Cambre v. Brignac

140 So. 702, 19 La. App. 437, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 150
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 1932
DocketNo. 14174
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 So. 702 (Cambre v. Brignac) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cambre v. Brignac, 140 So. 702, 19 La. App. 437, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 150 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JANVIER, J.

Elize Cambre and Fortuna Brignac are rival eandidates⅛ each seeking selection by the Democratic Party as nominee to enter the general election to be held for justice of the peace of ward 1 of St. James parish. In the first primary held during January, 1931, the two parties named were the sole remaining contestants and a second primary was held.

The St. James parish Democratic committee, having canvassed the returns of the second primary, and having declared that the two candidates each received 187 votes, and that no nominee had been selected by the party, Cambre brought this suit within the time permitted by law and seeks to have himself declared nominee because of the fact that one Pierre Poche, an alleged qualified and registered voter, who desired to vote for Cambre in the said second primary election, had been, by the commissioners of election, refused a ballot and denied permission to vote.

The St. James parish Democratic committee is also made party defendant by service upon Henry L. I-Iimel, chairman.

The main defense is twofold, and there is also and in the alternative a reconventional demand in which it is contended that a certain- Leonard Ordineaux, who is alleged to have voted for Cambre in the said primary election, should be declared ineligible as not duly qualified -as an elector in ward 1 of the parish. It is thus demanded, by way* of re-convention, that the total number of votes received by Cambre, even if he be entitled to the vote of Poche, should be reduced by the deduction of the vote of Ordineaux.

The two main defenses to which we have referred are as follows: That prior to the said primary the registrar of voters had, for legal cause and in the manner provided by law, removed from the registration rolls of ward 1 the name of the said Poche, and that, regardless of whether the said removal had been legally effected or not, the primary election laws and the registration laws of the state do not permit an attack of this kind, but provide another and an exclusive method by which an elector, illegally deprived of his registration, may obtain redress.

The district court rendered judgment for plaintiff, ordering that his name be certified to the secretary of state as the party nominee, and the contest is now before us on appeal from that judgment.

In opposition to the reconventional demand of Brignac, in which he maintains that the vote of Ordineaux should be deducted from the total cast for Cambre, Cambre has filed a plea of prescription founded on section 27 of Act No. 97 of 1922, under which section it is provided that “no contest shall be entertained unless brought within two days after the official promulgation of the result of the election.” The reconventional demand in which the vote of Ordineaux was contested was not filed until March 5, 1932, and, as the returns were promulgated on February 27, 1932, it is evident that more than two days elapsed between the time of the promulgation and the time at which the Contest as to Or-dineaux’s vote was instituted. But Brignac contends that the prescriptive period does not apply when -the contest appears by reconven-tional demand, and,' in support of this view, [703]*703he cites Thornhill v. Wear, 131 La. 479, 59 So. 909, 910, in which, in a contest for party nomination, the defendant, Wear, who had, by the committee, been declared the nominee, ■ set up, in answer to an attack by plaintiff, Thornhill, a reconventional demand in which he contested the legality of certain votes which had been cast for Thornhill.

In overruling a plea of prescription to the reconventional demand the court said that: “Plaintiff would scarcely have time to present his reconventional demand within the two days allowed to institute this suit. Plaintiff could not well institute a guit without knowing whether the action of the judicial executive committee would be questioned by contestant.”

We are not at all certain that the reasons given in that ease are applicable here because there Wear, the defendant and eon-testee, had been declared the party nominee and, manifestly, there was no reason, however illegal.may have been some of the votes cast for his opponent, for him to initiate a contest over those votes. Thus, if, with only two days provided for the filing of a contest, the unsuccessful candidate should wait until the last moment to file his contest, the successful party would, if the prescriptive period be applicable, be deprived 'of the right to attempt to eliminate illegal votes against him. In such case his attack on the illegal votes of his opponent is not a move of aggression, but one of defense, and it is easily understood why his right to use such contest purely as a defense should not be denied under a plea of prescription. Here, however, defendant is no more the successful party than is plaintiff, and in his reconventional demand he does not limit himself to defense, but becomes the aggressor when he asks that the vote of Ordineaux be rejected, not only for the purpose of defeating the claim of Oambre, but also for the purpose of permitting him (Brignac) to be declared nominee.

But whether the plea of prescription be good or not, it appears to us that, since the vote of Ordineaux has been cast and counted, and since the right of Ordineaux to cast the said vote was never questioned prior to nor at the election, it cannot be questioned now, and we base our views on this point largely on the decision of the Supreme Court in Perez v. Cognevich, 156 La. 331, 100 So. 444, 447, in which, after an election, it was sought to have the courts reject certain votes already cast. The court said:

“If these persons had no right to vote because they were not entitled to a place upon the registration rolls, or because they were not entitled to registration as voters in« the precinct in which they registered as such, or because their registration did not comply with the law in other respects, the proper proceeding should have been taken to purge their names from the rolls. Both the Constitution and the enactments of the Legislature contemplate direct proceedings against a voter to strike his name from the rolls, except, of course, when it appears that the voter has died, or it appears that since his registration he has been convicted of a felony, or has been declared insane. Section 5, art. 8, Constitution of 1921; sections 8, 9, 11, 12, and 13 of Act 122 of 1921.
“Were we to give our sanction to the attack here made, we could do so only by ignoring the methods provided by law for purging the rolls, and by permitting what is equivalent to a collateral attack upon the registration of the voters "in question, which, of course, we cannot do. See Turregano v. Whittington, 132 La. 454, 61 So. 525, and Smith v. Police Jury, 125 La. 731, 51 So. 703.”

True enough, this reasoning seems to be in conflict with the views expressed in Marrero v. Middleton et al., 131 La. 372, 59 So. 791; Marrero v. Middleton et al., 131 La. 432, 59 So. 863, and Edrington v. Chenet, 131 La. 439, 59 So. 866, in all of which cases the court permitted an investigation^ after election, into eligibility of persons who had voted, or who had desired to vote in the election, and in the second of which eases, on page 434 of 131 La., 59 So. 863, 864, the court said: “We hold in our former judgment that the objections to evidence attacking collaterally the registration of particular voters were properly overruled by the trial judge as to qualifications necessary for registration; and we now adhere to that ruling.

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Related

Landry v. Ozenne
195 So. 14 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1940)
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140 So. 702, 19 La. App. 437, 1932 La. App. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cambre-v-brignac-lactapp-1932.