New York City Campaign Finance Board v. Ortiz

38 A.D.3d 75, 826 N.Y.S.2d 244
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 19, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 38 A.D.3d 75 (New York City Campaign Finance Board v. Ortiz) 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
New York City Campaign Finance Board v. Ortiz, 38 A.D.3d 75, 826 N.Y.S.2d 244 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Andrias, J.

The New York City Campaign Finance Act (Administrative Code of City of NY § 3-701 et seq. [the Act]) provides public matching funds to candidates running for nomination or election to the office of mayor, comptroller, public advocate, borough president or member of the City Council, and is administered by plaintiff New York City Campaign Finance Board, an independent, nonpartisan agency. In order to qualify for matching funds, participating candidates must comply with certain requirements, including restrictions on the sources and amounts of campaign contributions, limitations on the types and total amount of campaign expenditures, the filing of receipt and expenditure reports, responding to Board requests for documentation and other information, and submission to audits by the Board to verily compliance. If the Board determines that a portion of the funding was used for purposes other than “qualified campaign expenditures,” it may seek repayment of the disqualified amount and impose a civil penalty up to $10,000 for any [77]*77violation of the Act or the implementing rules promulgated by the Board.

There seems, however, to be a loophole to the full and fair enforcement of the Act presented by the respective appeals, which are from orders entered in separate actions brought by the Board to recover public matching funds and civil penalties from the respective participating candidates, their principal campaign committees and the committees’ treasurers for violations of the Act. While there is no dispute that candidates and treasurers are personally liable for any civil penalties assessed by the Board pursuant to Administrative Code § 3-711 (1), the question presented is whether Administrative Code § 3-710 (2) (b) exempts them from personal liability for repayment of any public funds that have been determined by the Board to have been used for purposes other than qualified campaign expenditures, thus limiting liability in such cases to the committee alone. Liability is similarly limited in the case of a payment in excess of the aggregate amount to which the candidate was eligible under section 3-710 (2) (a).

The Board contends that in addition to the principal campaign committees, the individual defendants are personally liable as well for repaying public matching funds given to the respective campaign committees, which the Board later found were undocumented and, therefore, disqualified campaign expenditures, and argues that they have failed to timely challenge the Board’s final audits finding that the respective committees must repay $46,071 in the case of Community to Elect Edwin 0. Ortiz, Jr. and $63,756 in the case of The Committee to Elect Ricky Perez.

For the following reasons, we find that pursuant to section 3-710 (2) (b), the individual defendants are not personally liable for the repayment of any public funds that have been determined by the Board to have not been used for qualified campaign expenditures. We also take this opportunity to call to the City Council’s attention the apparent loophole reflected in section 3-710 (2) (a) and (b) and suggest that if this laudable legislation is intended to have its full desired effect, that body, if it so wishes, should address the matter.

It is fundamental that the petitioner in a CPLR article 78 proceeding be a person aggrieved by the administrative result. As recognized by the Board, a person is aggrieved by a determination when he knows or should have known that it “has its impact” upon him (Matter of Edmead v McGuire, 67 NY2d 714, [78]*78716 [1986]; Matter of Eldaghar v New York City Hous. Auth., 34 AD3d 326 [2006]). Another principle of administrative law, repeated in Administrative Code § 3-710.5, requires that, before any determination by the Board and before assessing any penalty against a participating candidate, his or her principal committee or principal treasurer for a violation of the campaign finance law or rules, such party must be given written notice of the charges and an opportunity to appear before the Board to contest them.

The final determinations that triggered any article 78 statute of limitations regarding repayment of disqualified public matching funds were the Board’s final audit reports, dated July 30, 2002 as to the Ortiz defendants, and January 14, 2003 as to the Perez defendants. Those audit reports, however, made no findings and assessed no penalties against the individual candidates or their campaign committee treasurers and certainly did not determine that they had to personally repay any disqualified campaign expenditures. Absent such a finding, the individual defendants were certainly not personally aggrieved parties as that term is generally understood. Nor is there any evidence in the record that they were given the requisite notice that they might possibly be found personally liable for the repayment of disqualified funds spent by their committees. Thus, while they may be precluded from contesting their personal responsibility for the civil penalties assessed by the Board in separate determinations, they can certainly contest their personal liability for repayment of public funds paid to their respective committees and later found not to have been used for qualified campaign expenditures.

The Board’s argument that its draft audit reports and repeated notices to each political committee, candidate and treasurer specifically warned that the repayment and penalties could be assessed not only against the political committees but also against the candidates and the treasurers individually, is belied by the respective records. In Ortiz, the only correspondence included in the record is a letter dated July 30, 2002, the final audit report and final Board determination, all dated July 30, 2002, which conclude simply that “the Committee must repay”; a notice of outstanding penalties and pending Web site posting, dated August 19, 2002, referring only to the penalties assessed by the Board on July 30, 2002 ($420) and April 11, 2002 ($400) that remained outstanding and are not in issue on these appeals; a notice of overdue penalties and Web site posting, dated [79]*79September 16, 2002, stating that “as further described in the Final Audit Report sent to you with the Final Board Determination, the Committee must repay to the Board $46,071 . . . and failure to repay these funds may result in the assessment of additional penalties by the Board and civil litigation to compel payment.”

The subsequent dunning letters, demanding payment and threatening that the candidates’ names, but not their participating committees, would be posted on the Board’s Web site, add nothing to the City’s arguments that the individual defendants were on notice that they could personally be liable for repayment of disqualified funds pursuant to section 3-710 (2).

Nor does the actual posting of delinquent candidates’ names on the Web site add any weight to such arguments. Such postings are authorized not by any of the enforcement sections of the Act (§§ 3-710, 3-711), but by Administrative Code § 3-708 (6), which provides that “the board shall publicize, as it deems appropriate, the names of candidates for nomination or election . . .

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Bluebook (online)
38 A.D.3d 75, 826 N.Y.S.2d 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-city-campaign-finance-board-v-ortiz-nyappdiv-2006.