New York Constitution Article 2, § 7, Article 9, § 2(c)(i), Article 9, § 2(c)(ii)(1); Municipal
Home Rule Law §§ 10(1)(i), 10(1)(ii)(a)(1), 23(2)(e); Election Law §§ 1-102, 9-112, 9-112(1),
15-100, 15-104, 15-104(1)(d), 15-126(2)(a)
A village can adopt a local law implementing a cumulative voting system and such local
law would be subject to mandatory referendum.
January 24, 2018
Anthony M. Cerreto Informal Opinion
Village Attorney No. 2018-1
Village of Port Chester
222 Grace Church Street
Port Chester, New York 10573
Dear Mr. Cerreto:
You have requested an opinion regarding whether the Village is authorized to adopt
a local law that would establish a system of cumulative voting to elect village trustees, and,
if so, whether that local law would be subject to referendum. Under a cumulative voting
system, each voter is entitled to cast as many votes as there are open seats—in the Village’s
proposal, six votes because the Village is governed by a board of six trustees elected at large
(and a mayor)—but is not limited to casting a single vote for a candidate. A voter could cast
a single vote for each of six candidates, or cast all six votes for one candidate, or allocate the
six votes among candidates in some other way. You have explained that the Village was
using cumulative voting by court order, which has since terminated, and would like to
continue using cumulative voting or another “fair representation” voting system instead of
returning to the single-vote-per-candidate system for its at-large trustee elections that the
Village’s Charter provides for. As explained below, we are of the opinion that the Village
can adopt a local law implementing a cumulative voting system and that such local law
would be subject to mandatory referendum.
The Village is authorized to adopt a local law relating to its government and to the
mode of selection of its officers, as long as that local law is consistent with the state
Constitution and general state statutes. N.Y. Const. Art. 9, § 2(c)(i),(ii)(1); Municipal Home
Rule Law § 10(1)(i),(ii)(a)(1). And the Court of Appeals has determined that the term “mode
of selection” is not limited to whether an officer is elected or appointed but also means that
“a municipality may define the precise method by which either an election or appointment
shall be effected.” Bareham v. City of Rochester, 246 N.Y. 140, 146 (1927). We therefore
believe that the Village’s proposed local law falls in the first instance within its home rule
authority.
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The next question is whether the proposed local law is inconsistent with either the
state Constitution or a general state law. We are not aware of any provision of the
Constitution that governs the method of electing local officers, other than the general
requirement that they be elected by ballot or by other method prescribed by law. N.Y.
Const., Art. 2, § 7. The proposed local law is consistent with this provision.
Nor are we aware of a provision of state law with which the proposed local law would
be inconsistent. The Election Law—which governs elections for village trustee as well as
for many other elective offices, see Election Law § 15-100 (application of statutes to village
elections); id. § 1-102 (same)—neither expressly mandates a ballot with respect to which a
voter can cast only a single vote per candidate nor specifically precludes a ballot with respect
to which a voter may cast more than one vote per candidate.
It has been suggested that certain provisions of the Election Law indirectly prohibit
a cumulative voting system. Specifically, section 9-212, relating to the canvass of elections
by county boards of election, and section 15-104, relating to village elections, provide that
the winning candidate is the one who receives the most votes. Election Law §§ 9-212(1)
(“each person elected by the greatest number of votes to each . . . village office”), 15-104(1)(d)
(“a candidate must receive more votes than any other candidate for the office”). Because an
election for an office can have only one winning candidate, if the Village’s at-large election
is viewed as filling a single office of village trustee, then it might be argued that an election
at which cumulative voting is used would have six, rather than one, winning candidates for
the office. But the Village’s election is better viewed as an election to fill six identical offices
of village trustee, with a single winner for each office. The Election Law supports this view
by providing, with respect to village elections, that “[t]he person or persons” who receive the
highest number of votes are elected.1 Election Law § 15-126(2)(a) (emphasis added).
In fact, were the Village to again implement a single-vote-per-candidate system for
electing its trustees at large, village voters could cast votes for six trustees, just as they
could if the Village adopted cumulative voting; the difference between the two systems
would not be in the number of “winners” but in the number of votes a voter could cast for a
single candidate. And the Election Law does not address the number of votes a voter can
cast for one candidate.
We thus conclude that the proposed local law would be consistent with the Election
Law. And we find no evidence that the Legislature has expressed an intent to preempt local
1At-large elections may also be held in cities, towns, and school districts as well as in villages. See Gerald
Benjamin, At-Large Elections in N.Y.S. Cities, Towns, Villages, and School Districts and the Challenge of
Growing Population Diversity, 5 Albany Gov’t L. Rev. 733, 734 (2012). Any election to fill an at-large office
with multiple vacancies will run afoul of sections 9-212(1) and 15-104(1)(d), even using one-vote-per-candidate
voting, if such an election is viewed as one for a single office instead of an election for multiple identical offices.
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legislation relating to the number of votes a voter can cast for a single candidate: the
Legislature simply has not spoken with respect to that area.
Finally, to briefly address a misunderstanding that might be raised with respect to
the proposed cumulative voting, it does not violate the “one person, one vote” principle.2
That principle does not limit a voter to only one vote but instead ensures that the vote of
any one voter has the same weight as that of any other voter. See Seaman v. Fedourich, 16
N.Y.2d 94, 101-02 (1965). The Village’s proposed local law does not undermine that
principle.
If adopted, as a local law that changes the method of electing an elective officer, the
proposed local law would be subject to mandatory referendum. Municipal Home Rule Law
§ 23(2)(e).
The Attorney General issues formal opinions only to officers and departments of state
government. Thus, this is an informal opinion rendered to assist you in advising the
municipality you represent.
Very truly yours,
KATHRYN SHEINGOLD
Assistant Solicitor General
in Charge of Opinions
2See Alec Slatky, Debunking the Myths about Port Chester (June 25, 2010), FairVote, at
http://www.fairvote.org/debunking-the-myths-about-port-chester.