
    In the Matter of the Application of William J. Pollard for an order to the Seneca County Clerk.
    
      (Supreme Court, Chambers, Monroe County,
    
    
      Filed November 2, 1893.)
    
    -Election—Political parties—Begularity.
    Courts will interfere in contests between factions of a political party only in cases where there has been no adjudication on the question of regularity by some division of the party which is conceded to be superior in point of authority to the one in which the contention arose, provided the question of good faith in the making of such adjudication is not involved.
    Application under § 65 of chap. 680, Laws 1892, for an order .to the county clerk of Seneca county.
    W. McDonald, for motion ; Mr. Lewis, opposed.
   Adams, J.

The controversy which has resulted in this appli'Cation is one which arose in the year 1891, between two conflicting factions of the Republican party in Seneca county, each of which claimed to be "regular in its organization. At the time .mentioned, a proceeding similar to this was instituted for the purpose of obtaining a judicial determination of the matter, and, .after a careful examination of the papers submitted I found myself constrained to decide in.favor of that element in the party known as the Patterson faction, and my reasons therefor were stated in an opinion which was designed to cover all the facts of the case. Matter of Woodworth, 16 N. Y. Supp., 147. This decision was subsequently affirmed by the general term, 64 Hun, 522 ; 46 St. Rep., 432, and the following year was approved by my learned associate, Mr. Justice Bradley.

notwithstanding these several adjudications, every state convention and every judicial, congressional and senatorial convention of the district in which Seneca county is located, which has been held Since they were rendered, has seen fit to ignore the same and to recognize the opposing, or Mongin faction, as the only lawful representative of the party. The Patterson delegates have been refused admission to all of these conventions to which delegates were sent, while those of the Mongin faction were received into full fellowship, and the county committee of that faction has been made the custodian of such funds and documents as were distributed by the state committee. This being the situation, I am again asked to determine the question of regularity upon facts which, other than as above stated, are precisely the same as those which existed at the time the first adjudication was had. The proposition, therefore, which presents itself is simply this: Shall the precedent which "has been established by court and judges, or that which has been ■established by political conventions, be followed?

When this controversy first required a judicial determination it became necessary to decide it upon such facts as were established by affidavits, unaided by the action of any convention of the party; and as those facts were made to appear, I had no .difficulty in reaching the conclusion before mentioned. I am still satisfied that such conclusion was justified, and should now adopt, it without hesitation were- it not for the fact that a different one has been so uniformly reached by the party conventions. In de-' termin-ing a question similar to this¡ which, arose- in Monroe-county,, In re Redmond, where the question of regularity had been passed upon by the state convention of the democratic party, I have just held that the action of that body must be regarded as conclusive,, and I see no reason why the same rule- should not obtain in this, case. The only difference is that here the state organization did not pass upon th.e question until after it had been determined judicially, but nevertheless both factions submitted their claims, to that body,, and for the reasons stated in- the opinion in the Redmond case I think the defeated party must now acqu-iesce in its-decision.

I am aware that this view is at variance with the one expressed by me upon the former hearing, and it likewise "appears to be in conflict with that entertained by Justice Bradley in his opinion in this same matter, but so far as any contrary view appears in my own opinion it will be found to be merely the expression of an opinion which was not called for by the facts of the case, and it is one which upon more- deliberate reflection 1 am disposed to-modify. The conflict between the views of Justice Bradley is-more apparent than real, inasmuch as it now appears that, since his decision was made, the regularity of the Mongin faction has been passed upon by several additional conventions-, and that the opposing faction has so far acquiesced in -their decisions as to omit, in more than one instance to "make any further demand for recognition.

I still think, as already stated, that the title to regularity of the Patterson faction was pretty clearly established upon the original hearing, and that it would, in view of the provision, of thé statute which authorizes this proceeding, have been no more than courteous for the party conventions to have adopted the decision of the general term, which was deliberately made after a careful and impartial hearing; but there is no way in which they can be compelled to do , so, and consequently it seems to me that the only rule for courts and judges to adopt in this and all other similar-contests is that they will interfere only in cases where there has-been no adjudication of the question of regularity by some division of the party which is conceded to be superior in point of authority to the one in which the contention arose, provided, of course, that the question of good faith in the making of such adjudication is not involved.

The adoption of a different rule will inevitably tend to bring party organizations and the courts into unseemly conflicts over questions which are peculiarly "within the cognizance of the former-tribunals, a result which most certainly ought, if possible, to be; avoided.

The application must be denied, and the decision of the clerk of Seneca county affirmed.  