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People ex Rel. Simmons v. Ham

Supreme Court, Dutchess Special Term
Oct 1, 1907
56 Misc. 112 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1907)

Summary

In People ex rel. Simmons v. Ham, (1907), 56 Misc. 112, 106 N YS. 312, the nomination certificate in question was required by Statute to be filed with the County Clerk by a time certain, but the Town Clerk claimed that it was his duty to file the Certificate and, in reliance on such statement, the Elections Supervisor delivered it to him for that purpose, and he failed to file it within the time limited.

Summary of this case from Bayne v. Glisson

Opinion

October, 1907.

George Overocker (George Wood, of counsel), for petitioner.

Edward Steilman, for defendant.

John F. Ringwood, for Clement Sweet, Democratic candidate for supervisor.


Application is made why the Dutchess county clerk should not print upon the regular official ballot, to be printed for the ensuing election, the names of the Republican candidates for the town officers of the town of Milan, this county, as filed by the party nomination certificate with him October 12, 1907, and why he should not print the names therein certified on the regular ticket.

It is claimed that the certificates were not filed in his office until the 12th day of October, 1907, twenty-four days prior to election, when the same should have been filed on the 11th day of October, 1907.

The town convention, which nominated these persons named in the certificate, was held on October tenth, and the persons nominated for offices were supervisor, justice of the peace, assessor, collector and constable, and the certificate was received by the clerk on the twelfth day of October, and filed by him in his office. It appears from the affidavit of Cyrus F. Morehouse, the present supervisor, who presided at the convention, that, after the convention, he took both certificates to the office of William Cookingham, the town clerk of said town, and intended to file the other with the Dutchess county clerk on the following day, October eleventh, which was the last day for filing such certificate; that said town clerk demanded of Morehouse the other certificate, telling him, Morehouse, that it was his, the town clerk's, duty to file it with the Dutchess county clerk; and Morehouse, believing that the town clerk knew the law applicable to the case, delivered the other certificate to the town clerk to be, by him, filed with the Dutchess county clerk.

The statements set forth in this affidavit are not contradicted, and I must assume that these statements are true. The certificate did not reach the county clerk's office until the morning of the twelfth of October.

It further appears by this affidavit that the town clerk did not mail this certificate to the county clerk until after five o'clock on the afternoon of October eleventh, so that it must be assumed that he retained the certificate from October tenth, in the afternoon, until five o'clock in the afternoon of October eleventh. There is no affidavit filed by the clerk why it was not mailed and retained that length of time, instead of at once mailing it when he received it from Morehouse; it was evidently kept or delayed until late in the afternoon of October eleventh and then, as it appears, was mailed and received by the county clerk the next day. There is nothing to show that the town clerk mailed the certificate immediately upon receipt of the same, but it appears that it was mailed nearly twenty-four hours after its receipt by him. If he knew the law, and it is presumed he does, he knew that the same had to be filed in the county clerk's office by October 11, 1907; and he must have known that the certificate would have to be mailed immediately by him or it could not reach the clerk's office until it was too late for filing.

It has been held that the law requiring the filing of certificates of nomination is mandatory. Matter of Cuddeback, 3 A.D. 103. This case has been cited in McMullen v. Berean, 29 Misc. 446; and in Matter of McDonald, 25 id. 84, Mr. Justice Chester states: "I do not doubt that in a proper case the court or a justice has the power to direct the filing of a certificate nunc pro tunc, but the facts proven here do not, in my opinion, justify such an order in this case."

The Cuddeback case was decided in 1895.

The McDonald case was decided in 1898.

In Matter of Halpin, 108 A.D. 276, 277, it was held: "We cannot peer into the future and forsee all conditions that may arise and the various phases in which, by certain exigencies, cases may be presented for a construction of the Election Law that may justify or require a strained construction of the statute to prevent the disfranchisement of electors or enforce the just claims of political parties or candidates. We shall, therefore, refrain from expressing any opinion on whether, in any emergency, the court would indulge in so-called judicial legislation; and if so, what circumstances would constitute such emergency. We are all agreed that no such emergency is now presented. There has been no fraud or accident to prevent the filing of a certificate of nomination duly and timely authorized by the convention, and there has been no neglect or refusal on the part of any public board or official to perform a statutory duty." This case was decided in the First Department in 1905.

In reading the last part of this quotation it will be noted that the court stated that it would "refrain from expressing any opinion on whether, in any emergency, the court would indulge in so-called judicial legislation, and if so, what circumstances would constitute such emergency. We are all agreed that no such emergency is now presented There has been no fraud or accident to prevent the filing of a certificate." If this means anything, it means that the court in an emergency would indulge in so-called judicial legislation and, if so, that circumstances would constitute such emergency. It particularly mentioned that there has been "no fraud or accident" to prevent the filing of a certificate of nomination duly and timely authorized by the convention.

From the affidavit it appears that the town clerk retained this certificate for twenty-four hours without mailing it, and the certificate did not reach the clerk's office until after the time within which the same was to be filed pursuant to the statute, and it must have been presumed he knew the law in this respect, and it must be by fraud or a design that the certificate did not reach the Dutchess county clerk's office in sufficient time to be filed. If the certificate had been mailed by him when he received it from Morehouse and was delayed in reaching the clerk's office in the mail, then it was an accident. The affidavits, as submitted, are silent upon this, and I cannot say that it was an accident. It appears from the moving affidavits that he received the paper and that it was not mailed until the next day. Where was it in the meantime?

I think on the facts as they appear in the affidavits the "emergency is now presented" to entitle the applicant to the relief asked for.

It is also claimed on the part of the applicant that the objection was not filed "within three days after filing of such certificate," as is provided by section 65 of the Election Law, and that such objection was not filed until October sixteenth; and, to come within the provision of the law, such objection should have been filed on the fifteenth day of October. As this case requires a hasty decision, I do not think it necessary that I should pass upon this question at this time. I think in furtherance of justice the applicant is entitled to the relief asked for, and the county clerk should print on the official ballot, to be printed for the ensuing election, the names of the republican candidates for town officers of the town of Milan as filed.

Motion granted.


Summaries of

People ex Rel. Simmons v. Ham

Supreme Court, Dutchess Special Term
Oct 1, 1907
56 Misc. 112 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1907)

In People ex rel. Simmons v. Ham, (1907), 56 Misc. 112, 106 N YS. 312, the nomination certificate in question was required by Statute to be filed with the County Clerk by a time certain, but the Town Clerk claimed that it was his duty to file the Certificate and, in reliance on such statement, the Elections Supervisor delivered it to him for that purpose, and he failed to file it within the time limited.

Summary of this case from Bayne v. Glisson
Case details for

People ex Rel. Simmons v. Ham

Case Details

Full title:THE PEOPLE ex rel. CHARLES B. SIMMONS, Plaintiff, v . JOHN M. HAM, County…

Court:Supreme Court, Dutchess Special Term

Date published: Oct 1, 1907

Citations

56 Misc. 112 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1907)
106 N.Y.S. 312

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