Amendments to the New York Constitution

Since 1777, the New York Constitution has been amended over 200 times. Some amendments affected more than one section of the constitution. Each square below represents when a section was changed by an amendment.

Scroll through the timeline to view amendments to the constitution by year and historical context for significant amendments.
 

1780
1790
1800
1810
1820
+61
1830
1840
+139
1850
1860
+19 1870
+18
1880
1890
+140
1900
1910
1920
+21
1930
+164
1940
1950
1960
+25
+2
+12
1970
1980
1990
2000
+33
2010
2020

Each block on this histogram represents a change—e.g., a substantive change, repeal & replace, or renumbering—to an individual section rather than an amendment. Some amendments result in multiple changes, resulting in multiple blocks being attributed to one amendment. Likewise, a section may be amended more than once in an year, but these amendments will only appear as one block on the histogram. When a block or blocks are marked red in a specific year, that means that a new constitution went into effect that year.

The New York Constitution & Its Amendments

Since 1777, New York has held eight constitutional conventions. Five of these conventions proposed significant changes to the entire constitution, while others proposed discrete constitutional amendments. Between conventions, voters have also adopted hundreds of amendments proposed by the legislature. The state has also regularly convened constitutional commissions to consider further amendments or prepare for conventions and convention votes.

The New York Constitution can be amended in two ways. First, the state legislature can refer proposed amendments to voters by passing them in two successive terms. The state’s voters can then choose to enact the proposals by majority vote. Second, New Yorkers have an opportunity every 20 years to vote on whether to call a constitutional convention, and the legislature can place a convention question on the ballot at other times as well. If voters approve the convention call, and the convention then proposes amendments or an entirely new constitution, those proposals are put on the ballot for New Yorkers to accept or reject by majority vote.

Scholarly and government sources frequently refer to New York as having adopted four, or five, constitutions, depending on whether the result of the 1938 Convention is considered a new constitution. However, these post-1777 “constitutions” were never presented to voters as a new constitution; instead, these changes were proposed to voters as collections of amendments following constitutional conventions. At times, courts have referred to these post-convention changes as amendments; at other times, courts have described them as new constitutions. For more information, see 1821, 1846, 1894, and 1938.

New York State Capitol. Bluefill.

2024

State Equal Rights Amendment

In 2024, New Yorkers adopted an Equal Rights Amendment, which expanded the state’s Equal Protection Clause to bar discrimination based on ethnicity, national origin, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression, pregnancy status, pregnancy outcomes, reproductive healthcare, and autonomy. In expressly protecting pregnancy status, pregnancy outcomes, reproductive healthcare, and autonomy, New York joined a host of other states expressly constitutionalizing reproductive rights in the wake of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization.

National Woman's Party delegates of New York posed with Governor Al Smith. The delegation lobbied for national Equal Rights Amendment in 1924. Library of Congress.

2021

Green Amendment

In 2021, New York became the third state to include an environmental rights provision in its Bill of Rights (after Pennsylvania and Montana, other states include their environmental rights and protections provisions in other locations in their constitutions). The provision guarantees that "Each person shall have a right to clean air and water, and a healthful environment."

White Lake Brook in Sullivan County, New York. GK tramrunner RU.

2014

Redistricting Reform

Like other states, New York struggled with legislative control over redistricting and experienced growing public discontent about gerrymandering. The 1967 Constitutional Convention originally attempted to remedy this issue by proposing to create a bipartisan redistricting commission and to prohibit religious, racial, or political gerrymandering; however, voters rejected the constitution proposed by that convention. Nearly 50 years later, the electorate adopted an amendment establishing a bipartisan redistricting commission and an express anti-gerrymandering provision. The amendment was designed to “‘unequivocally’ reform the ‘redistricting process permanently’ by ‘providing transparency to a process cloaked in secrecy’ and respite from ‘legal challenges to partisan gerrymandering.’

Despite this amendment, the 2022 redistricting process (the first to be conducted under the provisions enacted by the 2014 amendment) failed to live up the hopes of those who advocated for redistricting reform. The bipartisan redistricting commission deadlocked on party lines, allowing the Democrat-controlled legislature to adopt its own gerrymandered maps. The New York Court of Appeals ordered the trial court to adopt new maps to govern the 2022 mid-term elections. Following a second decision from the New York Court of Appeals holding that the commission failed to meet its constitutional obligations when it did not submit a second set of maps (due to the Republican members refusing to attend meetings, thus depriving the commission of quorum), new maps adopted in 2024. Despite a slight Democratic lean, Republicans did not challenge the maps in court.

In 2002 the Constitution was Changed 53 Times

Article I.
Section 1.

Rights, privileges and franchise secured; power of legislature to dispense with primary elections in certain cases

Article I.
Section 3.

Freedom of worship; religious liberty

Article I.
Section 6.

Grand jury; protection of certain enumerated rights; duty of public officers to sign waiver of immunity and give testimony; penalty for refusal

Article I.
Section 8.

Freedom of speech and press; criminal prosecutions for libel

Article I.
Section 10.

Right to assembly and petition; divorces; lotteries, pool-selling and gambling, laws to prevent

Article I.
Section 11.

Equal protection of laws; discrimination in civil rights prohibited

Article I.
Section 17.

Labor not a commodity; hours and wages in public work; right to organize and bargain collectively

Article I.
Section 19.

Workers' compensation

Article Second.
Section II.

Persons excluded from the right of suffrage

Article Second.
Section 3.

Certain occupations and conditions not to affect residence

Article Second.
Section 6.

Permanent registration

Article Second.
Section 9.

Presidential elections; special voting procedures authorized

Article III.
Section 2.

Number and terms of senators and assemblymen

Article III.
Section 6.

Compensation, allowances and traveling expenses of members

Article III.
Section 15.

Manner of passing bills

Article III.
Section 29.

Prison labor; contract system abolished

Article Third.
Section II.

Qualifications of governor and lieutenant-governor

Article Third.
Section IV.

Powers and duties of governor; compensation

Article Third.
Section V.

Reprieves, commutations and pardons; powers and duties of governor relating to grants of

Article Third.
Section VI.

When lieutenant-governor to act as governor

Article Third.
Section VII.

Duties and compensation of lieutenant-governor; succession to the governorship

Article Third.
Section 9.

Action by governor on legislative bills; reconsideration after veto

Article Fourth.
Section 1.

Comptroller and attorney-general; payment of state moneys without audit void

Article Fourth.
Section 6.

Civil service appointments and promotions

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 2.

Court of appeals; organization; designations; vacancies, how filled; commission on judicial nomination

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 3.

Court of appeals; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 4.

Judicial departments; appellate divisions, how constituted; governor to designate justices; temporary assignments; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 20.

Judges and justices; qualifications; eligibility for other office or service; restrictions

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 22.

Commission on judicial conduct; composition; organization and procedure; review by court of appeals; discipline of judges or justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 23.

Removal of judges

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 24.

Court for trial of impeachments; judgment

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 25.

Judges and justices; compensation; retirement

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 26.

Temporary assignments of judges and justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 27.

Supreme court; extraordinary terms

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 28.

Administrative supervision of court system

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 30.

Legislative power over jurisdiction and proceedings; delegation of power to regulate practice and procedure

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 35.

Certain courts abolished; transfer of judges, court personnel, and actions and proceedings to other courts

Article VII.
Section 1.

Estimates by departments, the legislature and the judiciary of needed appropriations; hearings

Article VII.
Section 2.

Executive budget

Article VII.
Section 3.

Budget bills; appearances before legislature

Article VII.
Section 4.

Action on budget bills by legislature; effect thereof

Article VII.
Section 9.

Gift or loan of state credit or money prohibited; exceptions for enumerated purposes

Article VII.
Section 15.

Sinking funds; how kept and invested; income therefrom and application thereof

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 1.

Bill of rights for local governments

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 2.

Powers and duties of legislature; home rule powers of local governments; statute of local governments

Article XV.
Section 8.

Vacancies in office; how filled; boards of education

Article XV.
Section 12.

Compensation of officers

Article XV.
Section 13.

Law enforcement and other officers

Article XVI. Taxation
Section 5.

Compensation of public officers and employees subject to taxation

Article XVI. Taxation
Section 6.

Public improvements or services; contract of indebtedness; creation of public corporations

Article XVII. Social Welfare
Section 4.

Care and treatment of persons suffering from mental disorder or defect; visitation of institutions for

Article XIV.
Section 1.

Amendments to constitution; how proposed, voted upon and ratified; failure of attorney-general to render opinion not to affect validity

Article XIV.
Section 2.

Future constitutional conventions; how called; election of delegates; compensation; quorum; submission of amendments; officers; employees; rules; vacancies

2001

Gender-Neutral Language

Like the U.S. Constitution, the New York Constitution contained gendered language, including in the provisions describing the duties and powers of the governor and the election of and restrictions on members of the legislature. These provisions did not prevent women from enjoying the protections of the constitution or running of office—the first female state legislator was elected in New York in 1918, the same year women were first allowed to vote. Nonetheless, Assemblywoman Sandra Galef, who pushed for an amendment to make the constitution gender-neutral, called the gendered constitution “old-fashioned” and “so behind the times.” Voters approved the amendment, resulting in “more than 170 minor changes to the [constitution’s] wording.”

In 1990 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

In 1978 the Constitution was Changed 17 Times

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 1.

Unified court system; organization; process

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 2.

Court of appeals; organization; designations; vacancies, how filled; commission on judicial nomination

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 7.

Supreme court; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 8.

Appellate terms; composition; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 11.

County court; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 20.

Judges and justices; qualifications; eligibility for other office or service; restrictions

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 22.

Commission on judicial conduct; composition; organization and procedure; review by court of appeals; discipline of judges or justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 22.

Commission on judicial conduct; composition; organization and procedure; review by court of appeals; discipline of judges or justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 26.

Temporary assignment of judges and justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 28.

Administrative supervision of court system

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 28.

Administrative supervision of court system

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 29.

Expenses of court

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 30.

Legislative power over jurisdiction and proceedings; delegation of power to regulate practice and procedure

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 36-a.

Effective date of certain amendments to articles VI and VII

Article VII.
Section 1.

Estimates by departments, the legislature and the judiciary of needed appropriations; hearings

Article VII.
Section 9.

State credit not to be given

Article XV.
Section 8.

Vacancies in office, how filled

1977

Judicial Reform & Other Amendments

In 1977, the constitution’s 200th anniversary, voters approved an amendment to make Court of Appeals judgeships appointed, rather than elected, positions. Four of the eight amendments on the ballot that year related to judicial reform, but the amendment to give the governor the power to appoint judges to the Court of Appeals was the “most controversial.” Proponents argued that the system, which also involved a judicial nominating commission and Senate confirmation, would “insure that the judges are qualified and ‘nonpolitical,’” while opponents worried that the amendment would simply encourage “powerful politicians, who have always controlled judicial elections,” to “shift their emphasis to the appointment process.” The amendment was proposed in the wake of several hotly contested elections in 1972, 1973, and 1974, during which judges were required to campaign and run television advertisements, something that supporters of the amendment thought turned judges into "commodities." Opponents argued that there was no evidence that appointments yielded better judges and that the political nature of the appointments would prevent the nomination of "people of top drawer talent."

Voters also approved amendments creating a commission on judicial conduct, increasing pension benefits to widows and widowers of those in the state retirement system, and allowing local governing bodies to fill vacancies on boards of education. They rejected four other amendments as well as the periodic call for a constitutional convention.

The New York Court of Appeals hearing oral argument in 2009. Tracy Collins.

In 1973 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

1969

Environmental Protection

In 1969, the electorate approved an amendment originally proposed by the 1967 Constitutional Convention: a “Conservation Bill of Rights.” The amendment declared that the conservation and protection of the state’s natural resources and scenic beauty was the policy of the state. The amendment also altered the constitution’s “Forever Wild” provision to establish a state nature and historic preserve. Marking the constitution’s 200th anniversary in 1977, one commentator remarked that the document “protects all, even the mountains!” 

In 2021, New York voters once again approved an amendment to protect the environment when the electorate approved the state’s “Green Amendment,” guaranteeing that “Each person shall have a right to clean air and water, and a healthful environment.”

Lake Kirsty, Tifft Nature Preserve, Buffalo, New York. Andre Carrotflower.

1967

Eighth Constitutional Convention

The 1967 Constitutional Convention—the state’s eighth—produced a new proposed constitution, intended to update the state’s constitutional law so that the state wouldn’t be “stuck with” an “archaic” document until the next time New Yorkers had the opportunity to vote on the automatic convention call. The Democratic majority at the convention favored drafting a new constitution while the Republican majority had favored making more discrete amendments to the existing constitution. Although Democrats won that battle, sentiment across the political spectrum was mixed on the final proposed constitution. As one newspaper put it, “Vote Maybe On Constitution.”

One of the most controversial differences between the existing constitution and the convention’s proposed constitution was the omission of the “Blaine Amendment,” which prohibited direct or indirect government aid to educational institutions “wholly or in part under the direction of any religious denomination.” Concerns about the projected growth of state expenditures and about allowing the legislature to take out bonds without voter approval also produced “a deeply divisive constitution debate.” In addition, despite restructuring the courts, the proposed constitution failed to satisfy proponents of court reform, with one observer commenting that “[t]he dream of wholesale court reform has been killed.” Of particular note was the failure to adopt a merit-based method of judicial selection.

Ultimately, voters rejected the proposed constitution by a three-to-one margin.

In 1964 the Constitution was Changed 32 Times

Article I.
Section 7.

Compensation for taking private property; private roads; drainage of agricultural lands

Article Second.
Section 1a.

Absentee voting

Article Second.
Section 9.

Presidential elections; special voting procedures authorized

Article III.
Section 10.

Powers of each house

Article III.
Section 18.

Restrictions on the legislature respecting the making or use of profits by municipal corporations operating certain utility services

Article III.
Section 25.

Emergency governmental operations; legislature to provide for

Article Third.
Section IV.

Duties and powers of governor; compensation

Article Third.
Section VI.

When lieutenant-governor to act as governor

Article Third.
Section VII.

Qualifications and duties of lieutenant-governor; succession to the governorship

Article VIII.
Section 1.

Counties, cities and towns not to give or loan money or credit

Article VIII.
Section 5.

Ascertainment of debt-incurring power of counties, cities, towns and villages; certain indebtedness to be excluded

Article VIII.
Section 12.

Powers of local governments to be restricted; further limitations on contracting local indebtedness authorized

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 1.

Counties; organization and government; restrictions on legislature with respect to laws affecting

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 2.

Counties; alternative forms of government for; effect of adoption thereof

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 3.

Existing laws to remain applicable

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 4.

Further powers of local legislation and administration for counties; county auditors

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 7.

Appointment or election of county officers when not provided for by constitution

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 9.

Cities and villages; organization; powers to be restricted

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 10.

Extra compensation prohibited

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 11.

Passage of special city laws prohibited; exceptions

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 12.

Powers of cities to enact local laws relating to property, affairs or government

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 13.

Existing laws to remain applicable; reservation of power in legislature over certain matters

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 14.

Annexation of territory to cities

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 15.

Election of city officers and certain county officers to be held in odd-numbered years

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 16.

Villages of five thousand or more; home rule for; duty of and restrictions on legislature respecting

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 1.

Bill of rights for local governments

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 2.

Powers and duties of the legislature; home rule powers of local governments; statute of local governments

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 3.

Existing laws to remain applicable; construction; definitions

Article XV.
Section 12.

Compensation of officers

Article XV.
Section 13.

Law enforcement and other officers

Article XV.
Section 14.

Employees of, and contractors for, the state and local governments; wages, hours and other provisions to be regulated by legislature

Article XIV. Conservation
Section 1.

Forest preserve to be forever kept wild; certain highways authorized

In 1962 the Constitution was Changed 45 Times

Article Fourth.
Section 2.

Civil departments in the state government

Article Fourth.
Section 3.

Assignment of functions

Article Fourth.
Section 4.

Departments heads

Article Fifth.

Article VI. Judiciary

Judiciary

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 1.

Unified court system; organization; process

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 2.

Court of appeals; organization; designations; vacancies, how filled; commission on judicial nomination

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 3.

Court of appeals; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 4.

Judicial departments; appellate divisions, how constituted; governor to designate justices; temporary assignments; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 5.

Appeals from judgment or order; new trial

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 6.

Judicial districts; how constituted; supreme court

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 7.

Supreme court; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 8.

Appellate terms; composition; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 9.

Court of claims; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 10.

County courts; judges

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 11.

County court; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 12.

Surrogate's courts; judges; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 13.

Family court; organization; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 14.

Discharge of duties of more than one judicial office by same judicial officer

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 15.

New york city; city-wide courts; jurisdiction

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 16.

District courts; jurisdiction; judges

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 17.

Town, village and city courts; jurisdiction; judges

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 18.

Trial by jury; trial without jury; claims against state

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 19.

Transfer of actions and proceedings

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 20.

Judges and justices; qualifications; eligibility for other office or service; restrictions

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 21.

Vacancies; how filled

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 22.

Commission on judicial conduct; composition; organization and procedure; review by court of appeals; discipline of judges or justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 23.

Removal of judges

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 24.

Court for trial of impeachments; judgment

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 25.

Judges and justices; compensation; retirement

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 26.

Temporary assignments of judges and justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 27.

Supreme court; extraordinary terms

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 28.

Administrative supervision of court system

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 29.

Expenses of courts

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 30.

Legislative power over jurisdiction and proceedings; delegation of power to regulate practice and procedure

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 31.

Inapplicability of article to certain courts

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 32.

Custodians of children to be of same religious persuasion

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 33.

Existing laws; duty of legislature to implement article

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 34.

Pending appeals, actions and proceedings; preservation of existing terms of office of judges and justices

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 35.

Certain courts abolished; transfer of judges, court personnel, and actions and proceedings to other courts

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 36.

Pending civil and criminal cases

Article VI. Judiciary
Section 37.

Effective date of article

Article VII.
Section 9.

State credit not to be given

Article X. Corporations
Section 7.

Liability of state for obligations of the port of New York authority for railroad commuter cars; limitations

Article X. Corporations
Section 7.

Liability of state for obligations of the port of new york authority for railroad commuter cars; limitations

1961

Unified Court System

In 1961, voters adopted an amendment creating a unified court system. The amendment reduced the number of courts, consolidating some of the state’s more specialized courts and allowing District and City Courts to replace other lower courts. District and City Courts have concurrent jurisdiction with County Courts (unlimited criminal jurisdiction, civil jurisdiction limited to cases involving amount in controversy up to $25,000) and State Supreme Courts (unlimited jurisdiction), but they only hear cases with smaller amounts in controversy, small claims matters, and lesser crimes. The entire court system was to be governed by administrative policies established by a board of five judges, who also had the responsibility to make budget requests. All judges, except those serving on district or local courts, were required to serve full time and, non-lawyers could only serve in town and village courts. 

Proponents of the amendment argued that the state’s existing system of courts, which varied by geography, jurisdiction, and administration, was needlessly fragmentary and confusing. They also contended that requiring most judges to serve full time would promote judicial expertise. Opponents warned that a unified system wouldn’t necessarily reduce delays (an ongoing challenge for the existing court system) and could make them worse during the transition, and they worried that the amendment’s changes might threaten judicial independence and replace town and village court judges with district court judges who may not be members of the community.

Executive Departments

Voters also adopted an amendment limiting the number of executive departments to 20 and allowing the legislature to "assign by law new powers and functions to departments, officers, boards, commissions or executive offices of the governor, and increase, modify or diminish their powers and functions." This resulted in no substantive change to the number of executive departments but provided flexibility on their names.

New York City Court. Norbert Nagel.

1953

Joint Election of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor

In 1953, New Yorkers voted on nine amendments, one of which provided for the joint election of governor and lieutenant governor. Previously, these two offices were elected separately, which raised the possibility of the governor and lieutenant governor being affiliated with different political parties. Proponents of the amendment saw it as a “safeguard against confusion and divided councils if the office of Governor became vacant” and put “the responsibility on party in the event of emergency.”

In 1939 the Constitution was Changed 184 Times

Article I.
Section 2.

Trial by jury; how waived

Article I.
Section 4.

Habeas corpus

Article I.
Section 6.

Bill of rights

Article I.
Section 7.

Compensation for taking private property; private roads; drainage of agricultural lands

Article I.
Section 11.

Escheats

Article I.
Section 12.

Feudal tenures abolished

Article I.
Section 14.

Leases of agricultural lands limited

Article I.
Section 15.

Restraints on alienation prohibited

Article I.
Section 11.

Equal protection of laws; discrimination in civil rights prohibited

Article I.
Section 12.

Security against unreasonable searches, seizures and interceptions

Article I.
Section 16.

Purchase of lands of indians

Article I.
Section 17.

Common law and acts of the colonial and state legislatures

Article I.
Section 18.

Grants of land made by the king of great britain since 1775; prior grants

Article I.
Section 18.

Damages for injuries causing death

Article I.
Section 17.

Labor not a commodity; hours and wages in public work; right to organize and bargain collectively

Article I.
Section 19.

Workmen's compensation

Article Second.
Section I.

Qualifications of voters

Article Second.
Section 1a.

Absent voters

Article Second.
Section II.

Persons excluded from the right of suffrage

Article Second.
Section 3.

Certain occupations and conditions not to affect residence

Article Second.
Section III.

Registration and election laws to be passed

Article Second.
Section 6.

Permanent registration

Article Second.
Section IV.

Manner of voting; identification of voters

Article Second.
Section 6.

Registration and election boards to be bi-partisan, except at town and village elections

Article III.
Section 6.

Compensation of members

Article III.
Section 7.

Members not to receive certain civil appointments

Article III.
Section 8.

Certain federal officers disqualified as members

Article III.
Section 8.

Persons disqualified from being members

Article III.
Section 7.

Members; qualifications; not to receive certain civil appointments; acceptance to vacate seat

Article III.
Section 9.

Time of elections of members

Article III.
Section 10.

Powers of each house

Article III.
Section 11.

Journals; open sessions; adjournments

Article III.
Section 12.

Members not to be questioned for speeches

Article III.
Section 13.

Bills may originate in either house; may be amended by the other

Article III.
Section 14.

Enacting clause of bills; no law to be enacted except by bill

Article III.
Section 15.

Manner of passing bills

Article III.
Section 16.

Private or local bills to embrace only one subject, expressed in title

Article III.
Section 17.

Existing law not to be made applicable by reference

Article III.
Section 18.

Cases in which private and local bills shall not be passed; restrictions as to laws authorizing street railroads

Article III.
Section 18.

Restrictions on the legislature respecting the making or use of profits by municipal corporations operating certain utility services

Article III.
Section 19.

Private claims not to be audited by legislature

Article III.
Section 23.

Certain sections not to apply to bills recommended by certain commissioners or public agencies

Article III.
Section 20.

Tax bills to state tax distinctly

Article III.
Section 21.

When yeas and nays necessary; three-fifths to constitute quorum

Article III.
Section 17.

Boards of supervisors may be vested with legislative powers

Article III.
Section 29.

Prison labor; contract system abolished

Article Third.
Section I.

Executive power

Article Third.
Section IV.

Duties and powers of governor; compensation

Article Third.
Section V.

Reprieves, commutations, and pardons to be granted by governor

Article Third.
Section VI.

When lieutenant-governor to act as governor

Article Third.
Section VII.

Qualifications and duties of lieutenant-governor; succession to the governorship

Article Third.
Section 8.

Lieutenant governor's compensation

Article Third.
Section 9.

Bills to be presented to governor; approval; passage of bill by legislature if not approved

Article Third.
Section 8.

Departmental rules and regulations; filing; publication

Article IV-A.

Article Fourth.

Officers and Civil Departments

Article Fourth.
Section 1.

Comptroller and attorney-general; election, terms

Article Fourth.
Section 2.

Departments in state government

Article Fourth.
Section 3.

Assignment of functions to departments provided

Article Fourth.
Section 4.

Heads of departments

Article Fourth.
Section 7.

Membership in retirement systems; benefits not to be diminished or impaired

Article VII.

State Finances

Article VII.
Section 1.

Estimates by departments, the legislature and the judiciary of needed appropriations; hearings

Article VII.
Section 2.

Executive budget

Article VII.
Section 3.

Budget bills; appearances before legislature

Article VII.
Section 4.

Action on budget bills by legislature; effect thereof

Article VII.
Section 5.

Restrictions on consideration of other appropriations

Article VII.
Section 6.

Restrictions on content of appropriation bills

Article VII.
Section 7.

Appropriation bills

Article VII.
Section 9.

State credit not to be given

Article VII.
Section 10.

State debts, power to contract

Article VII.
Section 11.

State debts on account of invasion, insurrection, war and forest fires

Article VII.
Section 12.

State debts generally; manner of contracting; referendum

Article VII.
Section 12.

State debts generally; how paid; restrictions on use of land proceeds

Article VII.
Section 13.

Refund of state debts

Article VII.
Section 10.

Canal improvement, and cost thereof

Article VII.
Section 14.

Creation of debts authorized

Article VII.
Section 15.

Sinking fund, how kept and invested

Article VII.
Section 16.

Payment of state debts

Article VIII.

Local Finances

Article VIII.
Section 5.

Specie payments not to be suspended

Article VIII.
Section 6.

Registry of bills and notes

Article VIII.
Section 8.

Preference of billholders

Article VIII.
Section 9.

Incorporation of cities and villages

Article VIII.
Section 10-a.

Debts of new york city for rapid transit railroads

Article VIII.
Section 12.

Boards appointed by governor

Article VIII.
Section 1.

Counties, cities and towns not to give or loan money or credit

Article VIII.
Section 2.

Restrictions on indebtedness of local subdivisions; contracting and payment of local indebtedness; exceptions

Article VIII.
Section 3.

Restrictions on creation and indebtedness of certain corporations

Article VIII.
Section 4.

Limitations of local indebtedness

Article VIII.
Section 5.

Ascertainment of debt-incurring power of counties, cities, towns and villages; certain indebtedness to be excluded

Article VIII.
Section 6.

Debt-incurring power of Buffalo, Rochester and Syracuse; certain additional indebtedness to be excluded

Article VIII.
Section 7.

Debt incurring power of new york city; certain additional indebtedness to be excluded

Article VIII.
Section 7-a.

Debt-incurring power of New York city; certain indebtedness for railroads and transit purposes to be excluded

Article VIII.
Section 8.

Indebtedness not to be invalidated by operation of this article

Article VIII.
Section 9.

When debt-incurring power of certain counties shall cease

Article VIII.
Section 10.

Limitations on amount to be raised by real estate taxes for local purposes; exceptions

Article VIII.
Section 11.

Taxes for certain capital expenditures to be excluded from tax limitation

Article VIII.
Section 12.

Further limitations on contracting local indebtedness authorized

Article IX. Local Governments

Local Governments

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 1.

Counties; organization and government; restrictions on legislature with respect to laws affecting

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 2.

Counties; alternative forms of government for; effect of adoption thereof

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 3.

Existing laws to remain applicable

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 4.

Further powers of local legislation and administration for counties; county auditors

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 5.

Sheriffs, clerks of counties, district attorneys; registers; power of removal

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 6.

Removal of district attorney for failure to prosecute; expenses in prosecutions of bribery

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 7.

Appointment or election of county officers when not provided for by constitution

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 8.

Powers of the city of new york over certain county officers; restrictions on legislature; appointment or election of officers generally when not provided for by constitution

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 9.

Cities and villages; organization; powers to be restricted

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 10.

Extra compensation prohibited

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 11.

Passage of special city laws prohibited; exceptions

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 12.

Powers of cities to enact local laws relating to property, affairs or government

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 13.

Existing laws to remain applicable; reservation of power in legislature over certain matters

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 14.

Annexation of territory to cities

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 15.

Election of city officers and certain county officers to be held in odd-numbered years

Article IX. Local Governments
Section 16.

Villages of five thousand or more; home rule for; duty of and restrictions on legislature respecting

Article X. Corporations

Corporations

Article X. Corporations
Section 1.

Corporations; formation of

Article X. Corporations
Section 2.

Dues of corporations

Article X. Corporations
Section 3.

Savings bank charters; restrictions on trusters; special charters not to be granted

Article X. Corporations
Section 4.

Corporations; definition; right to sue and be sued

Article X. Corporations
Section 5.

Public corporations; restrictions on creation and powers; accounts; obligations of

Article IX.

Education

Article IX.
Section 1.

Common schools

Article IX.
Section 2.

Regents of the University

Article IX.
Section 1.

Common school, literature and the United States deposit funds

Article IX.
Section 4.

Use of public property or money in aid of denominational schools prohibited; transportation of children authorized

Article XI.

Military

Article XI.
Section 1.

State militia

Article XI.
Section 2.

Enlistment

Article XI.
Section 3.

Organization of militia

Article XI.
Section 3.

Governor to appoint adjutant-general and major-generals

Article XI.
Section 5.

Appointment of other officers

Article XI.
Section 5.

Commissioned officers; removal

Article XV.

Public Officers

Article XV.
Section 1.

Oath of office; no other test for public office

Article XV.
Section 6.

Duration of term

Article XV.
Section 7.

Time of election

Article XV.
Section 8.

Vacancies in office, how filled

Article XV.
Section 9.

Political year

Article XV.
Section 10.

Removal from office for misconduct, etc

Article XV.
Section 11.

Office deemed vacant

Article XV.
Section 12.

Compensation of officers

Article XIV. Conservation

Conservation

Article XIV. Conservation
Section 1.

Forest preserve to be forever kept wild; certain highways authorized

Article XIV. Conservation
Section 2.

Reservoirs

Article XIV. Conservation
Section 3.

Wild life conservation and reforestation

Article XIV. Conservation
Section 4.

Violations of article; how restrained

Article XV. Canals

Canals

Article XV. Canals
Section 1.

Disposition of canals and canal properties prohibited

Article XV. Canals
Section 2.

Prohibition inapplicable to lands and properties no longer useful; disposition authorized

Article XV. Canals
Section 3.

No tolls to be imposed; contracts for work and materials; no extra compensation

Article XVI. Taxation

Taxation

Article XVI. Taxation
Section 1.

Power of taxation; exemptions from taxation

Article XVI. Taxation
Section 2.

Assessments for taxation purposes

Article XVI. Taxation
Section 3.

Status of intangible personal property; taxation of

Article XVI. Taxation
Section 4.

Certain corporations not to be discriminated against

Article XVI. Taxation
Section 5.

Compensation of public officers and employees subject to taxation

Article XVII. Social Welfare

Social Welfare

Article XVII. Social Welfare
Section 1.

Public relief and care

Article XVII. Social Welfare
Section 2.

State board of social welfare; powers and duties

Article XVII. Social Welfare
Section 3.

Public health

Article XVII. Social Welfare
Section 4.

Care and treatment of persons suffering from mental disorder or defect; visitation of institutions for

Article XVII. Social Welfare
Section 5.

Institutions for detention of criminals; probation; parole; state commission of correction

Article XVII. Social Welfare
Section 6.

Visitation and inspection

Article XVIII. Housing

Housing

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 1.

Housing for persons of low income; slum clearance

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 2.

Idem; powers of legislature in aid of

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 3.

Article VII to apply to state debts under this article, with certain exceptions; capital and periodic subsidies

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 4.

Powers of cities, towns and villages to contract indebtedness in aid of low rent housing and slum clearance projects; restrictions thereon

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 5.

Liability for certain loans made by the state to certain public corporations

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 6.

Loans and subsidies; restrictions on and preference in occupancy of projects

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 7.

Liability arising from guarantees to be deemed indebtedness; method of computing

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 8.

Excess condemnation

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 9.

Acquisition of property for purposes of article

Article XVIII. Housing
Section 10.

Power of legislature; construction of article

Article XIV.

Amendments to Constitution

Article XIV.
Section 1.

Amendments to constitution; how proposed, voted upon and ratified

Article XIV.
Section 2.

Future constitutional conventions; how called; election of delegates; compensation; quorum; submission of amendments; officers; employees; rules; vacancies

Article XIV.
Section 3.

Amendments simultaneously submitted by convention and legislature

Article XV.

Article XV.
Section 1.

Time of taking effect

Article XX. When to Take Effect

When to Take Effect

Article XX. When to Take Effect
Section 1.

Time of taking effect

1938

In 1938, New York held its seventh constitutional convention and first constitutional convention where women could serve as delegates. Occurring against the backdrop of the Great Depression, the convention reflected new societal attitudes and increased mobilization around the role of government. Like most of the prior conventions, the 1938 convention offered a bundled set of proposed revisions plus a slate of separate amendments addressing specific topics. In total, voters considered nine ballot questions and approved six, including the main proposal package, which affected 14 of the constitution’s 15 articles and added four new articles (one of the other questions added a fifth).

Some of the most significant changes are detailed below:

Constitutional Amendment Process

The process for amending the constitution was altered to require the legislature, after first proposing an amendment, to submit it to the attorney general for an assessment of whether the amendment would impact other, unidentified sections of the New York Constitution. The provision was designed to prevent inconsistencies and preserve the constitution’s integrity. However, the attorney general’s assessment is only advisory, and the legislature may choose to send the proposed amendment to voters even if the attorney general identifies potential conflicts or inconsistencies.

Bill of Rights

Several provisions were added to the Bill of Rights, including:

• An equal protection clause, which barred discrimination based on race, color, or creed, and differed from its federal analogue by also prohibiting discrimination by private actors.
• Protection against unreasonable search and seizures. 
• Allowing defendants accused of crimes not punishable by death to waive their right to a jury trial, if done in writing and in open court with the approval of the judge or justice of the court. (A mirror amendment allowing criminal defendants, other than those accused of crimes punishable by death or life imprisonment, to waive indictment by a grand jury was later added by amendment in 1973.)
• A provision declaring that labor is not a commodity, guaranteeing the right to organize and bargain collectively, and mandating a five-day work week of eight hours per day, along with prevailing wages, for all tradespeople on public work projects. 

New Articles

Five new articles were added to the constitution including one addressing Social Welfare and another addressing Housing.

Article XVII (Social Welfare) established that the “aid, care and support of the needy are public concerns and shall be provided by the state and by such of its subdivisions,” that the state and its subdivisions had a responsibility to protect and promote public health, and authorizing the state and localities to address mental health needs. Courts have held that these provisions impose an affirmative duty on the state to provide for the needy and that the state, even when pursuing valid state objectives, cannot deny assistance to those in need “solely on the basis of criteria having nothing to do with need.”

Article XVIII (Housing) explicitly authorized the legislature to adopt laws to provide for affordable housing and neighborhood improvements. The article reflected delegates’ belief that safe housing was essential for participation in a constitutional democracy.

The Andrews Terrace Apartments in Rochester, New York, an affordable housing development constructed in 1975. Andre Carrotflower.

1937

Four-Year Terms for Statewide Elected Office

In 1927, voters rejected an amendment to increase the term of the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, and comptroller from two to four years. However, ten years later, voters changed their mind and approved an amendment establishing a four-year term for statewide elected executive officials. This change in voter sentiment reflected the expanding duties of state executives and growing recognition that “a two year term is too short to permit of a long range program by an incumbent” and prevented the governor from “discharge[ing] his full duties to the state.”

New York State Capitol Executive Chamber and former Governor's Office. Anthony Giorgio.

1927

State Budgeting Authority

In 1927, voters adopted an amendment adopting the executive-budget model, where the governor proposes a state budget that is then subject to legislative amendments. The legislature can only respond to the governor’s proposal in four ways: (1) approve the governor’s budget (at which point it would go into immediate effect), (2) eliminate proposed appropriations, (3) reduce proposed appropriations, and (4) add separate appropriations. Once the legislature passes its version of the budget bill, the budget for the executive branch generally goes into effect without further gubernatorial action while any additions and the budgets for the legislature and judiciary remaining subject to the governor’s line-item veto power. This model was designed to create a realistic and unified state budget by requiring the governor to coordinate and oversee the executive branch instead of leaving it up to individual departments to make requests directly to the legislature and by making it more difficult for the legislature to engage in logrolling or pork barrel legislation.

In 1926 the Constitution was Changed 41 Times

Article Fourth.
Section 1.

Comptroller and attorney-general; election, terms

Article Fourth.
Section 3.

Canal commissioners

Article Fourth.
Section 4.

State prison inspectors

Article Fourth.
Section 5.

Commissioners of land office and canal fund

Article Fourth.
Section 6.

Powers and duties of boards

Article Fourth.
Section 7.

Suspension of treasurer

Article Fourth.
Section 2.

Departments in state government

Article Fourth.
Section 3.

Assignment of functions to departments provided

Article Fourth.
Section 4.

Heads of departments

Article Fourth.
Section 8.

Certain offices abolished

Article Fourth.
Section 9.

Civil service appointments and promotions

Article Fifth.
Section 1.

Supreme court; how constituted

Article Fifth.
Section 2.

Judicial departments

Article Fifth.
Section 3.

Appellate terms; establishment, how constituted, justices

Article Fifth.
Section 4.

Supreme court justices; terms; vacancies, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 6.

Circuit courts and courts of oyer and terminer abolished

Article Fifth.
Section 2.

Court of appeals; how constituted

Article Fifth.
Section 3.

Court of appeals; vacancies, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 9.

Court of appeals; jurisdiction limited

Article Fifth.
Section 8.

Powers of appellate courts generally

Article Fifth.
Section 11.

Removal of judicial officers

Article Fifth.
Section 13.

Trial of impeachment

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

County courts

Article Fifth.
Section 12.

Special county judge or surrogate

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

Surrogates' courts

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

Court of general sessions; new york county; jurisdiction, judges

Article Fifth.
Section 15.

City court of new york city

Article Fifth.
Section 16.

Vacancies in office of certain judges, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 15.

Special county judge and surrogate

Article Fifth.
Section 17.

Justices of the peace; election, terms, number, and duties

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

Inferior local courts

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

General provisions as to judges

Article Fifth.
Section 20.

Testimony in equity cases, etc.

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

Clerks of courts

Article Fifth.
Section 20.

Fees to judicial officers prohibited

Article Fifth.
Section 22.

Publication of statutes, rules, judicial statistics and opinions

Article Fifth.
Section 23.

Board or court of claims

Article Fifth.
Section 26.

Special sessions

Article VII.
Section 14.

Creation of debts authorized

Article VII.
Section 15.

Article VIII.
Section 11.

State board of charities; inspections

1925

Short Ballot & Executive Reorganization

Based on the amendment originally proposed by the 1915 Constitutional Convention, the 1925 short ballot amendment eliminated several elective offices, such as Secretary of State, which became an appointed position, and Treasurer, which was merged with the Comptroller. (A later statutory provision created an appointed state treasurer position that serves as the head of the Treasury Division of the State Department of Taxation and Finance.) Although some commentators believed the 1915 short ballot proposal did not go far enough, the 1925 amendment did not eliminate any additional elected offices beyond those identified in the 1915 proposal.

At the same election, voters also adopted an amendment reorganizing the executive branch. The reorganization capped the number of executive branch departments at 20 (up from the 17 proposed by the 1915 Convention) and eliminated several commissions and boards.

Judicial Reorganization

In 1921, the governor convened a group of 30 individuals, consisting of judges, the attorney general, legislators, and attorneys, to revise the constitution’s judiciary article. Termed a “convention” by statute, the Judiciary Commission of 1921 was tasked with trying to reduce the backlog of cases that had plagued the judicial system for most of the state’s history. The commission recommended several changes to the Court of Appeals’ jurisdiction while maintaining the court’s primary focus on establishing law and correcting major lower-court errors. It also proposed minor tweaks to the structure of the supreme court and intermediate appellate courts. “However, the revised judiciary article, which included several proposals suggested by the Convention of 1915, was not [initially] adopted by the legislature, and badly needed court reform again was postponed.

It wasn’t until 1925 that the legislature managed to put a revised judicial article before voters. The revision repealed obsolete provisions (such as those abolishing various courts), allowed for the temporary appointment of supreme court justices to serve as associate judges of the Court of Appeals when the court certifies that it is backlogged, clarified the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals, and established new courts to serve the city and county of New York.

New York Court of Appeals. Tyler A. McNeil.

1923

Home Rule

The 1894 amendment giving localities a “veto” over special laws had the effect of “giv[ing] [cities] a large measure of freedom from positive [state legislative] interference but almost no measure of opportunity for constructive local action.” However, in 1923, the people adopted a true home rule provision that replaced the prior system of municipal classification and local vetoes with a prohibition on special legislation concerning the “property, affairs, or government” of cities, except when the governor and two-third of the legislature declared an emergency. The amendment also granted municipalities the power to enact local laws that did not conflict with state laws concerning certain local matters. The scope of these constraints on special laws and state regulation of local government operations remains contested.

In 1935, voters approved a similar amendment that allows counties to adopt certain state-authorized alternative forms of government. Once the county’s voters approve such a change, the state legislature is then barred from adopting special laws “relating to the property, affairs or government of such county.” Likewise, in 1963, voters adopted an amendment extending home rule to towns and villages and providing for a “Bill of Rights for Local Governments.”

1921

Literacy Voting Requirement

New Yorkers passed an amendment in 1921 limiting voting rights to those who, except for physical disability, were “able to read and write English.” The legislature referred the amendment to voters as a part of a broader effort to exclude immigrants from elections.

Implementation of this new English-language requirement was immediately beset with controversy and confusion: In 1922, the legislature passed a law providing for two methods of establishing literacy (providing proof of having completed the eighth grade or passing a literacy test). The next year, it eliminated the literacy test option, but almost simultaneously, it passed two other laws related to the conduct of literacy tests. The board of elections of the city of New York determined that the latter two bills meant that voter registration inspectors could continue to use literacy tests to establish literacy. This question eventually reached the Court of Appeals, which made two determinations: First, the bills detailing the conduct of literacy tests were obsolete because the law authorizing those tests had been impliedly repealed. Second, the single remaining method of establishing literacy was a constitutional means of implementing the 1921 amendment.

Although the federal Voting Rights Act of 1965 invalidated literacy tests nationwide, the language imposing the literacy requirement was not removed from the New York Constitution until 1996.

1915

Rejection of 1915 Convention Proposals

New York’s sixth constitutional convention met in 1915 after voters narrowly approved a convention call (the vote was delayed so that it took place 20 years after the last convention rather than 20 years after the regular convention call question appeared on the ballot). Despite gains in the state’s population (more than doubling between the 1880 and 1920 censuses), fewer than half as many votes were cast on the 1914 ballot question to call a convention as had been cast on the previous convention call question in 1886. Furthermore, while nearly 95% of 1886 votes were cast in favor of a convention, the 1914 call was approved by just 50.22% of those voting on the question. As with prior conventions, the 1915 convention chose to present most of their 33 proposed amendments to voters as a single package.

The 1915 convention’s proposals drew significant concern and opposition. More than four times as many New Yorkers voted on whether to approve the package of amendments as had voted the prior year on whether to call a convention, and the amendments were defeated by a margin of more than two to one. (Voters also rejected two legislatively-referred amendments—one extending the vote to women and the other authorizing the legislature to contract temporary debts without voter approval.) Opponents of the proposals were suspicious of the convention’s decision to submit most of the amendments together, asking, “Why should a man who objects to the Conservation article, for example, but who favors the Short Ballot article, be forced to take the Conservation article in order to get the Short Ballot article?” In particular, opponents criticized the decision to bundle a legislative salary increase with the other amendments when voters had rejected a legislatively-referred salary amendment just four years prior. They saw such bundling as “farcical,” particularly since several other proposals had been carved out for separate consideration. Proponents, meanwhile, unsuccessfully tried to rally support for the amendments by emphasizing the virtue of a document that was “too progressive for reactionaries” but “too soundly conservative for impractical enthusiasts.” On their telling, opposition to the amendments was rooted in self-interest or ignorance.

Even though the electorate originally rejected all the amendments on the 1915 ballot, many of the  proposals were later adopted in some form, including allowing the state to contract debt in anticipation of the following year’s taxes and revenues without the prior authorization of the people (1920), home rule (1923), reorganization of the executive branch (1925), and transition to a “short ballot” (1925). As Elihu Root, president of the 1915 convention, later reflected, “I think it makes but little difference whether a man gives his life and his service to laying the foundation and building up the structure, or whether he is the man that floats a flag on the battlements and cried, ‘Victory.’

Convention president Elihu Root (c. 1902). George Prince.

In 1895 the Constitution was Changed 160 Times

Preamble

Preamble

Article I.
Section 2.

Trial by jury

Article I.
Section 6.

Bill of rights

Article I.
Section 7.

Compensation for taking private property; private roads; drainage of agricultural lands

Article I.
Section 8.

Freedom of speech and press; criminal prosecutions for libel

Article I.
Section 9.

Two-thirds bills

Article I.
Section 10.

Right to assemble and petition; divorces; lotteries, pool-selling and gambling, laws to prevent

Article I.
Section 11.

Escheats

Article I.
Section 12.

Feudal tenures abolished

Article I.
Section 13.

Allodial tenures

Article I.
Section 14.

Leases of agricultural lands

Article I.
Section 15.

Fines and quarter-sales abolished

Article I.
Section 16.

Purchase of lands of indians

Article I.
Section 17.

Common law and acts of the colonial and state legislatures

Article I.
Section 18.

Grants of land made by the king of Great Britain since 1775; prior grants

Article I.
Section 18.

Damages for injuries causing death

Article Second.
Section I.

Qualification of voters

Article Second.
Section II.

Persons excluded from the right of suffrage

Article Second.
Section 3.

Certain occupations and conditions not to affect residence

Article Second.
Section III.

Registration and election laws to be passed

Article Second.
Section IV.

Manner of voting

Article Second.
Section 6.

Registration and election boards to be bi-partisan, except at town and village elections

Article III.
Section 1.

Legislative power

Article III.
Section 2.

Number and terms of senators and assemblymen

Article III.
Section 3.

Senate districts

Article III.
Section 4.

Enumerations and reapportionments

Article III.
Section 5.

Apportionment of assemblymen; creation of assembly districts

Article III.
Section 6.

Compensation of members

Article III.
Section 7.

Civil appointments of members void

Article III.
Section 8.

Persons disqualified from being members

Article III.
Section 9.

Time of elections

Article III.
Section 10.

Powers of each house

Article III.
Section 14.

Enacting clause of bills

Article III.
Section 15.

Manner of passing bills

Article III.
Section 18.

Cases in which private and local bills shall not be passed; restrictions as to laws authorizing street railroads

Article III.
Section 20.

Two-thirds bills

Article III.
Section 21.

Appropriation bills

Article III.
Section 22.

Restrictions as to provisions in the appropriation or supply bills

Article III.
Section 23.

Certain sections not to apply to commission bills

Article III.
Section 20.

Tax bills to state tax distinctly

Article III.
Section 21.

When yeas and nays necessary; three-fifths to constitute quorum

Article III.
Section 22.

Boards of supervisors

Article III.
Section 17.

Local legislative powers

Article III.
Section 24.

Extra compensation prohibited

Article III.
Section 29.

Prison labor; contract system abolished

Article Third.
Section I.

Executive power

Article Third.
Section II.

Qualifications of governor and lieutenant-governor

Article Third.
Section III.

Election of governor and lieutenant-governor

Article Third.
Section IV.

Duties and powers of governor; compensation

Article Third.
Section V.

Reprieves, commutations, and pardons to be granted by governor

Article Third.
Section VI.

When lieutenant-governor to act as governor

Article Third.
Section VII.

Qualifications and duties of lieutenant-governor; succession to the governorship

Article Third.
Section 8.

Salary of lieutenant-governor

Article Third.
Section 9.

Bills to be presented to governor; approval; passage of bill by legislature if not approved

Article Fourth.

Article Fourth.
Section 1.

State officers

Article Fourth.
Section 2.

First election of state officers

Article Fourth.
Section 3.

Superintendent of public works; appointment; powers and duties of

Article Fourth.
Section 4.

Superintendent of state prisons, appointment, powers and duties of

Article Fourth.
Section 5.

Commissioners of the land office; of the canal fund; canal board

Article Fourth.
Section 6.

Powers and duties of boards

Article Fourth.
Section 7.

State treasurer, suspension by governor

Article Fourth.
Section 8.

Certain offices abolished

Article Fourth.
Section 9.

Civil service appointments and promotion

Article Fifth.
Section 1.

Supreme court; how constituted; judicial districts

Article Fifth.
Section 2.

Judicial departments; appellate division, how constituted; governor to designate justices; reporter; time and place of holding courts

Article Fifth.
Section 3.

Judge or justice not to sit in review; testimony in equity cases

Article Fifth.
Section 4.

Terms of office; vacancies, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 5.

City courts abolished; judges become justices of supreme court; salaries; jurisdiction vested in supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 6.

Circuit courts and courts of oyer and terminer abolished

Article Fifth.
Section 2.

Court of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 3.

Vacancy in court of appeals, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 9.

Jurisdiction of court of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 10.

Judges not to hold any other office

Article Fifth.
Section 11.

Removal of judges

Article Fifth.
Section 12.

Compensation; age restriction; assignment by governor

Article Fifth.
Section 13.

Trial of impeachments

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

County courts

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

Surrogates' courts; surrogates, their powers and jurisdiction; vacancies

Article Fifth.
Section 15.

Local judicial officers

Article Fifth.
Section 17.

People may determine that judges shall be appointed

Article Fifth.
Section 17.

Justices of the peace; district court justices

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

Inferior local courts

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

Clerks of courts

Article Fifth.
Section 20.

No judicial officer, except justice of the peace, to receive fees; not to act as attorney or counselor

Article Fifth.
Section 21.

Judgments of inferior courts may be removed to court of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 22.

Publication of statutes

Article Fifth.
Section 25.

Terms of office of present justices of the peace and local judicial officers

Article Fifth.
Section 26.

Courts of special sessions

Article Fifth.
Section 28.

Commission of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 30.

Additional justices to the supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 30.

Additional justices to the supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 32.

Kings county court

Article VII.
Section 1.

Canal sinking fund

Article VII.
Section 2.

Canal appropriations; state debts

Article VII.
Section 3.

Canal revenues

Article VII.
Section 4.

Enforcement of state claims against corporations

Article VII.
Section 5.

Appropriations for deficiency in canal revenues

Article VII.
Section 7.

Salt springs not to be disposed of

Article VII.
Section 8.

State moneys not to be expended without appropriation

Article VII.
Section 9.

State credit not to be given

Article VII.
Section 2.

State debts, power to contract

Article VII.
Section 11.

State debts to repel invasions

Article VII.
Section 12.

Limitation of legislative power to create debts

Article VII.
Section 13.

Sinking fund, how kept and invested

Article VII.
Section 14.

Claims barred by statute of limitations

Article VII.
Section 7.

Forest preserve

Article VII.
Section 8.

Canals, not to be sold; not applied to certain canals; disposition of funds

Article VII.
Section 9.

No tolls to be imposed; contracts for work and materials no extra compensation

Article VII.
Section 10.

Canal improvement, and cost thereof

Article VIII.
Section 1.

Corporations, formation of

Article VIII.
Section 3.

Corporation, definition of term

Article VIII.
Section 4.

Savings bank charters; restrictions upon trustees; special charters not to be granted

Article VIII.
Section 5.

Special payment

Article VIII.
Section 7.

Liability of stockholders of banks

Article VIII.
Section 8.

Billholders of insolvent bank, preferred creditors

Article VIII.
Section 9.

Credit or money of the state not to be given

Article VIII.
Section 11.

Counties, cities and towns not to give or loan money or credit; limitation of indebtedness

Article VIII.
Section 11.

State board of charities; state commission in lunacy; state commission of prisons

Article VIII.
Section 12.

Boards appointed by governor

Article VIII.
Section 13.

Existing laws to remain in force

Article VIII.
Section 14.

Maintenance and support of inmates of charitable institutions

Article VIII.
Section 15.

Commissioners continued in office

Article IX.
Section 1.

Common schools

Article IX.
Section 2.

Regents of the University

Article IX.
Section 1.

Common school, literature and the United States deposit funds

Article IX.
Section 4.

No aid to denominational schools

Article X.
Section 1.

Sheriffs, clerks of counties, district attorneys and registers; governor may remove

Article X.
Section 2.

Appointment or election of officers, not provided for by this constitution

Article X.
Section 3.

Duration of term

Article X.
Section 6.

Political year

Article X.
Section 7.

Removal from office for misconduct, etc.

Article X.
Section 8.

Office deemed vacant

Article X.
Section 9.

Compensation of officers

Article XI.
Section 1.

Militia

Article XI.
Section 2.

Militia officers, how chosen

Article XI.
Section 1.

State militia

Article XI.
Section 2.

Enlistment

Article XI.
Section 3.

Organization of milita

Article XI.
Section 3.

Appointment of military officers by the governor

Article XI.
Section 5.

Manner of election of military officers prescribed by legislature

Article XI.
Section 5.

Commissioned officers; their removal

Article XII.

Article XII.
Section 1.

Organization; restriction of powers

Article XII.
Section 2.

Classification of cities; general and special city laws; special city laws; how passed by legislature and acceptance by cities

Article XII.
Section 3.

Election of city officers, when to be held; extension and abridgment of term

Article XIV.

Article XV.

Article XV.
Section 1.

Oath of office

Article XV.
Section 1.

Official bribery and corruption

Article XV.
Section 2.

Offer or promise to bribe

Article XV.
Section 3.

Person bribed or offering a bribe may be a witness

Article XV.
Section 5.

Free passes, franking privileges, etc., not to be received by public officers; penalty

Article XV.
Section 4.

Removal of district attorney for failure to prosecute; expenses of prosecutions for bribery

Article XIV.

Article XIV.
Section 1.

Amendments to constitution, how proposed, voted upon and ratified

Article XIV.
Section 2.

Future constitutional conventions; how called; election of delegates; compensation; quorum; submission of amendments; officers; rules; vacancies; taking effect

Article XIV.
Section 3.

Amendments of convention and legislature submitted coincidently

Article XV.

Article XV.
Section 1.

Time of taking effect

1894

In 1894, New York held its fifth constitutional convention. Eight years earlier, in 1886, voters considered the once-every-20-years question of whether to hold a convention. Nearly 95% of voters said yes. But partisan divisions over the method of selecting delegates led to a lengthy delay. In an age of growing industrialization and immigration, the “convention manifested, to a degree greater than at any previous time in New York’s history, the tension between urban and rural New York.” As with the 1867 convention, the 1894 convention proposed a set of consolidated amendments for a single yes-no vote as well as two separate amendments to be voted on individually. Voters approved the consolidated changes, both separate amendments, and two additional amendments that the legislature had referred outside the convention process (which never substantively went into effect).

Major changes that emerged from the convention included:

• Specifying that when voters approve competing legislatively-referred amendments and convention-proposed amendments at the same election, the convention-proposed amendments supersede the legislatively-referred amendments.
• Adopting an "absolute" ban on gambling.
• Providing that local elections are to be held in odd-number years so that they do not coincide with state and national elections.
• Requiring that all civil service appointments and promotions be “made according to merit and fitness to be ascertained, so far as practicable, by examinations, which, so far as practicable, shall be competitive.”
• Creating an appellate division of the supreme court; limiting the jurisdiction of the New York Court of Appeals to cases that involve pronouncing general principles or reconciling conflicts between lower-court decisions; and eliminating the circuit courts and Courts of Oyer and Terminer, transferring their jurisdiction to the supreme court.
• Classifying cities into three classes based on population and allowing the legislature to pass “special city laws,” which apply to just one city or any number of cities fewer than all cities in a class, either with the acceptance of the affected city or cities or over a city’s veto by passing the special city law a second time.
• Requiring that the state fund public education at the state’s common schools.
• Adopting a provision protecting state forest preserves; preventing the land from being leased, sold, or exchanged; and prohibiting the harvesting or destruction of timber from the land. (This provision is commonly referred to as the “Forever Wild” article.)

Adirondack Forest Preserve (c. 1973). Anne LaBastille.

In 1889 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

In 1885 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

In 1880 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

1874

1874 Amendments to the Constitution

In 1874, New Yorkers adopted eleven constitutional amendments. These amendments were first proposed by a 32-member constitutional commission, the first of its kind to be established in New York. The commission, established by the legislature, recommended amendments to 13 articles of the constitution. Based on these recommendations, the legislature adopted, in two successive legislatures, 11 amendments eventually approved by voters, including:

• Eliminating the property requirement for voting that applied only to Black men, which brought the state in line with the Fifteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which was ratified four years earlier.
• Giving the governor 30 days after the adjournment of the legislature to approve or reject bills and line-item veto power over appropriations bills. The previous constitutional convention had rejected a proposed line-item veto out of concern that the power would “mak[e] the Governor the affirmative and sole law-making power of the State.”
• Provisions designed to eliminate election-related corruption, including allowing for the removal of district attorneys who fail to “faithfully prosecute” a person charged with bribery, requiring voters to affirm they have not bribed or been bribed to vote, and facilitating testimony against corrupt officials.

Photograph of Samuel J. Tilden, elected governor of New York in 1874. Unknown author.

In 1874 the Constitution was Changed 38 Times

Article Second.
Section I.

Qualifications of voters

Article Second.
Section II.

Bribery at elections

Article III.
Section 5.

Assembly reapportionment

Article III.
Section 6.

Compensation of members of legislature

Article III.
Section 7.

Member of legislature not eligible to certain appointments

Article III.
Section 8.

Certain federal and city officers disqualified as members

Article III.
Section 17.

Existing laws not applicable by reference

Article III.
Section 18.

Private and local bills limited; street railroads

Article III.
Section 19.

Private claims not to be audited by legislature

Article III.
Section 20.

Tax law to state amount and object of tax

Article III.
Section 21.

Three-fifths bills

Article III.
Section 22.

Boards of supervisors

Article III.
Section 17.

Powers of boards of supervisors

Article III.
Section 24.

Extra compensation prohibited

Article III.
Section 25.

Statutory revision commission bills exempted from §§ 17 and 18

Article Third.
Section I.

Governor and lieutenant governor

Article Third.
Section II.

Qualifications of governor and lieutenant governor

Article Third.
Section IV.

Governor's general powers; compensation

Article Third.
Section 8.

Lieutenant governor's compensation

Article Third.
Section 9.

Executive consideration of bills; subsequent legislative action

Article VII.
Section 3.

Canal revenues

Article VII.
Section 6.

Canals not to be disposed of; expenditures and revenues

Article VII.
Section 13.

Tax law to state amount and object of tax

Article VII.
Section 13.

State sinking funds to be kept separate

Article VII.
Section 14.

Three-fifths bills

Article VII.
Section 14.

Restriction on allowance of claims against state

Article VIII.
Section 4.

Savings banks

Article VIII.
Section 10.

No state aid to individuals or corporations

Article VIII.
Section 11.

Municipal aid prohibited, except for public purposes

Article X.
Section 9.

Constitutional officers not to receive extra compensation

Article XII.
Section 1.

Oath of office

Article XV.

Article XV.
Section 1.

Bribery of public officers

Article XV.
Section 2.

Bribery, how punished

Article XV.
Section 3.

Accused a competent witness in his own behalf

Article XV.
Section 4.

Delinquent district attorney may be removed from office

Article XVI.

Article XVI.
Section 1.

When amendments to take effect

In 1872 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

1870

Fourth Constitutional Convention

In 1866, New Yorkers had their first opportunity to vote on whether to hold a constitutional convention pursuant to the provision adopted by the 1846 Convention that automatically put the question to the electorate every 20 years. The voters said yes, and New York convened its fourth constitutional convention from 1867 to 1868. The convention proposed an amended constitution and three separate amendments, but, in 1869, the state’s voters then rejected all of these proposals except for an amendment to the judicial article. 

The judicial amendment reorganized the Court of Appeals; established a Commission of Appeals to hear cases still pending before the Court of Appeals on January 1, 1870; expanded the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to include appellate cases; created new city courts in the city and county of New York, Buffalo, and Brooklyn; and raised the mandatory retirement age for judges from 60 to 70. The Commission of Appeals, created to help relieve the burden on the Court of Appeals, operated from 1870 to 1875, during which time the Commission heard 800 cases. It briefly operated again from 1889 to 1892 (during which time it was called the Second Division of the Court of Appeals).

New York Court of Appeals courtroom. Daniel Case.

In 1870 the Constitution was Changed 39 Times

Article Fifth.
Section 1.

Assembly may impeach civil officers

Article Fifth.
Section 2.

Court of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 3.

Supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 3.

Vacancies, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 4.

Judicial districts

Article Fifth.
Section 4.

Transfer of causes; commission of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 5.

Legislature may alter jurisdiction and proceedings in law and equity

Article Fifth.
Section 5.

Vacancies in commission

Article Fifth.
Section 6.

General and special term; circuits; oyer and terminer

Article Fifth.
Section 6.

Supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 7.

Compensation of judges

Article Fifth.
Section 7.

General and special terms; circuits; oyer and terminer

Article Fifth.
Section VII.

Chancellor and supreme court judges to hold no other office

Article Fifth.
Section 8.

Judge not to sit in review of his own decisions; proceedings in law and equity

Article Fifth.
Section 9.

Legislature to classify judges and fix terms of court

Article Fifth.
Section 9.

Vacancies in supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 10.

Judges not to hold any other office

Article Fifth.
Section 11.

Removal of judges

Article Fifth.
Section 12.

Certain local courts continued

Article Fifth.
Section 12.

Judges, how chosen; term of office

Article Fifth.
Section 13.

Vacancies, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

Compensation of judges

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

County courts

Article Fifth.
Section 15.

Special county judge and surrogate

Article Fifth.
Section 16.

Reorganization of judicial districts

Article Fifth.
Section 17.

People may determine that judges shall be appointed

Article Fifth.
Section 17.

Justices of the peace

Article Fifth.
Section 18.

Local judicial officers

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

Inferior local courts

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

Clerks of supreme court; clerk of court of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 20.

Judges not to receive fees or practice as attorneys

Article Fifth.
Section 21.

Judgements of inferior courts may be removed to court of appeals for review

Article Fifth.
Section 22.

Publication of statutes; supreme court reporters

Article Fifth.
Section 23.

Tribunals of concilliation

Article Fifth.
Section 24.

Commissioners to revise procedure

Article Fifth.
Section 24.

First election of judges

Article Fifth.
Section 25.

Certain officers to continue until expiration of term

Article Fifth.
Section 26.

Special sessions

Article Fifth.
Section 27.

Relief of surrogates' courts

In 1864 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

In 1854 the Constitution was Changed 1 Time

1847

As with the amendments proposed by the 1821 Convention, the amendments proposed by the 1846 Convention covered a broad range of topics.

Future Constitutional Amendments

The package of amendments included one to give New Yorkers the opportunity to vote every 20 years on whether to hold a constitutional convention. This automatic question appeared on the ballot for the first time in 1866, and the practice has continued through today. This provision gives the people a pathway to seek constitutional change without going through the state legislature.

The 1846 Convention also made it easier for the legislature to propose constitutional amendments. Rather than requiring a two-thirds majority vote during the legislature’s second consideration of an amendment, the threshold was lowered to a simple majority vote. 

Elected Officials

The amendments also turned some previously appointed positions into elected offices. The secretary of state, treasurer, attorney general, comptroller, canal commissioners, state engineer, and state prison inspectors were all made elected positions, as well as almost all state judicial and local offices. Governor John Young praised this amendment, noting that “Any appointing power, other than the people, may be either corrupted or subjected, unconsciously, to interested and pernicious influence.—Not so with the people. If they err to-day, they will correct the error to-morrow.

The terms of state senators were also shortened from four to two years, and all legislators were to be elected from single-member districts, with the hope of allowing “the character and qualifications of candidates for office be fully known and appreciated by electors.” Despite voters’ rejection of the amendment expanding Black suffrage, one commentator described the amended constitution as “the apogee of participatory democracy in New York.”

Legislative Powers

For the first time, the constitution included a single-subject rule limiting legislation to just one topic. This was aimed at ending the practice of logrolling, which allowed legislators to combine unrelated provisions in one bill in an effort to drum up support. New York legislators had, up to this point, frequently attached matters of private or special concern to bills of a more general nature.

The convention also altered the balance of power between the legislature and local governments. As amended, the constitution authorized the legislature to regulate local governments by restricting their power in fiscal matters. At the same time, however, it allowed the legislature to delegate to county officials powers to deal with local matters.

Judiciary

Despite an attempt by the previous constitutional convention to reduce burdens on the court system, the state’s courts remained backlogged. To address this issue, the convention once again increased the number of judges, this time by creating eight judicial districts, with four Justices of the Supreme Court in each district (except the district comprised of the city and county of New York, which had eight justices), increasing the total number of justices from just three to 36. The amendment also replaced the Court of Impeachment and Correction of Errors with the Court of Appeals, which to this day remains New York’s highest court.

State Debt

In the early 1840s, eight states (Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Mississippi, and Pennsylvania) and the Territory of Florida defaulted on their debt obligations. States had incurred significant debt to build inter- and intra-state infrastructure, such as canals and railroads. New York only barely avoided default, and in response, New York became one of twenty states to adopt state constitutional public debt limits between 1840 and 1860. The amendment limited state debt to $1 million and required the state to seek voter approval for any additional debt, except for the purpose of state defense.

Jurors Listening to Counsel, Supreme Court, New York City Hall, New York. Harper's Weekly, Volume XIII (1869).

In 1847 the Constitution was Changed 159 Times

Preamble

Preamble

Article First.

Article First.
Section XVI.

Commencement of official term after first election

Article I.

Article I.
Section 1.

Rights of citizens

Article I.
Section 2.

Trial by jury preserved

Article I.
Section 3.

Religious liberty

Article I.
Section 4.

When writ of habeas corpus not to be suspended

Article I.
Section 5.

Bail; fines; punishments; detention of witnesses

Article I.
Section 6.

Rights of accused in criminal cases; taking private property for public use

Article I.
Section 7.

Compensation for private property, how ascertained; private roads

Article I.
Section 8.

Freedom of speech and press; evidence in libel cases

Article I.
Section 9.

Two-thirds bills

Article I.
Section 10.

Right to assemble and petition; divorces; lotteries prohibited

Article I.
Section 11.

Sovereignty in real property; escheats

Article I.
Section 12.

Feudal tenures abolished

Article I.
Section 13.

Absolute ownership of estates

Article I.
Section 14.

Leases of agricultural lands limited

Article I.
Section 15.

Restraints on alienation prohibited

Article I.
Section 16.

Indian lands

Article I.
Section 17.

Common law continued

Article I.
Section 18.

Royal grants and charters preserved

Article Second.

Article Second.
Section I.

Qualifications of voters

Article Second.
Section II.

Exclusion from right of suffrage

Article Second.
Section 3.

Right of suffrage not affected by certain occupations and conditions

Article Second.
Section III.

Registration of voters

Article Second.
Section IV.

Elections to be by ballot

Article III.

Article III.
Section 1.

Legislative power

Article III.
Section 2.

Senate and assembly, how constituted

Article III.
Section 3.

Senate districts

Article III.
Section 4.

Census; reapportionment of senators

Article III.
Section 5.

Apportionment of assembly

Article III.
Section 6.

Compensation of members

Article III.
Section 7.

Members not to receive certain civil appointments

Article III.
Section 8.

Certain federal officers disqualified as members

Article III.
Section 9.

Time of elections

Article III.
Section 10.

Quorum; special powers of each house

Article III.
Section 11.

Journals; public sessions; adjournments

Article III.
Section 12.

Privileges of members

Article III.
Section 13.

Bills may originate in either house

Article III.
Section 14.

Enacting clause

Article III.
Section 15.

Manner of passing bills

Article III.
Section 16.

Private and local bills limited to one subject

Article III.
Section 17.

Boards of supervisors may be vested with legislative powers

Article Third.

Article Third.
Section I.

Governor and lieutenant governor; term of office

Article Third.
Section II.

Qualifications of governor

Article Third.
Section III.

Elections of governor and lieutenant governor

Article Third.
Section IV.

Governor's general powers

Article Third.
Section V.

Governor may grant pardons and reprieves

Article Third.
Section VI.

When lieutenant governor to act as governor

Article Third.
Section VII.

Qualifications of lieutenant governor; when president pro tem. to act as governor

Article Third.
Section 8.

Lieutenant governor's compensation

Article Third.
Section 9.

Legislature to present bills to governor for his action

Article Fourth.

Article Fourth.
Section I.

Militia officers, how chosen

Article Fourth.
Section IX.

District attorneys and clerks of courts; appointment and removal

Article Fourth.
Section X.

Mayors, how appointed

Article Fourth.
Section 1.

State officers; election and compensation

Article Fourth.
Section 2.

State engineer and surveyor

Article Fourth.
Section 3.

Canal commissioners

Article Fourth.
Section 4.

State prison inspectors

Article Fourth.
Section 5.

Commissioners of land office and canal fund

Article Fourth.
Section 6.

Powers and duties of boards

Article Fourth.
Section 7.

Suspension of treasurer

Article Fourth.
Section 8.

Certain offices abolished

Article Fifth.

Article Fifth.
Section 1.

Assembly may impeach civil officers

Article Fifth.
Section 2.

Court of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 3.

Supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 4.

Judicial districts

Article Fifth.
Section 5.

Legislature may alter jurisdiction and proceedings in law and equity

Article Fifth.
Section 6.

General and special term; circuits; oyer and terminer

Article Fifth.
Section 7.

Compensation of judges

Article Fifth.
Section VII.

Judges to hold no other office

Article Fifth.
Section 9.

Legislature to classify judges and fix terms of court

Article Fifth.
Section 10.

Testimony in equity cases

Article Fifth.
Section 11.

Removal of judges

Article Fifth.
Section 12.

Election of judges

Article Fifth.
Section 13.

Vacancies, how filled

Article Fifth.
Section 14.

County judges and surrogates

Article Fifth.
Section 15.

Special county judge and surrogate

Article Fifth.
Section 16.

Reorganization of judicial districts

Article Fifth.
Section 17.

Justices of the peace

Article Fifth.
Section 18.

Local judicial officers

Article Fifth.
Section 19.

Clerk of court of appeals; clerks of supreme court

Article Fifth.
Section 20.

Fees to judicial officers prohibited

Article Fifth.
Section 21.

Judgments of inferior courts may be removed to court of appeals

Article Fifth.
Section 22.

Publication of statutes and decisions

Article Fifth.
Section 23.

Tribunals of concilliation

Article Fifth.
Section 24.

Commissioners to revise procedure

Article Fifth.
Section 25.

Legislature to organize court of appeals; transfer of business of other courts

Article Sixth.

Article Seventh.

Article Seventh.
Section IV.

Clergymen not eligible to office

Article VII.

Article VII.
Section 1.

Canal sinking fund

Article VII.
Section 2.

Canal appropriations; state debts

Article VII.
Section 3.

Canal revenues

Article VII.
Section 4.

Enforcement of state claims against corporations

Article VII.
Section 5.

Appropriations for deficiency in canal revenues

Article VII.
Section 6.

Canals not to be disposed of

Article VII.
Section 7.

Salt springs not to be disposed of

Article VII.
Section 8.

State moneys not to be expended without appropriation

Article VII.
Section 9.

No state aid to individuals or corporations

Article VII.
Section 10.

When state may contract debt

Article VII.
Section 11.

Debts for state defense

Article VII.
Section 12.

How other debts authorized

Article VII.
Section 13.

Tax law to state amount and object of tax

Article VII.
Section 14.

Three-fifths bills

Article VIII.

Article VIII.
Section 1.

Corporations, how formed

Article VIII.
Section 2.

Dues from corporations, how secured

Article VIII.
Section 3.

Corporation defined

Article VIII.
Section 4.

Banking corporations

Article VIII.
Section 5.

Specie payments not to be suspended

Article VIII.
Section 6.

Registry of bills and notes

Article VIII.
Section 7.

Liability of stockholders

Article VIII.
Section 8.

Preference of billholders

Article VIII.
Section 9.

Incorporation of cities and villages

Article IX.

Article IX.
Section 1.

Education funds preserved; how applied

Article X.

Article X.
Section 1.

Election and removal of certain county officers

Article X.
Section 2.

Local officers, how chosen

Article X.
Section 3.

Duration of certain offices, how fixed

Article X.
Section 4.

Legislature to prescribe time of elections

Article X.
Section 5.

Vacancies

Article X.
Section 6.

Political year and legislative term; opening of legislature

Article X.
Section 7.

Removal of officers

Article X.
Section 8.

Legislature may determine vacancies

Article XI.

Article XI.
Section 1.

Militia

Article XI.
Section 2.

Militia officers, how chosen

Article XI.
Section 3.

Governor to appoint certain militia officers

Article XI.
Section 4.

Election of militia officers

Article XI.
Section 5.

Commissioned officers; removal

Article XI.
Section 6.

Method of choosing militia officers may be changed

Article XII.

Article XII.
Section 1.

Oath of office

Article XIII.

Article XIII.
Section 1.

Constitution, how amended

Article XIII.
Section 2.

Constitutional convention

Article XIV.

Article XIV.
Section 1.

First election of legislature under this Constitution

Article XIV.
Section 2.

First election of governor and lieutenant governor

Article XIV.
Section 3.

State officers continued until expiration of term

Article XIV.
Section 4.

First election of judges

Article XIV.
Section 5.

Transfer of business of certain courts

Article XIV.
Section 6.

Chancellor and supreme court to complete certain business

Article XIV.
Section 7.

Governor to fill vacancies

Article XIV.
Section 8.

Certain judicial offices abolished

Article XIV.
Section 9.

Incumbents of abolished offices eligible to new office

Article XIV.
Section 10.

County officers to continue until expiration of term

Article XIV.
Section 11.

Judicial officers may continue to receive certain fees

Article XIV.
Section 12.

Local courts continued

Article XIV.
Section 13.

When Constitution to take effect

1846

Third Constitutional Convention

Although the amended constitution adopted in 1821 specified for the first time the process for making future amendments to the constitution, it did not explicitly lay out the process for calling a constitutional convention. Nonetheless, the legislature resolved in 1846 to call a constitutional convention rather than to continue its piecemeal efforts to modify the constitution by legislatively-referred amendments (which had yielded only eight amendments in the previous 25 years). 

Like the 1821 Convention, the 1846 Convention presented its amendment proposals to voters as a package, explaining that “it was not practicable to separate” “the several amendments to the Constitution, agreed to by this convention” “into parts to be separately passed upon by the people” because the provisions were “often dependent on upon another.” The one exception was an amendment to repeal the property-owning requirement for Black suffrage. Although some voters, including the winning gubernatorial candidate John Young, might have objected to individual amendments had they been submitted separately, voters approved the bundled amendments. But they rejected the amendment expanding Black suffrage. The resulting document, which went into effect in 1847, was more than three times longer than the constitution as it was originally adopted in 1777.

To learn more about the substance of these amendments, see 1847.

List of delegates from the Manual for the use of the Convention to revise the constitution of the state of New York, convened at Albany, June 1, 1846. Walker and Craighead.

1822

Voters approved the amendments proposed by the 1821 Constitutional Convention during a three-day election in January 1822, and the amendments took effect at the end of the year. As detailed below, these changes were significant and addressed some of the concerns repeatedly raised in the legislature over the previous two decades.

Constitutional Amendments

The 1777 Constitution lacked a provision describing the process for amending the constitution, leaving it up to the legislature to decide on ad hoc basis how to call a convention and whether to submit the convention’s proposals to the people for ratification. This apparent legislative prerogative drew criticism from the Council of Revision, which had the power to veto bills (though whether the council could exercise the vote for reasons other than a bill’s unconstitutionality was disputed). As one member of the Council observed after the legislature attempted to call a convention without first getting voter approval, “The Constitution is the will of the people expressed in their original charter. . . . [I]t is perfectly consonant to the republican theory, and to the declared sense and practice of this country, that it cannot be altered or changed in any degree without the expression of the same original will.”

The 1821 convention filled this gap by providing that future amendments would require the approval of two successive legislatures, first by a majority vote and then by a two-thirds vote, followed by a vote of the people.

Suffrage

The 1821 convention abolished the property ownership requirement for white men to vote, leaving the requirements that they paid taxes, served in the militia or as a fireman, or worked as a highway laborer—a move that “in practice proved to be unlimited suffrage for white males.” New York would remove these remaining qualifications for white males entirely through further amendment in 1826.

However, at the same time, the amendment increased the property and residency requirements for Black men to vote, requiring that they possess a freehold estate worth at least $250 and reside in the state for at least three years (compared to white men who only had to reside in the state for one year)—effectively disenfranchising all but a handful of Black New Yorkers. This marked the first time the New York Constitution expressly contained a provision referring to race.

Constitutional Structure and Separation of Powers

The convention also eliminated the Council of Revision and transferred the veto power to the governor. This significantly increased the governor’s power even though the convention simultaneously removed the governor’s power to adjourn the legislature (a power the governor had previously used to express disapproval of the legislature’s dealings) and shortened the governor’s term of office from three to two years.

The convention also imposed fiscal constraints on the legislature, including requiring two-thirds support for any bill appropriating money or property for local or private purposes. The requirement originated in scandals involving bank charters. “Early banks were popularly identified by their founders’ political affiliations” and soon became tools of the political parties. If a bank was controlled by a political party, “a bank could insure that party supporters were disproportionately advantaged with share ownership and, perhaps, access to credit.” Because the legislature limited the number of bank charters, prospective bankers employed various means of persuading the legislature to favor their petitions, including, allegedly, bribes.

Finally, despite the 1801 amendment clarifying the appointment power, relations between the governor and the other members of the Council of Appointments remained strained due to legislative control of the council. Then-council member Senator DeWitt Clinton, who had been “very persistent in pressing the claims of the council to a concurrent right of nomination,” became governor in 1817, at which point he changed his mind. As with the Council of Revision, the convention’s solution was to eliminate the Council of Appointments. Under the new system, the governor was authorized to appoint all judicial officers (except justices of the peace) with the consent of the senate and the legislature was empowered to make all other appointments, including the treasurer, attorney general, comptroller, and surveyor-general. Justices of the peace, sheriffs, county clerks, and coroners became elected positions. The power of removal was also split between the three branches. including by requiring senate approval of some gubernatorial removal recommendations.

Judiciary

By 1821, New York’s court system was unable to keep up with its expanding caseload given the state’s rapid population and economic growth, resulting in what one convention delegate described as “a denial of justice.” Many convention members also had concerns about who was on the bench, and they sought to push out sitting supreme court judges (who would otherwise remain in office until they turned 60) and replace them with new appointees.

The convention debated a number of proposals to increase the number of judges while also including provisions that one convention delegate characterized as having “no other object than that of pulling from the bench of our supreme court certain individuals who may have become odious to a portion of the community,” (but who had not engaged in the sort of misconduct that would justify removing them for cause). Proposals to change the size of the supreme court without immediately removing the incumbents were rejected.

The final amendment created a court for the trial of impeachments and correction of supreme court errors; divided the state into circuits, each with its own judge; decreased the number of supreme court justices from five to three (one chief justice and two associate justices) but increased the court’s capacity by having the circuit judges join the supreme court on some issues; terminated all incumbent supreme court justices; and prohibited judges from running for other elected office while sitting on the bench.

Bill of Rights

Voters also adopted a Bill of Rights, creating a separate article devoted to civil liberties. The Bill of Rights was based on both the English Bill of Rights (which had remained a part of state law following independence through a constitutional provision that kept English law in force, subject to legislative alteration), and the U.S. Constitution’s Bill of Rights. Some provisions, like those addressing habeas corpus, double jeopardy, and self-incrimination, were identical to their federal counterparts, but others—like freedom of speech or religion—contained distinctive language referencing collective responsibilities.

Broadway in New York City, 1820. Francis Guy.

In 1822 the Constitution was Changed 81 Times

Constitution of 1777
Article I.

Constitution of 1777
Article XXXI.

Article of Amendments

Article of Amendments

Preamble

Preamble

Article First.

Article First.
Section I.

Legislative power

Article First.
Section II.

Senate and assembly, how constituted

Article First.
Section III.

Special powers of two houses

Article First.
Section IV.

Journal of proceedings; public sessions; adjournments

Article First.
Section V.

Senate districts

Article First.
Section VI.

Census; reapportionment of senators

Article First.
Section VII.

Apportionment of members of assembly

Article First.
Section VIII.

Bills may originate in either house

Article First.
Section IX.

Compensation of members

Article First.
Section X.

Members not to receive civil appointment

Article First.
Section XI.

Disqualification of members

Article First.
Section XII.

Governor to approve bills

Article First.
Section XIII.

Removals by legislature

Article First.
Section XIV.

Political year; meeting of legislature

Article First.
Section XV.

Elections, when held

Article First.
Section XVI.

Commencement of official term after first election

Article Second.

Article Second.
Section I.

Qualification of voters

Article Second.
Section II.

Exclusion from right of suffrage

Article Second.
Section III.

Registration of voters

Article Second.
Section IV.

Elections to be by ballot

Article Third.

Article Third.
Section I.

Governor and lieutenant governor; term of office

Article Third.
Section II.

Qualifications of governor

Article Third.
Section III.

Governor and lieutenant governor; election of

Article Third.
Section IV.

Governor's general powers

Article Third.
Section V.

Governor may grant pardons and reprieves

Article Third.
Section VI.

When lieutenant governor to act as governor

Article Third.
Section VII.

When president of senate to act as governor

Article Fourth.

Article Fourth.
Section I.

Militia officers, how chosen

Article Fourth.
Section II.

Governor to appoint certain militia officers

Article Fourth.
Section III.

Legislature to regulate elections of militia officers

Article Fourth.
Section IV.

Commissioned officers; how commissioned and removed

Article Fourth.
Section V.

Legislature may prescribe other modes of appointment and removal

Article Fourth.
Section VI.

State officers; how appointed

Article Fourth.
Section VII.

Governor to appoint judicial officers, except justices of the peace

Article Fourth.
Section VIII.

Sheriffs, clerks, and registers; election and removal

Article Fourth.
Section IX.

District attorneys and clerks of courts; appointment and removal

Article Fourth.
Section X.

Mayors, how appointed

Article Fourth.
Section XI.

Coroners, election and removal

Article Fourth.
Section XII.

Masters, examiners, and registers in chancery

Article Fourth.
Section XIII.

Officers of other courts, how chosen

Article Fourth.
Section XIV.

Justices' courts in New York

Article Fourth.
Section XV.

Other officers, how chosen

Article Fourth.
Section XVI.

Duration of offices not herein provided for

Article Fifth.

Article Fifth.
Section I.

Court of impeachment, and for correction of errors

Article Fifth.
Section II.

Assembly may impeach civil officers

Article Fifth.
Section III.

Chancellor and supreme court justices, official term

Article Fifth.
Section IV.

Supreme court, how constituted

Article Fifth.
Section V.

Judicial circuits

Article Fifth.
Section VI.

County judges and recorders

Article Fifth.
Section VII.

Chancellor and supreme court judges to hold no other office

Article Sixth.

Article Sixth.
Section I.

Official oath

Article Seventh.

Article Seventh.
Section I.

Rights of citizens

Article Seventh.
Section II.

Trial by jury preserved

Article Seventh.
Section III.

Religious toleration

Article Seventh.
Section IV.

Clergymen not eligible to office

Article Seventh.
Section V.

Militia to be maintained; who may be excused from service

Article Seventh.
Section VI.

Habeas corpus, when writ may be suspended

Article Seventh.
Section VII.

Right of accused in criminal cases; taking private property for public use

Article Seventh.
Section VIII.

Freedom of speech and press; evidence in libel cases

Article Seventh.
Section IX.

Two-thirds bills

Article Seventh.
Section X.

Common school funds; canals; salt springs

Article Seventh.
Section XI.

Lotteries prohibited

Article Seventh.
Section XII.

Indian lands

Article Seventh.
Section XIII.

Common law continued

Article Seventh.
Section XIV.

Royal grants and charters preserved

Article Eighth.

Article Eighth.
Section I.

Constitution, how amended

Article Ninth.

Article Ninth.
Section I.

Constitution, when to take effect

Article Ninth.
Section II.

Existing election laws applicable to first election

1821

Second Constitutional Convention

In 1811, the assembly passed a bill recommending a convention to consider “the property qualifications of voters, the Council of Appointment, the election of sheriffs, and the appointment of clerks by the court of common pleas.” The assembly also debated whether to recommend that the convention address a number of other subjects, including for-cause protections for appointed officers, prohibitions on dual office holding, and single-member senate districts. The senate, however, failed to pass the assembly’s bill, so no convention was called. Around this same time, citizens from Ontario and Rensselaer Counties independently petitioned the legislature to pursue a constitutional amendment to remove the property qualifications on voters.

After additional legislative efforts to call a constitutional convention failed, the legislature ultimately put the question of holding a convention before voters in 1821. Just one year prior, the Council of Revision vetoed a convention bill on the grounds that it would have called the convention without first seeking voter approval.

Voters approved the 1821 convention call, and the convention then met from August through November. Although the convention had the option to present its proposed amendments to the state’s voters separately, it chose to submit the amendments all together for “convenience.” Voters approved the amendment package in early 1822, resulting in a document that is commonly considered the second constitution of the state even though it was presented to voters as an amended version of the 1777 constitution.

To learn more about the substance of these amendments, see 1822.

1801

First Amendments to the 1777 Constitution

The 1777 Constitution lacked a formal mechanism for making amendments or for calling a new constitutional convention. However, when issues with the size of the legislature and the power of appointment arose, the legislature passed a bill proposing a convention that would address only those two issues and provide for an election to select delegates. Although the legislature had considered putting the decision to call a convention to a popular vote, the final bill only gave the people the opportunity to elect delegates, not to approve or disapprove of the convention itself. 

The convention adopted two amendments, neither of which were submitted to the voters for ratification.

First, the 1777 constitution had tied the number of state legislators to state’s population, which meant that the legislature’s size ballooned as the state grew. Originally, the senate had 24 members, split between four multi-member senate districts, and the assembly had 70, with each county serving as a multi-member assembly district. By 1801, the senate had 43 members, and the assembly had grown to 126 members. Further increases were on the horizon because the 1777 constitution authorized a senate of up to 100 members and an assembly of up to 300. The 1801 convention adopted an amendment fixing the number of senators at 32, apportioned by population, and providing for between 100 and 150 assembly members, with each county receiving at least one assembly member.

Second, the convention addressed a dispute over who had the authority to nominate appointees—the governor alone or also the Council of Appointments. The Council of Appointments was comprised of one senator from each of the four senate districts and the governor (or whoever was serving as the executive when the governor was absent from the state). It was clear under the 1777 constitution that the council could approve or reject appointees, but the governor and the rest of the council disagreed on whether the initial power to nominate appointees rested with the governor or with the council.

After rejecting a proposal that would have given the council both nomination and approval powers, the 1777 legislature adopted the version of the provision at issue, which separated the power of appointment from the other powers of the governor with a semi-colon. In a separate statement not expressly incorporated into the constitution, the legislature declared that “the appointment of officers in this state is, by the Constitution thereof, vested in the governor, by and with the advice and consent of the council of Appointment.” Despite the legislature’s instruction on construction, in 1794, the council nominated and approved the appointment of a judge to the supreme court over the protests of Governor George Clinton. This act sparked the dispute eventually resolved by the 1801 convention.

In 1795, Governor Clinton’s successor, John Jay, asked the legislature to step in to settle the disagreement, but the issue remained unsettled. By 1801, the work of the council had stalled as tensions between the governor and the rest of the council came to a head. Following another request from Governor Jay, the senate and assembly struggled for months to come to a consensus on the issue before directing the question to the constitutional convention, by which time George Clinton had retaken the office of governor. (Governor Jay had also requested the opinion of the judiciary, but the court declined to opine on the issue.) 

The question was only settled when the 1801 Constitutional Convention adopted a resolution clarifying that the “true construction” of the provision vested both the governor and the council with the concurrent power to nominate appointees. By permitting the legislature to share nominating power with the governor, the convention paved the way for a system of political patronage and concentrated the power in the legislative members of the council, who held all but one seat on the council.

Gubernatorial portrait of George Clinton (c. 1802). Ezra Ames.

1777

The First Constitution

After the start of the American Revolutionary War, a pro-independence legislature governed the parts of New York outside of British military control. Originally called the Provincial Congress of the Colony of New York, the body adopted the name Convention of the Representatives of the State of New York after it endorsed the Declaration of Independence.

Unlike the earlier legislative bodies, which were elected primarily to consider acts to provide for the welfare of the state in wartime, the new 1776 legislature was “elected with express authority to form a new plan of government”: “[T]he right of framing, creating, or remodeling Civil Government is and ought to be in the People.” Although the resulting constitution was not submitted to the people for ratification, it contained a proclamation that “no authority shall, on any pretence whatever, be exercised over the people or members of this State but such as shall be derived from and granted by them.”

The legislature drafted the state’s first constitution while also managing the state’s war effort. It had few other constitutions to reference as models except those being newly drafted and adopted in other states. Nonetheless, the 1777 Constitution laid the foundations for the state’s modern tripartite government. It created a bicameral legislature, a governor, a Council of Revision through which the governor and several judges could revise bills, a Council of Appointment through which the governor and several state senators appointed officials whose selection was not otherwise provided for in the constitution, and one court,the Court for the Trial of Impeachments and the Correction of Errors.

Although the 1777 Constitution lacked a formal bill of rights, it did contain a right to trial by jury, counsel in felony cases, due process, prohibition on bills of attainder, as well as a right to conscientious objection for Quakers, and provisions providing for religious freedom. It also permitted all men, regardless of race, to vote upon meeting certain property requirements.

"Vice-President Van Cortlandt with the members of the convention appeared in front of the court-house, and the secretary, Robert Benson mounted upon a barrel, read the immortal document to the assembled multitude" New York Public Library.