Austin v. City of Alice

193 S.W.2d 290, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 703
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 1946
DocketNo. 11621.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 193 S.W.2d 290 (Austin v. City of Alice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. City of Alice, 193 S.W.2d 290, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 703 (Tex. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This suit was instituted in the District Court of Jim Wells County against the City of Alice, a municipal corporation of Jim Wells County, B. O. Goldthorn, individually and as Mayor of the City of Alice, E. G. Lloyd, Jr., and Bruce Ainsworth, individually and as Commissioners of said City, and P. S. Anderson as City Secretary, seeking a mandamus requiring the respondents to cause the names of relators, Sterling Austin, Percy Beck and W. R. Tidwell, to be printed upon the official ballot for the City Election of said City, to be held on April 2, 1946, as candidates for the offices of Mayor and City Commissioners, respectively. The petition for the candidate for Mayor was signed by 207 voters of the City of Alice, and the petition for each of the candidates for Commissioner was signed by 204 of such voters. These petitions were tendered to the City Clerk of Alice on Monday, March 4, 1946, whereupon the Clerk refused to file the same. A meeting of the City Commission was called at once and the action of the City Clerk upheld. ,

The trial court sustained special exceptions to relators’ petition and entered a judgment dismissing the cause, from which judgment the relators have prosecuted this .appeal. Relators have also tendered a petition here seeking the issuance of the original writ of mandamus out of this Court, together with a motion for leave to file such petition. The record was filed in this Court on March 9, 1946, and set at once for submission, on March 11, 1946, at which time all matters involved were submitted to this Court.

We are of the opinion that the City Commission of the City of Alice properly refused to receive and consider the petitions tendered to it on behalf of relators, as they were tendered too late.

We are of the opinion that when all the pertinent provisions of the election laws of this State (Title 50, R.C.S. Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2923 et seq.) are considered and construed together, the law requires that petitions of voters seeking to have the names of persons printed upon the official ballot in a city election as candidates for any city office, must file such petitions with the city clerk not later than thirty days before the date set for the election.

Art. 2923 states:

“The provisions of this title (Title 50) shall apply to all elections held in this State, except as otherwise provided.”

Art. 2997' states:

“ * ■ * * In all elections in incorporated cities, towns and villages, the mayor, the city clerk, or the governing body shall do and perform each act in other elections required to 'be done and performed respectively by the county judge, the county clerk, or the commissioners’ court.” ,

Art. 2931 states:

“All provisions of this title (Title 50) which prescribe qualifications for voting and which regulate the holding of elections shall apply to elections in cities and towns. * * * ”

Thus it becomes our duty to apply all provisions of Title 50, where pertinent, to elections in cities and towns, whether cities and towns or officials of cities and towns are mentioned in such provisions or not.

It is clear from the statutes that the names of candidates must be posted or published ten days before the printing of official ballots, which must be printed twenty days before election day, in time for absentee voting, thus requiring that the names of candidates be filed with the clerk thirty days before election day. ■

Art. 3129 provides that the county clerk shall cause the names of the candidates who have received the necessary votes to nominate, as directed by the county executive committee, for each office, to be published in some newspaper published in the county, and if none, then he shall post a list of such names in at least five public places in the county, one of which shall be upon the court house door.

Article 3132 provides:

“Each county clerk shall post in a conspicuous place in his office, for the inspection of the public, the names of all candidates that have been lawfully certified to him to be printed on the official ballot, for at least ten days before he orders the same *292 to be printed on said ballot; and he shall order all the names of the candidates so certified printed on the official ballot as otherwise provided in this title.”

Thus there can be no doubt as ⅜0 the duty of the city clerk in city elections to post a list of the names of all candidates certified to him and whose names are to be printed on the official ballot for at least ten days before the ballots are to be printed.

Under the provisions of Art. 2956 (Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 2956) abséntee voting starts twenty days before election day, and absentee voting applies to city and town elections. Arts. 2923, 2931; Wood v. State ex rel. Lee, 133 Tex. 110, 126 S.W.2d 4.

Each voter who desires to cast an absentee vote and who expects to be absent on the day of holding the election is entitled to an official ballot. Art. 2956. Thus it becomes the duty of the clerk to have the official ballots printed not later than twenty days before election day. Thomason v. Seale, 122 Tex. 160, 53 S.W.2d 764, 765.

It is the mandatory duty of the city clerk to comply with these several pre-election processes. Cummins v. Democratic Executive Committee, Tex.Civ.App., 97 S.W.2d 368, 369; Taylor v. Nealson, 132 Tex. 60, 120 S.W.2d 586.

There are other articles of the statute which have some bearing on this question. Art. 3102 provides, in effect, that nominations for party candidates shall be made not less than ten days prior to the election. The absentee voting law, Art. 2956, was enacted subsequent to the above provision. The Supreme Court properly held, in Skelton v. Yates, 131 Tex. 620, 119 S.W.2d 91, that when absentee voting begins the election is in progress. Thus construing the two statutes together and giving meaning to each, the above provision of Art. 3102 must be construed as meaning that nominations are required to be filed with the city clerk ten days before absentee voting begins. This article applies to nonpartisan or independent candidates, because Art. 2978, in effect, provides that no name shall appear on the official ballot except that of a candidate who was actually nominated. The petition signed by the required number of voters is the certificate of nomination of an independent candidate, and is the nomination which Art. 3102 requires to be filed with the city clerk ten days before the voting starts.

Our attention has been called to the provisions of Art. 3159, which are in effect that non-partisan or independent candidates may have their names printed on the official ballot by filing their petitions, signed by voters, etc., within thirty days after primary election day. Since the enactment of this statute, there have been enacted statutes providing for run-off primaries, and if the run-off primary day be taken as the day referred to in Art.

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Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.2d 290, 1946 Tex. App. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-city-of-alice-texapp-1946.