Opinion
January, 1925.
Appeal from Supreme Court, Erie County.
Present — Hubbs, P.J., Clark, Davis, Sears and Crouch, JJ.
Order affirmed, without costs, upon the opinion of Crosby, J., delivered at the Special Term. All concur, except Davis, J., who dissents upon the authority of Matter of Taylor v. Board of Elections ( 123 Misc. 817).
The following is the opinion of the Special Term:
At the time that this motion was brought on for argument, another motion was also heard in which it was sought to secure an order declaring section 249 of the Election Law to be unconstitutional in part and directing the board of elections to print the names of Andrew B. Gilfillan and William P. Brennan, candidates for the office of Justice of the Supreme Court, in the so-called LaFollette column, as well as in the column of the Democratic party, of which party they were the regular nominees. An order has been entered herein, directing the relief demanded by said Gilfillan and Brennan. [See Matter of Gilfillan v. Commissioners of Election, 124 Misc. 628.] The parties interested in the above-entitled proceeding are now desirous of a ruling so worded as to indicate what the decision of the court upon the claim of counsel for the Democratic county committee is as to the constitutionality of the whole of section 249. Mr. Killeen, counsel for the Democratic county committee, argued upon the motion herein that the whole of section 249 was unconstitutional, and that the court ought to make an order providing that the ballots upon the voting machines should be arranged in conformity to the paper ballots provided for by the Election Law and used where voting machines are not used. I declined to find that the whole of section 249 was unconstitutional, but the order made in the proceeding which was brought on for argument in company with this proceeding did not disclose my decision in that regard, and the order now made in this proceeding is made for the purpose of deciding that section 249 is not unconstitutional as a whole, but only unconstitutional in that it fails to place the regular nominees of the independent body, known as the Progressive party, in the column which has been assigned to that independent body. An order may now enter, in appropriate form, to indicate my decision that the whole of section 249 is not unconstitutional.
See Election Law of 1922, § 249, as amd. by Laws of 1924, chap. 443. — [REP.
See Election Law of 1922, § 105. — [REP.