Coates v. Camp

173 P.2d 266, 161 Kan. 732, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 203
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 27, 1946
DocketNo. 36,758
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 173 P.2d 266 (Coates v. Camp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coates v. Camp, 173 P.2d 266, 161 Kan. 732, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 203 (kan 1946).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hoch, J.:

The principal questions here presented are: First, is the appellee, Elburn M. Beal, who was a candidate for the Republican nomination for sheriff of Shawnee county at the recent August primary, eligible to hold the office during the regular term beginning in January, 1947, and entitled to have his name printed upon the ballot as such nominee; second, if Beal is not so eligible and so entitled, is Coates, the appellant, entitled to be certified as the Republican nominee for such term as sheriff. Procedural questions are whether Coates is entitled to bring the action, and whether the substantive issues above stated may properly be determined in this proceeding.

Beal was duly appointed sheriff by the governor to fill the unexpired term of sheriff William Frey who had been inducted into the military service of the United States. He took office on October 23, 1943, and continued to hold the office during the remainder of 1943 and most of 1944, and at the election in November, 1944, was elected for the regular two-year term beginning on January 8, 1945. On December 4, 1944, he resigned, and Gerald Kreipe, the under-sheriff, was appointed sheriff and Kreipe immediately appointed Beal as undersheriff. As undersheriff, Beal continued to occupy the sheriff's living quarters, and on January 8, 1945, again assumed the office of sheriff for the term for which he had been elected and at once named Kreipe as undersheriff.

At the primary election in August, 1946, Beal and Coates were candidates for the Republican nomination for the regular term beginning in January, 1947.

Upon canvass of the votes it was announced by the county commissioners acting in their capacity as canvassing board — hereinafter referred to as the board — that Beal had received the most votes and would be certified as the Republican nominee. Whereupon [735]*735action was brought in the district court by Coates, the “runner-up,” to enjoin the issuance of a certificate of nomination to Beal and to require the board to issue such certificate to him. Beal and the county clerk, Hal Rager, were also named as defendants. The ground upon which the petition was based was that Beal is ineligible under the constitution of the state to hold the office for the term beginning in January, 1947; that being so ineligible, his nomination is invalid and void, that the votes cast for him are not entitled to be' counted, and that because of such invalidity, Coates is entitled to the certificate of nomination. The provision of the constitution relied upon by Coates is article 4, section 2, which provides:

“. . . No person shall hold the office of sheriff ... for more than two consecutive terms.”

Restraining order was issued and the matter set down for hearing.

The board and the county clerk filed an answer in which they averred that the only duty they had to perform in the matter is a ministerial one; that the only function of the board was to canvass the votes and determine which one of the candidates received the highest number of votes, and to make an abstract of the votes cast for the various candidates, and that it is the statutory duty of the clerk to make out a certificate of nomination for each person receiving the most votes for the respective offices, and to deliver such certificate to each successful candidate upon his making application therefor. The board and the clerk further averred that they had no interest or responsibility in determining the eligibility of Beal to be a candidate and that their duties in the matter are entirely ministerial, and they prayed that the court advise and instruct them in the matter.

Defendant Beal filed a demurrer to the petition on the principal grounds that the plaintiff had no legal capacity to bring the action, that the court was without jurisdiction of the defendants, and that the petition did not state a cause of action. Beal also filed a motion to dismiss the action and to dissolve the restraining orders, on the grounds that the board had no jurisdiction except to determine what candidate received the greatest number of votes; that it had determined that Beal had received the most votes, and that the board could not be enjoined from performing its purely ministerial duties; that the board had completed its statutory duties, and could not be required to reconvene or to announce any determination other than the one already made; that the county clerk had no duty in [736]*736the matter except to accept the determination of the board, to attest the same when reduced to writing and signed by the board, and to place the name of Beal on the general election ballot; that injunctive relief is not a proper remedy; that the plaintiff has plain and adequate remedies at law, and that in any event the plaintiff would not be entitled as “runner-up” to be certified as the Republican nominee.

The trial court sustained the demurrer and the motion of Beal on the ground that “the petition of the plaintiff does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, in that the court does not have jurisdiction or equitable power to enjoin the defendants . . . from performing the ministerial duties placed upon them by law.” This appeal followed.

The case is immediately before us upon motion of appellees to dismiss the appeal for the reasons that “the law on the only question involved on the appeal is so settled . . . that any further review thereof is unnecessary” • that the appeal is “frivolous and for delay and is wholly without merit”; that “in any event” review “would be ineffectual.”

The case has received immediate consideration by the court in view of the public interest involved and the need for early decision.

We first consider the procedural questions. The appeal is not to be dismissed on the ground that appellant Coates was without capacity to bring the action. As a “runner-up” for the nomination, he certainly has a special and peculiar interest in determination of the question of whether Beal is ineligible and whether he, Coates, is entitled to be certified as the nominee in case Beal be held ineligible. Whether a plaintiff has such a special and peculiar interest in a controversy as to entitle him to bring action is a matter to be determined in the light of the nature of the controversy and of all attendant facts and circumstances. In Young v. Regents of State University, 87 Kan. 239, 124 Pac. 150, we said upon this point:

“There are no rules for the accurate determination of such questions, and their solution depends upon a fair and candid exercise of the faculty of discrimination. In some cases the private interest is patent. ... In other cases, the independent private interest is not so readily distinguishable, but is sufficiently clear to entitle it to recognition. In the case of Simpson v. Osborn, 52 Kan. 328, 34 Pac. 747, twenty-five petitioners nominated a candidate for a public office. It was held that one of them possessed such a peculiar and special interest in having the name of the nominee appear on the official ballot that he could maintain an action of mandamus to require the secretary of state to certify the nomination to the various county clerks. . . .” (p.244.)

[737]*737We do not question the soundness of the rule which denies the right to bring an action to one who clearly has no special or peculiar interest in the controversy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P.2d 266, 161 Kan. 732, 1946 Kan. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coates-v-camp-kan-1946.