitants, of a proposed town.was considered as justifying its inclusion in one assembly district instead of another, though resulting in a slight inequality of population. They also were evidently dominant in the minds of the framers of the Constitution of 1894, where the requirement of compactness for the first time appears in addition to those of convenience, and equality of population.

Another serious objection to the validity of the attempted apportionment appears in the omission to include the present city of Tonawanda, which is • wholly located in Erie county and wholly within the fiftieth senatorial district; which was doubtless an oversight, but which has an important bearing in the disposition of the entire question before me. The board of supervisors were doubtless laboring under the impression that the city of Tonawanda re-, mains a part of the town of Tonawanda as it was prior to its incorporation as a city by chapter 357 of the Laws of 1905. The only reference to the town of Tonawanda in the resolution of the hoard creating the assembly district is found in the formation of the eighth assembly district, which is stated to include “ the towns of Grand Island and Tonawanda, as now laid out,” and certain portions of the city of Buffalo. An examination of the charter of the city of Tonawanda shows that it provides that “ The town of Tonawanda shall on and after the passage of this act consist of all that portion of said town not included within the boundaries of the city of Tonawanda, and the territory embraced within the boundary of the city of Tonawanda as herein-before described shall not constitute or be a part of the town of Tonawanda.” Other provisions of the charter show clearly that the Legislature- eliminated the city of Tonawanda from the former town of Tonawanda and made of -it [197]*197a separate town, leaving the remainder of the former town of Tonawanda the present town of Tonawanda. It may he that, if this were the only obstacle to this apportionment, the courts might strain the language of the resolution of the board of supervisor^ so as not to invalidate the apportionment; but in view of the other objections already considered it is obviously unwise to overlook this serious objection, as it may have the effect of disfranchising the voters of the entire city of Tonawanda as regards assembly elections, and in this view it would be clearly invalid and unconstitutional.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Misc. 192, 100 N.Y.S. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-timmerman-nysupct-1906.