In re Complaint of Greene

Hatch, J.:

We are agreed that that part of the order appealed from, which determined that the certificate of nomination, which was filed by the complainant, is in all respects a valid certificate of nomination by an existing political party was correctly decided; that the same is in compliance with the Election Law of the State (Laws of 1896, chap. 909), and being such, the complainant is entitled to have his name placed upon the official ballot to be voted at the ensuing election. In this respect we are in harmony with the views expressed by the learned court below. Upon the question as to whether the use of the words “ National Democratic Party ” is in substance the. same as the regularly adopted name “ Democratic Party ” as a designation of an .older political organization we are not so agreed. In the Election Law of this State the' Democratic party is recognized as .one of the great political parties, and if has become securely entitled to that name as a. party designation. Any use, therefore, of a name in the official *225ballot which infringes upon this right is in violation of the statute which secures it. It is quite evident that the design of the statute is to secure to the party a distinctive name in order that the voters who are in harmony with the principles which the party represents may know certainly that they are voting its ticket, and that they may not he misled into voting a ticket which does not represent those principles by the use of a name which so closely resembles it that the voter may not readily discern the difference. We are, therefore, to see if the proposed name “National Democratic Party ” may thus mislead, tested by this rule. In determining this question we consider the names used by the representative parties in former years and since this requirement became the policy of the Election Law of the State. In this view the action of those parties who have clung to the distinctive name Democratic and have, with qualifications, made use of the name in party designation upon the official ballot, becomes significant and important. In 1894 an organization in Kings county called itself the “ Democratic Party Reform Organization,” and under this name it nominated. candidates for State and county offices, and its candidates were placed upon the official ballot under this designation, and thousands of voters cast their ballots for the candidates thus presented. In the next year a State convention was held which nominated candidates for State offices, who were voted for throughout the State, and local conventions under the same auspices were held in Kings county and candidates named for the several offices. These tickets, State and local, found place upon the official ballot under an adopted emblem of a full rigged ship and with the name as above mentioned. This party thus acquired a right of use of this name as secure as is the right of the Democratic party to its name. It is of considerable importance to note that upon the official ballot this party and ticket appeared in the third column designated in the first line as “ Democratic Party,” followed in the second line by “ Reform Organization.” The first line is the precise designation of the Democratic party in its column. It would seem that as this designation in the first line was in the same language, its tendency might be to mislead, yet thousands of voters, cast their ballots for both tickets at a time when the law was new, not alone once, but twice, and yet no complaint was ever made that a single voter was misled or that either *226party suffered loss of votes on account of the resemblance. Tills condition seems to establish that, as to the words Democratic Party,” no right is acquired when such words are accompanied by other words which qualify their sense or convey a meaning that a different party is intended, and that in practical use the voter is not misled and the. statute is not, therefore, violated. The object of the law is to secure to each voter the right to cast his ballot for the party of his choice. To this end the emblem is required that the illiterate voter may be secure iu his choice; the designation by "name is made for the benefit and security of the voter who can read. It is at once evident that the illiterate voter cannot be misled by any designation iii words, for all. are meaningless to him, and besides he. may be entitled to assistance. (Election. Law, § 104, subd. 2.)

The voter who does not know for whom he wishes to vote or what ballot he intends to cast, cannot be misled or confused by any designation which may be made, and consequently remains unaffected by the use of any words of designation. It is undoubtedly true, in the sense that the Democratic party is made up from citizens in every State and community in the Union, that its general convention is “ National” in .that it embraces representatives from all parts of the country, and all of its members are affected by its action. And it is in the sense-of representation, and that alone, that the word “ National ” has any signification in connection with the party named. . It has never, so far as the papers disclose, or so far as we are aware, made use of the word as a party designation in this State, and it is not claimed that it ever appeared as a party designation upon the official ballot. Its voters who have cast its ballots do not know it by that name, and have never been confronted with its ticket under that designation. To the voter, therefore, who can read, and it is for him that the name is given, when the words “ Democratic Party ” are preceded or followed by a qualifying word or words, his attention is arrested, and we think it necessarily conveys to his mind that the two parties are not.one and the same, but are different, and when this is followed by the name of the presidential candidates, whom, we must assume, as he can read, he knows, it does not seem possible that he can be misled by what he can plainly see. • We must -bear in mind' that, during the last two *227years, as we have seen, the Democratic party has been represented upon the official ballots by two tickets, calling themselves Democratic. The voters of the State have,' therefore, become familiar with such fact. The respondent has always been designated Democratic Partyit is still so designated. The other branch has been the “ Democratic ' Party ” qualified by other words. The word “National” keeps up the qualifying designation, and it seems to my mind that a voter with intelligence sufficient to read could not be misled by such terms into voting a ticket that he did not intend' to vote, or fail to recognize the distinction between the two parties. When we add to this consideration the fact that we are upon the eve of an election, wherein the candidates and principles of the two' dominant parties have been under consideration for months; that, since the 3d day of September, 1896, a party calling itself the “National Democratic Party,” in contradistinction to the Democratic party, with candidates for president and vice-president, has been before the people, discussed in all newspapers, brought to the. attention of the citizens- and voters in every city and hamlet -in this State by all the enginery of political machinery, we must conclude that the word “ National,” used in this connection, has acquired something more or something less than its generic sense, and that as so used, it has all the attributes of a descriptive term, means a party, and that party is the National Democratic party, as distinct in meaning and purpose from the Democratic party as is the Republican party, and that it is so generally understood hy all citizens and voters who can read. In this view, the consideration of words as constituting an infringement of trade marks, or that generic words may not be so used or adopted as to become vested with property rights, have no application. But the word is to be considered in the connection in which it is used in order to determine the meaning conveyed; and although it may be entirely ai’bitrary, yet, if its sense and meaning is clear in the connection in which it appears, that signification will be attached to it. It follows from these views that the use- of the words as a party designation infringes no right of the Democratic party, and is not in violation of the statute.

The order in this respect should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.'

All concurred, except Cullen and Bartlett, JJ., who dissented from the modification of the order.