In re Wallace

36 Misc. 1, 72 N.Y.S. 445
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Misc. 1 (In re Wallace) 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 Wallace, 36 Misc. 1, 72 N.Y.S. 445 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1901).

Opinion

Chester, J.

The sole question presented hy this application for determination, is whether the general committee of the Democratic party for the county of Albany or the city committee of the city of Albany has the power, under the Primary Election Law, to fix the number of delegates which shall represent the various wards of the city in the city convention.

Upon the passage of the Primary Election Law in 1898 (ch. 179), the Democratic general committee of the county adopted a rule continuing the' then existing basis of representation in conventions. This provided for four delegates from each ward, making seventy-six for the entire city. No change of this rule has since been made by this committee.

Prior to 1901, the first sentence of subdivision one of section 3 of the Primary Election Law read as follows:

“ Each party shall have a general committee for each county, except that in the city of New York there may be, in lieu of, orín addition to, a general committee for each county wholly therein, a general city committee or general borough committees, or both, as the rules and regulations of the party may prescribe ” (as amd. L. 1899, ch. 473, § 9).

But by section 2 of chapter 167, Laws of 1901, the sentence above quoted was amended by adding thereto: “ and except that in each city other than said city of New York, if it be desired by a majority of the members of such general committee elected [3]*3from the wards of such city, there shall' be for such city a city committee to consist of such members so elected from such wards, who shall have power to perfect their own organization under such rules and regulations as they may prescribe for the conduct of the affairs of such party affecting such city and the wards thereof.”

Pursuant to this amendment the members of the general committee of the county, elected from the several wards of the city of Albany, met and organized as a city committee. The latter committee has passed a resolution fixing the basis of representation from the several wards to city conventions at one delegate for each one hundred votes polled in each ward for the Democratic candidate for Governor at the last preceding general election. The effect of this, if valid, is to authorize a representation varying from three in the Eighteenth to ten in the Twelfth ward and a total of 115 from all the wards of the city, instead of four from each ward as authorized by the general county committee.

The chairman of the county committee, in compliance' with subdivision 4 of section 4 of the Primary Election Law (as amd. L. 1899, ch. 473, § 4, subd. 4), has filed with the custodian of primary records a statement of the number of delegates from the several wards to the city convention fixed upon by his committee, and the vice-chairman, in the absence of the chairman, 'of the city committee has filed with such custodian a like statement of the number of such delegates fixed upon by his committee.

■ The custodian has acted upon the statement filed by the city committee, and ignored that filed by the county committee, in preparing and publishing the official notice of the ensuing primary election and in preparing the sample ballots therefor.

The petitioner insists that in so doing the custodian has not complied with the law, and seeks by this application to compel him to give the official notice and to prepare the sample ballots based upon the statement filed with him by the chairman of the general county committee. The claim is based upon section 10 of. the Primary Election Law (as amd. L. 1899, ch. 473, § 10), which requires delegates to conventions to be apportioned upon the number of votes cast for the party candidate for Governor at the last preceding general election, “ except that in any county • which is not wholly included within the boundaries of a city of the first class, the general committee of the party, may, by its [4]*4rules and regulations, continue any existing system of representation in conventions.”

If the term “ general committee ” used in this exception to the general method of apportionment provided'for in section 10, means the general committee of the county, there is an apparent inconsistency between the provision authorizing such committee to continue the existing system of representation and the provision contained in the amendment of 1901, authorizing the organization of a city committee “ under such rules and regulations as they may prescribe for the conduct of the affairs of such party affecting such city and the wards thereof.”

If there is an inconsistency here between the older and the later provisions of the statute the well-settled rule that the earlier must give way to the later provisions, applies, because the latest expression of the legislative intent must control.

But the petitioner cites the equally well-settled rule of statutory construction that the original statute with all its amendments must be read together and be viewed as one act passed at the same time. In so doing, however, force must be given to still another rule and that is that effect must, if possible, be given to all the provisions of the statute:

Bearing these rules in mind, I think such a construction may fairly be given to this statute as to relieve it from any substantial inconsistencies between its various provisions and as will give effect to all its provisions. This requires an examination of the meaning of the terms “ general committee ” and city committee ” as used in the statute, and of the general intention of the Legislature in enacting the amendment.

Prior to the amendment Few York was the only city having the right to a city committee, exercising the powers of a general or county committee with respect to party affairs in the city. This was under an exception to the general rule that each party should have a general committee for each county. The amendment created another exception in favor of any other city where it was desired by a majority of the members of the general county committee elected from the wards of such committee to organize a city committee under an express grant of power to organize under such rules and regulations as they may prescribe for the conduct of party affairs affecting such city and the wards thereof. The evident intention of this provision was to confer upon the city committee the same power with reference to city and ward [5]*5conventions as had previously been exercised by the general or county committee and to give to the city committee instead exclusive control over party affairs in the city. The effect of it wa& to make the city committee the general committee for city affairs-while the county committee remained the general committee for county affairs. If this is not so substantially no force is given to the amendment and the grant of power to the city committee contained in the amendment is practically meaningless.

This construction is also supported by numerous minor changes made by the amendment in the same subdivision; for instance, in the old law it was provided that “ On the day fixed by the rules and regulations of the party, the members of each county or general committee shall meet and organize.” L. 1899, ch. 473, § 9, subd. 1. The amendment (L. 1901, ch. 167, § 2) changes this to read:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Misc. 1, 72 N.Y.S. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-wallace-nysupct-1901.