Filed Date: 8/24/1995
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/31/2024
Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Torraca, J.), entered August 18, 1995 in Sullivan County, which dismissed petitioner’s application, in a proceeding pursuant to Election Law § 16-102, to declare invalid the designating petition naming respondent Donald P. Trotta as the Republican Party candidate for the office of Sullivan County Legislator in the September 12, 1995 primary election.
Since Election Law § 16-102 (2) provides for several time limitations, the matter distills to a question of whether this proceeding to invalidate a petition is subject to a 14-day Statute of Limitations running from the last day to file designating petitions, in which event it would be timely, or whether it is a proceeding with respect to the filing of a certificate of nomination made at a meeting of a party committee, which must be instituted within 10 days of said meeting. Our review of the law compels us to a decision that the proceeding relates to the designating petition and thus was timely.
In our view, the provision of Election Law § 16-102 upon which Supreme Court relied applies only where a meeting of a party committee results in the nomination of a candidate. Here, Trotta could only be nominated at a primary election (Election Law §§ 6-110, 6-118) and the only document emanating from the subject committee meeting was a certificate of authorization. We note that the Election Law does not equate a certificate of nomination with a certificate of authorization and does not use the terms interchangeably (see, Election Law §§ 6-156, 6-158 [13]). Thus, since a certificate of authorization is an integral part of a valid designating petition (see, Matter of Plunkett v Mahoney, 76 NY2d 848, modfg on dissenting mem below 164 AD2d 976; Matter of Hanofee v Board of Elections, 16 NY2d 885; Matter of Van Stockum v Castine, 218 AD2d 915 [decided herewith]), we find that the 14-day Statute of Limitations applies and the dismissal of this proceeding was in error.
Since Supreme Court merely ruled on the fifth affirmative
Cardona, P. J., White, Casey, Peters and Spain, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is reversed, on the law, without costs, and matter remitted to the Supreme Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this Court’s decision.