Corkery v. Hinkle

217 P. 47, 125 Wash. 671, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 1106
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1923
DocketNo. 18104
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 P. 47 (Corkery v. Hinkle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corkery v. Hinkle, 217 P. 47, 125 Wash. 671, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 1106 (Wash. 1923).

Opinion

Mackintosh, J.

A vacancy having been occasioned by the resignation of the member of Congress for the fifth congressional district of this state, pursuant to statutory requirements, a special primary election was held for the purpose of nominating persons to be subsequently voted for at a special election to fill such vacancy. The question before us arises as to whether certain votes cast at this primary under the so-called absent voters act are to be counted.

It is to be regretted that the need for a speedy decision of this question makes it impossible in the limited time at our disposal to present as orderly and finished an opinion as this important and interesting question merits.

The following statutory provisions are pertinent to this inquiry:

“That whenever any vacancy exists in the office of United States senator or representative in congress from this state, or representatives in congress from any congressional district of this state by death, resignation, disability or failure to qualify, of persons elected to such office, and there shall be a necessity for the filling of such vacancy, or threatened vacancy, for the term or the remainder of the unexpired term, the governor shall issue a writ of election to fill such vacancy, which writ shall fix the time for such election not less than twenty-five days after the issuance thereof, and such writ sháll also fix a day not less than fifteen days after the issuance of the writ, and not less than ten days before the special election called therein, for the holding of a special primary for the purpose of nominating candidates, to be voted for at such special election.” Rem. Comp. Stat., §3799 [P. C. §1458] (Passed 1909).
“The general election laws and the laws relating to primary elections shall apply to the special elections herein provided for, in so far as the same are not inconsistent with this act and shall be construed with and [673]*673made a part of this act for the purpose of carrying out the spirit and intent thereof.” Rem. Comp. Stat., §3802 [P. O. §1461] (Passed 1909).
“Any elector of the state who believes that he will be unavoidably absent from his home, and more than twenty-five miles distant from the precinct in which he is qualified to vote, may vote at general elections to be held for federal, United States senatorial and congressional, state or legislative officers, or propositions, or at any primary held for the purpose of nomination for any such election, in the manner provided for in this act.” Rem. Comp. Stat.-, §5280 [P. C. §2087] (Originally passed in 1915).

The plaintiff has made an elaborate presentation in his briefs and in his oral argument of the question whether the act of 1915, providing for the voting of absent electors, is constitutional under the provisions of art. 6, § 1, of the constitution. But this becomes entirely immaterial to the question before us if we do but remember that this court, in State ex rel. Zent v. Nichols, 50 Wash. 508, 97 Pac. 728, has already decided that the constitutional definition of the qualifications of voters has no reference to primary elections held for the nomination of candidates for office; that the constitutional “elections” do not include “primary elections ; ’ ’ and that the situation before us involves only the absent voters act as referring to a “primary election.” We therefore may dismiss all those cases arising at the time of the civil war which hold that absent voters acts were unconstitutional, and at the same time those later cases which have held that similar modern laws which now exist in 43 of the 48 states of the Union are constitutional, and leave undecided that question until it is presented in a case involving the constitutionality of this act as it relates to “elections” as we have defined them as not including primaries.

[674]*674We come now directly to the question before us,which is whether the provisions of § 3802, supra, which provides that all general election laws and laws relating to primary elections shall apply to special elections and shall be considered and made a part of the special election and primary law, have thus incorporated with them the provisions of § 5280 et sec[. relating to absent voting. On this question, which, as we have already said, is the only one in the case before us, we have not had the benefit of the citation of any authorities or any discussion in the briefs or oral arguments of either party. We have, therefore, been compelled in the extremely short time allowed for the determination of this case, to make an independent investigation, which compels the conclusion that the act of 1915, by reference, has been made a part of the act of 1909, and that absent voting is legal in a primary held for the purpose of making nominations to be voted on at a special election. This conclusion appeals as being logical and is supported by such authorities as our research has revealed, there being apparently nothing to the contrary.

Before passing to the consideration of those authorities it is well to state certain fundamental principles relating to the subject generally. It has been held by this court in at least four cases that statutes such as the absent voters act may be passed as statutes regulating the procedure of voting. This was held in State ex rel. Shepard v. Superior Court, 60 Wash. 370, 111 Pac. 233, 140 Am. St. 925; State ex rel. Rogers v. Howell, 92 Wash. 381, 159 Pac. 118; State ex rel. Mullen v. Howell, 108 Wash. 340, 184 Pac. 333, which involved the question of registration, and in State ex rel. Carroll v. Superior Court, 113 Wash. 54, 193 Pac. 226, involving a similar question. The absent voters act, taking [675]*675it as valid in so far as it relates to primaries, as a matter of fact, does not attempt to either enlarge or diminish the qualifications set out in the constitution for electors, and is, in fact, an act modifying or adding to acts theretofore in existence relating to the process and means by'which the electors’ will is to be ascertained, and it is analogous to those statutes which relate to the casting and receiving of the ballots of electors who through physical or mental disability are unable to comply with the demand of the ordinary regulations covering other qualified electors differently situated. In other words, the act of 1915, by its terms, attempts to create no new class of voters nor to add any new qualifications. It deals with persons possessed of the qualifications set out in the constitution who have the right to vote and says that certain of them occupying a certain status may have their ballots received in a certain manner, exactly as other statutes say that certain others in different situations — i. e., the blind, the feeble, those using voting machines, those whose votes have been challenged etc. — may have their ballots received in manners differing from the ordinary methods. Straughan v. Meyers, 268 Mo. 580, 187 S. W. 1159.

What we have just said does not determine the question raised by the attack upon the constitutionality of the absent voters act only as applied to constitutional “elections,” because ’that attack, directed upon the hypothesis that “elections” and “primaries” are the same things, is that the act is unconstitutional for the reason that it permits voting at a place other than that described in the constitution as being the one “.at which they offer to vote.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Blilie
939 P.2d 691 (Washington Supreme Court, 1997)
Seaborn v. First Judicial District Court
29 P.2d 500 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1934)
State Ex Rel. Walker v. Dean
284 P. 756 (Washington Supreme Court, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 P. 47, 125 Wash. 671, 1923 Wash. LEXIS 1106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corkery-v-hinkle-wash-1923.