Matter of Trosk v. Cohen

187 N.E. 566, 262 N.Y. 430, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 965
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 24, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 187 N.E. 566 (Matter of Trosk v. Cohen) 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 Trosk v. Cohen, 187 N.E. 566, 262 N.Y. 430, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 965 (N.Y. 1933).

Opinion

Crane, J.

Most of the questions iraised on this appeal have been before the courts in former years with the result thakcertain rulings regarding independent nominations have become fairly well established. When an independent body nominates by petition candidates for certain offices without making nominations for other offices to be filled at the same election those in sympathy with the general independent movement and members *434 of the same body have the right to file petitions of nominations for these other offices using the same name and emblem. This was Matter of Wechsler (134 App. Div. 378, 379). The court there said, “In a broad sense all the electors who hold the same general political views as the city, county and borough candidates have a right as to the district candidates to use the same name and emblem.”

In Matter of Folks (134 App. Div. 376) it was held that it is always a question of good faith as to whether or not the particular persons nominated to fill up the ticket or the petitioners are in sympathy with the movement. This case was affirmed (196 N. Y. 540). These cases were decided in 1909 under the old Election Law. Following in 1912, came Matter of O’Brien, wherein the National Progressive party had nominated a full State ticket but had failed and, as stated in the opinion, omitted intentionally the nomination of a justice of the Supreme Court in the Third Judicial District. This nomination was made by independent electors filing a petition solely for this office, using the name and emblem of the National Progressive party. Objection was raised to this independent nomination for justice of the Supreme Court on the ground that it did not have the approval of the independent State party or organization. The Appellate Division (152 App. Div. 856, 859) said: “ The petition being regular and being the one first filed we think it must be assumed that the signers were members of the National Progressive party, and that it cannot be assumed that they were not in good faith members of that party but were in fact members of either the Republican or Democratic party. * * * It cannot be assumed, in the absence of proof, that such petition was made by members of another party, or that it was made in bad faith for the purpose of foisting upon the National Progressive party a candidate distasteful to the leaders or the members of the party, or for the purpose of aiding *435 a nominee or member of another party.” It was further held that although the committee of the party nominating for State offices had objected to the fifing of this independent petition for nomination to the Supreme Court, yet the members of the party were greater than the committee and were not to be controlled by it. Believing as we do that the objection on the part of the committee was not sufficient to deprive the members of the party from making a nomination if they saw fit, and assuming, as we must, that the petition was signed by members of the Progressive party, it follows that it was sufficient to place the respondent in nomination ” (p. 860). This case was affirmed by this court (206 N. Y. 694) with a very strong dissent by Chief Judge Cullen, concurred in by two of his associates, emphasizing most of the objections now raised by the appellants in this case. There is this difference, however. The dissent was based upon the fact that the State nominators did not intend to file petitions for a Supreme Court justice in the Third Judicial District and that such action could not be taken in opposition to the will and purpose of the governing committee of the State organization. In other words, if the State organization through its control committee had authorized or approved of the filling up of the judicial ticket there would probably have been no dissent in this court. We may say in passing that the case now before us involves no such disagreement in the party organization, the opposition to the fifing of the petition coming from nominees of other parties.

These cases we have referred to with some particularity for the reason that by 1912 they had explained the Election Law regarding independent nominations and had stated these rulings for the guidance of electors and election officials. The Election Law under which they were decided (Laws of 1909, ch. 22, §§ 122, 123 and 124) is the same as the recodification of the Election Law under which we are now operating (Laws of 1922, ch. *436 588, § 137). The Legislature of the State must have known of these decisions and has made no change. Even in rewriting the present law in 1922, the provision for independent nominations (§ 137) was an embodiment of the old law of 1909. This silence or inaction in the face of these decisions laying down a rule of conduct for election officials is more than mere acquiescence; it is an approval of this interpretation and a declaration in effect that these rulings are a part of the Election Law. We", therefore, should be very slow in overturning them. Change, if any, must come from the Legislature.'

At a meeting of the members of the Recovery party held in the Hotel Biltmore, New York city, on the sixth day of October, 1933, the members agreed to unite as a committee to advocate the election of Joseph V. McKee, as mayor, and candidates for comptroller, president of the board of aldermen, borough presidents and district attorney of New York county. The party adopted the name of the Recovery party and chose its emblem. It chose a committee of three, “an executive committee of said committee and duly authorized us as such executive committee to determine for the Recovery party whether or not candidates should be nominated by the Recovery party other than those above mentioned and whether or not the right to the use of the name or emblem of the Recovery party should be granted to or permitted by any other bodies or candidates,” etc. This executive committee gave its consent and approval to the nomination by the Recovery party of Philip J. McCook, Samuel I. Rosenman, Charles B. McLaughlin and Edward R. Koch for justices of the Supreme Court in the First Judicial District. Petitions were prepared and filed in behalf of these four candidates. Like petitions were also filed for the Recovery ticket in behalf of Dennis O’Leary Cohalan and Moses H. Grossman. It is conceded or at least not denied that the petitioners for all these six ■nominees to fill five places (for there were only five *437 places to fill), were in sympathy with the Recovery party program and members of it. More than three thousand of the signers to each petition were original signers to the petition for McKee and his associates. The question, therefore, of any lack of harmony or disagreement between the petitioners and the main body is not in this case; neither is there any question of bad faith. Four of the candidates had the approval of the executive committee appointed by the Recovery party and the fifth, Moses H. Grossman, while disapproved by the executive committee, was, within the rulings in the O’Brien case, nominated by a sufficient number of the Recovery party members to entitle him to a place upon the ticket.

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Bluebook (online)
187 N.E. 566, 262 N.Y. 430, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-trosk-v-cohen-ny-1933.