
    In the Matter of Objections to Independent Nomination of Francis R. Stoddard, Jr., for Member of Assembly, Twenty-fifth Assembly District, and Henry H. Curran for Alderman, Twenty-sixth Aldermanic District. Francis R. Stoddard, Jr., and Henry H. Curran, Appellants.
    First Department,
    October 27, 1913.
    Election Law — review by Supreme Court of validity of petition for independent nomination — time of filing objections.
    The provision of the Election Law that an order of the Supreme Court relating to the sufficiency of a petition for an independent nomination must be made within fifteen days of the election is merely directory, and objections to a petition for an independent nomination for the Assembly filed on the day registration was completed or as soon as the validity of the petition could be ascertained is sufficient.
    Appeal by Francis E. Stoddard, Jr., and another from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the New York Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York, declaring independent nominations for Assemblyman in the twenty-fifth Assembly district, and for alderman in the twenty-sixth aldermanic district void.
    
      
      Robert McC. Marsh, for the appellants.
    
      J. Hampden Dougherty, for Anti-Tammany Jeffersonian Alliance.
    
      Samuel J. Rosensohn, for the respondent petitioner, A. Welles Stump.
   Ingraham, P. J.:

The order appealed from recited as facts that there was filed with the board of elections, city of New York, an independent nominating petition, purporting to nominate Francis E. Stoddard, Jr., for member of Assembly from the twenty-fifth Assembly district under name of the Anti-Tammany Jeffersonian Alliance; that objections to the said petition were duly filed on the 18th day of October, 1913; that the number of signatures required to nominate a candidate for member of Assembly in the twenty-fifth Assembly district was 403; that the number of signatures filed was 461; the number of illegal signatures was 70; that the number of legal signatures was 391; and that, therefore, this nominating petition was illegal and void; and the order sustained the objections and enjoined ■the board of elections from printing the name of Francis E. Stoddard, Jr., as candidate for member of Assembly in the twenty-fifth Assembly district.

The appellant does not attack the findings of the court, that the number of nominators was, not sufficient as required by the statute (Election Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 17; Laws of 1909, chap. 22], § 122, as amd. by Laws of 1913, chap. 800), but takes the objection that the application was not presented within fifteen days prior to election day,. and, therefore, the court was without jurisdiction to entertain the application. When objections are filed to a certificate of nomination under section 134 of the Election Law (as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 649), section 125 of the Election Law (as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 649) provides that any question with reference to the construction, sufficiency, validity or legality of any such certificate shall be determined upon the application of any citizen by the Supreme Court, or any justice thereof, within the judicial district, who shall make such order in the premises as justice may require, “but the final order must be made on or before the last day fixed for filing certificates of nomination to fill vacancies with such officer as provided in section one hundred and thirty-six of this article.” In Matter of Hennessy (54 App. Div. 180) we held that the order determining the validity of the certificate must be made on or before fifteen days prior to the election day, and that was reversed by the Court of Appeals (164 N. Y. 393). After reviewing the law, the Court of Appeals said: “ It is thus apparent that the Legislature contemplated a review of the action of the election officers and a correction of the errors which they may have committed in the discharge of their duties under the statute, and that this was regarded as one of the prominent and essential features of the law.” (See, also, Matter of Herman, 108 App. Div. 335.) It appears from the papers before us that the eighteenth of October was the last day of registration, and, until it was ascertained who were the registered voters, it was impossible to determine whether the certificate contained enough signatures of registered voters to make a valid certificate. The objections to the petition were filed after the registration was completed and on the same day. If the objection of the appellant that such day was the last day on which application to the court could, be made, the object of the statute would be frustrated, and there could be no review by the Supreme Court of the validity of this certificate. This provision of the Election Law (§§ 125, 136, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chaps. 649, 891), that the order must be made within fifteen days of the election, prevented the court from making an order after that time if this provision were mandatory; but, however, if it were merely directory, it would seem that an application to the court made immediately after the last day of registration would be in time. The application to the court was made on the twentieth of October, the first day on which an application could be made, as the intervening day — the nineteenth — was Sunday. That was returnable the twenty-second of October, and the court made the order, finding as a fact that the certificate was illegal. It seems to me that if this provision of the Election Law is directory simply, and not mandatory, and if this application was made as soon as the validity of the certificate could he ascertained, the time was sufficient and the court below had jurisdiction.

It follows, therefore, that the order appealed from should be affirmed.

Clarke, Scott, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred. ‘

Order affirmed.  