A special judicial election was held on May 17, 1870, to fill the seats on the re-organized New York Court of Appeals.

Background

An Amendment to the New York Constitution, adopted in November 1869, re-organized the Court of Appeals. The first judges were to be elected at a special statewide election to take office on July 4, 1870. The new Court had a Chief Judge, elected as such,[1] and six associate judges. Each ticket could have only four candidates for associate judge so that at least two judges were elected by the minority party.

In April 1870, a new city charter for New York City was enacted by the New York State Legislature under instructions from William M. Tweed. The first municipal election under the new charter was scheduled for the same day, with the intention to swamp the strong upstate Republican vote with a heavy Democratic/Tammany vote in New York City.

Results

Boss Tweed's plan worked, and all five Democratic candidates were elected, leaving only two judgeships to the Republican minority.

1870 judicial election results
Office Democratic ticket Republican ticket
Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals Sanford E. Church 239,890 Henry R. Selden 151,978
Associate Judges of the Court of Appeals William F. Allen 239,173 Charles J. Folger 154,930
Martin Grover 238,516 Charles Andrews 154,094
Rufus W. Peckham, Sr. 236,685 Charles Mason 152,306
Charles A. Rapallo 235,994 Robert S. Hale 150,862

Of the seven original judges elected in 1870, only two completed the 14-year term. Four died (Peckham in 1873, Grover in 1875, Allen in 1878, and Church in 1880) and Folger was first appointed, and then elected, Chief Judge, but resigned in 1881. Andrews was then appointed Chief Judge, but lost the election in 1882, and continued on the bench as an associate judge. Rapallo and Andrews were re-elected in 1884. Rapallo died during his second term in 1887. Andrews was elected Chief Judge in 1892, and retired at the end of 1897 after almost 28 years, the longest tenure of any judge on the New York Court of Appeals.

Notes

  1. From 1847 to 1870, the office of Chief Judge was rotative by seniority among the judges.

Sources

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