Com. ex rel. Albert v. Hard

2 Pa. D. & C. 520, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 338
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cumberland County
DecidedApril 29, 1922
DocketNo. 439
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Pa. D. & C. 520 (Com. ex rel. Albert v. Hard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cumberland County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Com. ex rel. Albert v. Hard, 2 Pa. D. & C. 520, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 338 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Biddle, P. J.,

The relator in this case filed her petition for a writ of alternative mandamus on April 26, 1922, on which date a writ of alternative mandamus was awarded, service thereof being accepted by the respondents on the same day. The answer of the respondents was filed on April 27, 1922, and on April 28th a demurrer was filed by the relator, and the matter was heard in argument on said demurrer.

The essential facts, as they would appear under the pleadings, are that the relator, a resident of the 2nd Ward of the Borough of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, filed with the Secretary of the Commonwealth of this State on April 6, 1922, a petition to have her name placed on the primary ballot for the election to be held on May 16, 1922, for the office of State Committeeman of the Democratic Party from Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. This petition was received and accepted by the Secretary of the Commonwealth, who subsequently, in accordance with the provisions of the Uniform Primary Act of July 12, 1913, par. 9, P. L. 719, certified the name of the relator to the County Commissioners of Cumberland County to be printed on the primary ballot as a candidate of the Democratic Party for the said office of member of the State committee. On April 22, 1922, the clerk to the county commissioners, in response to a request from the Secretary of the Commonwealth, certified to the Secretary of the Commonwealth that the relator, Mary C. Albert, was not enrolled as a qualified elector of the Democratic Party, and on April 24, 1922, the Deputy Secretary of the Commonwealth certified to the county commissioners that it had been certified to the Secretary of the Commonwealth that the relator had not been enrolled as a member of the Democratic Party, and that, therefore, she was not qualified to have her name printed as a candidate of the said party for the office of State committeeman, and that her name should not be printed on the official ballot for the primary election to be held [521]*521May 16, 1922. Upon receipt of this second certificate, the relator was advised by the respondents that her name would not be printed upon the official ballot. In consequence of this notice, she applied for a writ of mandamus.

The question involved, as the court views it, is a narrow one, and does not at all involve the determination here of any question in regard to the qualifications of Mary C. Albert. That question, if it is to be determined at all, should be determined by the courts of Dauphin County and not by the court of Cumberland County. But the question for us to determine is whether any effect whatever can be given here to the certificate of April 22nd from the respondents and to the certificate of April 24, 1922, from the Secretary of the Commonwealth.

If there is any valid basis for these certificates, then this court would be without jurisdiction, and the remedy of the relator would be before the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County. On the other hand, if the Secretary of the Commonwealth was without authority to ask for the certificate of April 22nd from the county commissioners and to issue his certificate of April 24th, then those certificates should be disregarded. In that event, the case would have to be considered by the court as if the petition of the relator, filed April 6th, had been duly received by the Secretary of the Commonwealth, his certificate to the county commissioners properly received by them, and as if the relator had, without more, been notified by the commissioners that they intended to disregard the notification from the Secretary of the Commonwealth. If the matter stood in that position, we think that the relator would be within her right in applying to this court for a writ of mandamus to compel the county commissioners to have her name printed on the official ballot as a candidate for the office that she seeks, and that no other court would have jurisdiction of this question in the first instance.

After as careful a consideration of the matter as the very limited time has permitted, the court has reached the conclusion that nothing has been shown to justify or sustain the action of the Secretary of the Commonwealth in sending the certificate of April 24th to the county commissioners; that that certificate must be treated as a nullity, and the refusal of the county commissioners to print the name of the relator on the official ballot for the election to be held on May 16,1922, as having no valid basis to support it. The learned and able counsel for the respondents were frank in stating that they could cite no decisions of the courts of this State in support of the position of the Secretary of the Commonwealth, and that they relied upon the provisions of the Act of July 12, 1913, P. L. 719, as amended by the Act of May 18, 1917, P. L. 244. In our opinion, this act does not sustain the position of the Secretary of the Commonwealth and of the respondents here. It is true that paragraph two of the amending Act of May 18, 1917, P. L. 244, provides, “That in no event shall any person’s name be printed upon the official ballot of any party as a delegate, State committeeman, National committeeman or party officer unless he is a qualified elector of said party;” but, as the court views it, this section, without more, does not confer any judicial functions in the matter upon the Secretary of the Commonwealth or upon the county commissioners. Without this provision, a member of one party might seek any of the offices mentioned in connection with another party, just as for public offices it frequently happens that a member of the Republican Party may be nominated by the Democrats, or a member of the Democratic Party may be nominated by the Republicans, Prohibitionists or Socialists; and it was to provide against this that the clause in question appears in the section quoted. It merely notes a necessary qualification 'of such a candidate, [522]*522just as the Constitution provides an age qualification for members of Congress.

As we view the act as a whole, the only power that is not purely ministerial conferred upon the Secretary of the Commonwealth is to determine whether the petitions presented to him are in proper form and conform to the requirements of the act of assembly. The act does not give him the right to pass upon the qualifications of the petitioners who signed the petition, nor of the candidate in whose behalf the petition is signed. The Act of May 18, 1917, above quoted, requires that the candidate shall file with the petition an affidavit, stating, inter alia, that he has the necessary qualifications for the office that he seeks, and if this affidavit is attached and is in proper form, it is conclusive, so far as the Secretary of the Commonwealth is concerned.

In the pending case there is no allegation nor suggestion that the petition filed in behalf of the relator with the Secretary of the Commonwealth was defective in form, or that the requisite affidavit was not filed with the nomination petition.

When the Secretary of the Commonwealth had forwarded to the county commissioners the list of the candidates of each party for the various offices as shown in such petition, and had also notified the candidates that their names had been so certified, his functions in the matter were at an end; and while it may be that he would thereafter have the power to correct a mistake of his office in preparing the list so forwarded to the county commissioners, or in the notification to the candidate, he would have no right to attempt to pass upon the qualifications of the candidates or of the signers of the various petitions.

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2 Pa. D. & C. 520, 1922 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/com-ex-rel-albert-v-hard-pactcomplcumber-1922.