Yevoli v. Cristenfeld

Latham and Shapibo, JJ. (dissenting).

We believe that the county committee rules here under consideration are valid and we therefore dissent.

We agree that subdivision 2 of section 15 of the Election Law requires a party’s committee rules to be “ consistent ” with the Election Law, but, differing from the majority view, we are of the opinion that the rules are completely consistent with and do not violate any express provisions of that law or “ the general policy ” of subdivision 4 of section 137 and section 248 of the Election Law.

*158The majority, in a sweeping generalization, determines that the rules contravene the basic philosophy of our democratic system and concludes: “we rest our holding not alone on the language of the laws but as well on the broad grounds of public policy express and implicit therein.” We fail to find any such applicable laws nor any implied or expressed public policy which is in any way violated by the adopted rules. On the contrary, we believe that a fair reading of all of the provisions of the Election Law compels the conclusion that courts have no right or business to become enmeshed in the internal worldngs of our political parties.

Since we differ with the majority on that basic point, we analyze the governing statutes noting at the outset that, except in special elections and in the filling of vacancies, the county committee does not nominate the candidates of its party. What it does do is indorse, i.e., recommend, a potential candidate to the enrolled voters of its party. That candidate must then seek his party’s nomination in its primary election.

Subdivisions 1, 2 and 3 of section 137 of the Election Law enunciate the general rule that persons may not be candidates of a political party in which they are not enrolled. Subdivision 4 contains the exception that nonparty members may be indorsed or designated as candidates by a majority of a committee.

Section 248 merely sets forth the makeup of the ballot if a candidate receives the nomination of more than one party. Significantly, the provision of that statute that the name of a person nominated for office solely by one or more independent bodies shall only appear once on the voting machine has been upheld on the ground that it did not make it impossible for members of a group to vote as such (Matter of Battista v. Power, 16 N Y 2d 198, 201). Nothing in either of the rules here under consideration prohibits multi-party indorsements. A potential candidate who is of the view that he wants or needs the indorsement of another political party may, despite the rules, enter his own party’s primary and accept another party’s indorsement.

To us it seems that the majority of the court has fallen into error because its determination is posited on its conclusion that what the Legislature may not do a party committee may not do, since it is merely a part of the election machinery authorized by the Legislature.” But Matter of Callahan (200 N. Y. 59), which the majority apparently deems authority for that statement, does not stand for any such proposition; indeed it would seem to hold the opposite. In that case the Court of Appeals decided that the Legislature could not limit the power of a politi*159cal committee to indorse any candidate it chose, thus necessarily holding that, at least in that regard, the power of the political committee exceeded that of the Legislature. The fact that the Legislature could not constitutionally fetter the county committee in the latter’s choice of its candidates, which Matter of Callahan stands for, is a far cry from the holding of the majority that the committees here could not voluntarily impose upon themselves a restriction which, if enacted by the Legislature, would be invalid, for, as the intervenors properly state in their brief, “there is a wide constitutional gulf between (a) the Legislature’s power to prohibit action by a group and (b) that group’s right to voluntarily refrain from the same action.”

Perhaps the best way to indicate that the majority of the court errs in its view that Matter of Callahan decided that what the Legislature may not do the county committees may not do, is to cite portions of the opinion in that case. Speaking for the majority, Chief Judge Cullen said (p. 61): “ if the legislature does grant to any contention, committee or body the right to make nominations, it cannot limit the right of such convention, committee or body to nominate as its candidate any person who is qualified for the office. ’ ’

Chief Judge Cullen further said (p. 62):

The liberty of the electors in the exercise of the right vested in them by the Constitution to choose public officers on whatever principle or dictated by whatever motive they see fit, unless those motives contravene common morality and are, therefore, criminal, such as bribery, violence, intimidation or fraud, cannot be denied” (emphasis supplied).

Thus, in our opinion, Matter of Callahan negates the contention of the majority that the power of the Legislature and a political committee created by it are circumscribed by the same limitations.

To us it seems clear that the object of the rules adopted by the respective county committees is to encourage the continuance of a true two-party system and to preserve their own political integrity. We see no reason why that may not be done. To point up the issue more clearly, we may consider the Conservative and Liberal Parties, the views of which, on basic issues, are known to be antithetical. That being the case, would it be improper for the county committee of the Liberal Party to adopt a rule that no candidate which it indorses could accept the indorsement of the Conservative Party or for the Conservative Party to adopt a similar rule with respect to the Liberal Party! Can it be sensibly contended that a political party may not thus preserve *160its own integrity? To ns, in the minority, the answer seems obvious, and that is all that the respective county committee rules here seek to do. In this connection, it should be repeated for emphasis that neither rule prevents any person, otherwise qualified, from filing a designating petition and becoming a candidate in the primary election for his party’s nomination; nor do they limit the right of any recognized political party, or independent group, to nominate or designate anyone they choose ; nor does either rule prevent a write-in vote in the primary election. All the rules seek to do is to regulate county committee indorsements of party members on a basis which is not prohibited by any statute. The court should not by judicial legislation meddle in the intra-party management of a political party in the guise of permitting the people, as stated in the majority opinion, to “ have the right freely and fairly to choose those who will govern them,” — a right which these rules in no way infringe upon.

The rules establish, in advance, a standard for action by each party committee. By so doing they publicly advise their enrolled party members, who, with the exception heretofore noted, are the only ones who can run legally in their primaries (Election Law, § 137), that they will refuse to give their blessing to any proposed candidate who refuses to sign a statement that he will forego acceptance of any other party’s indorsement. To us it seems quite plain that a majority of the members of each of the county committees could, in the case of each individual indorsement, and on a case by case basis, insist upon the same declaration which is now contained in its rules; and, if it could do so in each individual case, we see no reason why it cannot with equal validity accomplish the same purpose by a general all-embracing rule.

The constitutional validity of section 137 of the Election Law, popularly known as the Wilson-Pakula Law, which prohibits candidates from running in the primary of a party in which they are not enrolled, without the consent of the appropriate committee of that party, was upheld in the two Ingersoll cases (Matter of Ingersoll v. Curran, 188 Misc. 1003, affd. 297 N. Y. 522; Matter of Ingersoll v. Heffernan, 188 Misc. 1047, affd. 297 U. Y. 524). In the Curran, case, the Special Term said (pp. 1006-1007): “ the enrolled voter of any political party who desires to have as his nominee a person who is not an enrolled member thereof can do so by the simple expedient which is still reserved by the Election Law of writing in such person’s name upon the primary ballot at the primary election. * * * Whether the required number of the qualified enrolled voters of a party are sufficiently *161interested to do so or not, is not, in my judgment, a test of the constitutionality of the statute involved. The test is that there is preserved unimpaired for every qualified enrolled voter of any political party the right at the primary election to vote for any person of his choice for a party nomination regardless of whether such person is an enrolled member of his party or not.”

In that same case, the court said that the Wilson-Pakula Law ‘ ‘ does not restrain freedom in nominating condidates at the primary ” (p. 1008); and in the Heffernan ease the Special Term made the point that participation in primary elections is not a matter of absolute right and that a primary election is a party function which becomes available for use only through the medium of a political organization. Quite pertinent to the issue here is the statement in Heffernan (p. 1052) that: “ Its enactment [the Wilson-Pakula Law] is consistent with the legislative policy as expressed in prior statutes throughout the years. There is no impairment in the exercise of the elective franchise or any deprivation of the petitioner’s right to be a candidate for public office. He is qualified to be a candidate of his own party; he may seeh and secure independent nominations. There is, however, no constitutional provision guaranteeing to him the right to be the candidate of a party to the objectives and purposes of which he is opposed ” (emphasis supplied).

Paraphrasing what the court there said, we see no reason why a concededly partisan political party may not insist that its designee promise not to dilute its principles by accepting the designation of another political party which has different and opposing principles.

Since each county committee, in the management of its own political party affairs, came to the conclusion, expressed by its rule, that its integrity as a political party required it to demand a pledge of support of its principles by potential candidates, evidenced by their agreement to renounce indorsement of another political party presumably having a different basic philosophy, and since there is nothing arbitrary or unreasonable in so doing, and since the rules are not ‘ ‘ tantamount to a restraint upon freedom in voting ” (Matter of Ingersoll v. Heffernan, 188 Misc. 1047, 1051, supra), and as the rules do not deprive any enrolled party member of the right to be a candidate in the primary election of his party, the petitioners are not entitled to a declaration that the county committee rules are invalid. On the contrary, and since this article 78 proceeding is now deemed to be an action for a declaratory judgment, we conclude that the judgment appealed from should be reversed and that a judgment *162should issue declaring the rules to be constitutionally valid (cf. Lanza v. Wagner, 11 N Y 2d 317; Eager, The Declaratory Judgment Action, § 92).

Hopkins, Acting P. J., and Brennan, J., concur with Benjamin, J.; Latham and Shapiro, JJ., dissent and vote to reverse the judgment and to declare the provisions in the rules in question valid, with a joint opinion.

Judgment affirmed, without costs.