Matter of Crane v. Voorhis

178 N.E. 169, 257 N.Y. 298, 78 A.L.R. 394, 1931 N.Y. LEXIS 855
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 23, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 178 N.E. 169 (Matter of Crane v. Voorhis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Crane v. Voorhis, 178 N.E. 169, 257 N.Y. 298, 78 A.L.R. 394, 1931 N.Y. LEXIS 855 (N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

Crane, J.

The Board of Elections has prepared a ballot for use in the voting machines for the county of Richmond in the coming election, which carries a full line of nominees for the Democratic and Republican parties; almost a complete line for the Socialist party and *300 a separate line or horizontal row for the Independent party designated by the emblem of a “ Bell ” and the words “ Independent Judiciary.” The candidates of this Independent Judiciary body were nominated by petition for the office of Surrogate, Justice of the City Court and District Attorney. No nominations were made by this party for the other offices to be filled.

The name Frank S. Gannon, Jr., appears in this Independent row or line as nominee for Surrogate and Carl D. Isaacs as nominee for Justice of the City Court. The space for the District Attorney in this row or line is left blank. One James C. Crane was nominated by this Independent Judiciary body for District Attorney but his name does not appear in the place where a voter would naturally look for it, in the row of the Independent Judiciary nominations, but it does appear in the line or row of the Republican nominees with the two emblems, the “ Eagle,” the emblem of the Republican party, and the “ Bell,” the emblem of the Independent Judiciary nominees. Although Crane has received the nomination of the Republican party and has also been nominated by petition by the Independent Judiciary nominators, his name appears but once upon the ballot, and that in the Republican line or row with these two emblems, the Eagle and the Bell. The reason why his name does not appear in the line with the other nominees of the Independent Judiciary nominators is that the Election Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 17), section 249, as amended by chapter 270 of the Laws of 1931, enacted as follows: “ When a person has been nominated for an office by one political party and has also been nominated for that office by one or more independent bodies, unless said independent body or bodies shall have nominated candidates for more than fifty per cent of the offices to be filled, his name sha.11 appear only in the row or column containing generally the names of candidates for other offices nominated by such party, and the name and emblem of such party *301 and of each of such indépendent bodies shall appear in connection with his name.”

The petitioner Crane attacks this law as unconstitutional on the ground that it is unreasonable and unfair to the voter, and an arbitrary direction by the Legislature for the formation of the ballot.

We held in Matter of Callaghan v. Voorhis (252 N. Y. 14) that where an independent body had made nominations for some of the offices to be filled at the coming election and there was a line provided for these nominations that the name of Mr. Justice Callaghan, who had been nominated for the Supreme Court by that body, should appear in its line as well as in that of the Republican party which had also nominated him. In that opinion we did refer to the fact that this body of independent nominators had made up a fairly full and complete ticket. This, however, was an incident and not a rule for the case. What would constitute a sufficient number of nominations to require an independent line or row, and how many nominations should appear in that row to entitle all the nominees of that party or of those nominators to a place in the line, we did not undertake to state. We simply stated the facts as they were.

The underlying principle regarding the franchise and the inviolable rights of an elector under the State Constitution was stated in these words: The whole purpose of the Election Law and of the Constitution under which it is enacted, is that, within reasonable bounds and regulations, all voters shall, so far as the law provides, have equal, easy and unrestricted opportunities to declare their choice for each office. Section 249 of the Election Law is constitutional except in those instances when to apply it would be unfair and prejudicial to a particular class of voters.”

What would be unreasonable and unfair to the voter is a question of fact depending upon the circumstances of each case. It is a judicial question and not a matter *302 for arbitrary legislation. Shall we say, for instance, that an independent party which shall make nominations for forty or forty-five per cent of the offices to be filled, shall be deprived of a nominee for one of these offices because another party has also nominated him, whereas if it had made nominations for fifty-one per cent of the offices, the name of that candidate would be placed in the row of the independent party nominations as well as in another party fine or row? Such an arbitrary selection by the Legislature for the formation of a ballot is to declare beforehand what is or is not fair and reasonable whereas it may appear in the particular instance to be very unfair and very unreasonable.

An independent party or independent nominators might select a Governor, a Lieutenant-Governor, an Attorney-General and a Comptroller; in other words, State officers, and omit the local officers to be elected in a particular county or district, with the exception possibly of a District Attorney or County Court Judge. Because these offices for which nominations have thus been made did not constitute fifty per cent of all the State and numerous county offices appearing upon the ticket, would it be fair to eliminate the District Attorney or County Court Judge from the line of the independent nominators?

We had this question presented to us in Matter of Lynn v. Nichols (254 N. Y. 630). Lynn had been nominated by the Democratic party for the office of Justice of the Supreme Court in the Seventh Judicial District of the State. An independent body, which had adopted the name “ Law Preservation,” also nominated him for that office. At the election fourteen separate and distinct offices were to be voted for, running from the Governor down to the County Commissioner of Public Welfare and County Purchasing Agent. The Democratic party had nominated candidates for all these offices. The Law Preservation group made nominations for only two of the offices, besides that of Lynn for Justice of the Supreme *303 Court, to wit, the Governor and the Attorney-General. Section 249 of the Election Law, as it read at that time, provided that when a person had been nominated for an office by one political party and had also been nominated for that office by one or more independent bodies, bis name should appear only in the row or column containing generally the names of candidates of such party with the emblem of the independent body appearing in connection with his name. We held this provision of the law unreasonable, and, therefore, unconstitutional, and affirmed the decision requiring Lynn’s name to be placed in the row or line assigned to the Law Preservation party. We think that case is controlling upon the facts here presented.

The Independent Judiciary nominators, as before stated, do have a horizontal line in which appear the names of Frank S. Gannon, Jr., for Surrogate, and Carl D. Isaacs for Justice of the City Court, and the next space to the right of Isaacs is left blank, wherein should appear the name of James C.

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Bluebook (online)
178 N.E. 169, 257 N.Y. 298, 78 A.L.R. 394, 1931 N.Y. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-crane-v-voorhis-ny-1931.