Before the court are companion, appeals arising out of the same situation. Special Term dismissed the petition brought by Spillane and Greenfield and the petitioners in the second petition stipulated that this dismissal mandated a like disposition on their application. There are, however, some facts disclosed necessitating somewhat different discussion.
Both petitions are brought pursuant to section 330 of the Election Law against the City Clerk and the Board of Elections. The object of the Spillane petition is to direct the City Clerk to certify to the Board of Elections that the elections for Judge of the Civil Court be held on a county-wide basis and to have the board declare void the petitions of all candidates for the said position whose petitions were filed on a district-wide basis. Special Term dismissed the petition on the ground that petitioners have no standing which enables them to be heard.
Concededly petitioners are citizens qualified to vote at the forthcoming election. As such they are persons aggrieved and entitled to petition (Matter of Mahoney v. Lawley, 301 N. Y. 425, 427; Matter of Decatur v. Board of Elections of County of Albany, 47 Misc 2d 647, affd. 24 A D 2d 735, affd. 16 N Y 2d 848).
This brings us to the merits of the petition. The basis for the petitioners’ complaint has its situs in the constitutional amendment of November 7, 1961, now section 15 of article VI, which provides for the abolition of the former City Court and Municipal Court of the City of New York and the creation of the Civil Court. The Constitution therein provides that the Judges of the Civil Court shall be elected “ from districts within such .counties established by law.” At the expense of repetition, it is well known and recognised by all parties appearing in this matter that this provision was occasioned by a desire to continue the situation prevailing in the former courts, namely, that the former Judges of the City Court were elected from a *159county-wide constituency while the former Judges of the Municipal Court were elected by the voters of statutorily fixed districts. This disposition was not written into the Constitution, but rather it was left to the Legislature to continue it as long as it saw fit. At the same time it was recognized that, as all of the Judges of the Civil Court performed the same functions, exercised the same jurisdiction and were subject to the same administration, which was on a county-wide basis, in the absence of other legislative proscription the electoral unit was the county (Cox v. Katz, 30 A D 2d 432, affd. 22 N Y 2d 903). The Legislature annually from 1962 through 1968 has enacted legislation providing that at the ensuing election vacancies in the Civil Court be filled as follows: successors of former City Court Judges be elected on a county-wide basis and successors of former Municipal Court Judges on a district-wide basis. In 1969 no such legislation was enacted; in fact, no statute of any sort relating to the situation.
It having been determined that in the absence of otherwise specifying legislation candidates for the Civil Court were to be elected on a county-wide basis (Cox v. Katz, supra), by virtue of the failure of the Legislature to direct otherwise the anomaly of Judges of the same court being elected on differing bases no longer prevails, though subject to reinstatement at the pleasure of the Legislature.
However, the Board of Elections on the possible conclusion that the failure of the Legislature to provide in a manner similar to its earlier enactments was an inadvertence, has ruled as if such legislation had actually been passed and has accepted petitions on a district-wide basis and rejected petitions on A county-wide basis. Obviously this is in effect legislating, and so far beyond the powers of the board that it merits no discussion. However, in view of another question raised it is in order to point to the consequences if the board’s action is countenanced and allowed to stand. There would then be an election between candidates some of whom at least were invalidly nominated. Moreover, the invalidity is no mere irregularity but one going to the vitals of the electoral process. Should such a candidate be elected, his tenure on the Bench would be continuously suspect and the Attorney-General would be under a duty to bring quo warranto proceedings with the result that the judicial process in a most important court would be questioned and, in this particular, the electorate would have their franchise nullified.
We have pointed to these consequences because of a procedural argument advanced. The candidates whose petitions are chai*160lenged were not made parties to this proceeding. Actually many, though not all, of them have intervened and it is they who have, with admirable skill, advanced the contentions in opposition to the petition. The officials who are the named defendants take-no position at all. Despite their actual presence and the fact that they have been fully heard, these candidates point out that their intervention was allowed at a time when proceedings under section 330 were time barred and their subsequent appearance cannot give the court jurisdiction. We reach decision on acceptance of that contention.
Further, it is recognized that a candidate whose petition is questioned is, generally speaking, a necessary party (Swan v. Cohen, 179 Misc. 69, affd. 262 App. Div. 956, affd. 286 N. Y. 678). But this is in the situation where the challenge to the petition involves questions of its technical validity. It cannot be the law where the petition itself is a nullity and the candidate supposedly nominated by it would be ineligible to serve if elected, not by virtue of personal disqualification but because his name was never properly on the ballot. In this situation it is not so much the proposed candidate but the electorate that is aggrieved. While the candidate is a proper party (and in this instance was actually heard) he is not an essential party. No court can shut its eyes to what has been called to its attention and suffer the situation to go by default.
By the second petition two candidates seek to have their petitions validated. Each of these candidates filed two petitions with the respondent board, one petition on a county-wide basis, one on a district-wide basis. The board, consonant' with its determination as to other candidates, validated the petition on the district-wide basis and invalidated the other. At the time petitioners acquiesced in this determination. Also their counsel stipulated that the determination in the Spillane petition would be controlling, as it would have been if the determination had been made on the merits. However, neither of the procedural objections has any application to this petition. We do not deem their acceptance of the board’s action or even their solicitation of the decision rendered by the board to have been a withdrawal of the county-wide petition. Less than that, they are entitled to have the petition validated.
The orders dated June 4, 1969, should be reversed on the law and petitions granted without costs to any party.