Sooy v. Gill

774 A.2d 635, 340 N.J. Super. 401, 2001 N.J. Super. LEXIS 213
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 21, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 774 A.2d 635 (Sooy v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sooy v. Gill, 774 A.2d 635, 340 N.J. Super. 401, 2001 N.J. Super. LEXIS 213 (N.J. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

KEEFE, P.J.A.D.

The issue presented in these two eases, which we have consolidated for the purpose of this opinion, is whether a candidate for public office is entitled to use a professional title preceding the candidate’s name on the ballot. The issue is one of first impression in this State.1 The Law Division judges in each case ruled that the County Clerks of Salem and Gloucester Counties abused their discretion in refusing to permit the candidates to use their professional titles. We reverse the judgments under review.

Richard Sooy, Jr., and Warren S. Wallace were candidates for elected office. Sooy sought the elected office of Board of Education member for Pennsville Township in Salem County, and Wallace sought the elected office of Freeholder in Gloucester County. Sooy is a podiatrist, while Wallace has a Ph.D. degree. Both use the professional title “Dr.” preceding their names.

Sooy and Wallace requested the County Clerks of their respective counties to insert “Dr.” preceding their names on the election ballots. In each case, the County Clerks denied the requests, taking the position that a professional title was not a part of a candidate’s “name” in the context of N.J.S.A. 19:14-2. Sooy and Wallace filed separate complaints and orders to show cause in the Law Division. In each case, the trial court reversed the decisions of the County Clerks and compelled them to place “Dr.” on the ballots preceding the candidates’ names.

In the Sooy matter, the trial judge agreed with the Salem County Clerk that “Dr.” is not the “plaintiffs name” and found that his name is “Richard Sooy, Jr.” The judge acknowledged that the title of doctor resulted from Sooy’s “training and his profes[406]*406sion.” Nonetheless, the judge overruled the County Clerk’s decision, giving the following reason:

Inasmuch as I am made to believe that people have been able to have them names appear on ... the ballot when they’re candidates, under the names by which they’re popularly known, and there’s nothing before me to indicate that Dr. Sooy is not popularly known by the indication of Dr. Richard Sooy, then if a person is entitled to have a popularly known name entered on the ballot and it occurs, then a person who is known by his professional name is entitled as well____
And on that basis, I am going to issue the order provided that Dr. Sooy underwrites the cost of altering the ballot, accordingly. I note that neither of [the] counsel were able to provide me any citations, probably because there are none other than the Law Division case of 1971, which prohibited such use.

In the Wallace matter, the trial judge acknowledged the absence of statutory or case law authority in this State that either “allow[s] or disallow[s] the use of a title, such as doctor, on a ballot.” Nonetheless, the judge overruled the Gloucester County Clerk. The essence of the judge’s reason for doing so follows:

News articles have been appended to the moving papers showing that he is commonly referred to in his political activities as Dr. Warren Wallace. His business card shows that he uses that title, Dr. Warren Wallace, and that is the name by which he is commonly known and it is, therefore, part of his persona and part of his identity.
Any suggestion that there would be a misleading of the voters, I believe, is belied by that fact. Each of these cases must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
When looking at the case-by-case determinations that have been made as examples and illustrations, we find that within this very county, this very candidate, Dr. Wallace, on three prior occasions has had his name printed on the ballot as Dr. Warren Wallace. The ballot, approved by the County Clerk in each instance, and put out to the voters for their consideration.
We have when we look at individual cases the circumstances of an individual running for a State Assembly office and Attorney General John Fanner on August 6, 1999, certified the name of that individual running for the General Assembly as Herb Conaway, M.D., clearly indicating his status as a medical doctor. And that was certified and approved for a state office by the State Attorney General.
We have the case in this vicinage, fairly recently, in which a school board nominee was permitted by court order in Salem County to use the title doctor. So to say that it is absolutely prohibited by law is not a valid position. Whether it should be a per se break line prohibition in all cases is not the law today. Whether it were made the law by some appropriate authority in the future, then that would be the guiding principle.
[407]*407And apparently nicknames are commonly used. I know in my own common experience when I go to vote, I often see nicknames and Mr. McBride has pointed out an excellent example of why, in his own personal case, everyone knows him as Bud. If his name were to appear- on some official document as Bernai-d, some people might say, who’s that? And then you say, oh, it’s Bud, they’d say, why didn’t he say so, that’s who I know him as, you mean Bud.
And, therefore, I conclude that in his case, for him, in this election, it is proper to allow him to use that on the ballot as a full and accurate and informative description of who he is, and who it is that’s running for office.

These appeals followed. The elections have taken place. Nonetheless, we do not consider the appeals moot since the issue is of substantial public importance and is capable of repetition. Zirger v. General Accident Ins. Co., 144 N.J. 327, 330, 676 A.2d 1065 (1996).

It is clear from the Law Division’s opinions in these matters that both judges entertained the complaints under the assumption that the County Clerks had discretion in deciding whether to use professional titles preceding the candidates’ names. We hold, for the reasons to follow, that the County Clerks in the circumstances of these cases had no discretion to do other than they did.

In the context of the election laws, county clerks do not have discretion in all matters. “[Wjhere there is clear statutory direction of a specific procedure to be followed, the county clerk is governed thereby and has no discretionary authority.” Tomasin v. Quinn, 150 N.J.Super. 593, 597, 376 A.2d 233 (Law Div.1977); see also, Harrison v. Jones, 44 N.J.Super. 456, 461, 130 A.2d 887 (App.Div.1957). The statute governing the content of the ballot in part pertinent to this appeal is as follows:

There shall be a single or blanket form of ballot, upon which shall be printed the names of all the candidates of every party or group of petitioners having candidates to be voted for at such election. The name of a candidate nominated at the primary who shall fail to accept his nomination, or file the oath of allegiance executed, in the manner herein provided shall not be printed on the ballot. The name of a candidate whose nomination has been vacated as hereinbefore provided shall not be printed on the ballot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
774 A.2d 635, 340 N.J. Super. 401, 2001 N.J. Super. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sooy-v-gill-njsuperctappdiv-2001.