Crews v. Cappell

277 So. 2d 150
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 8, 1973
DocketNo. 4251
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 277 So. 2d 150 (Crews v. Cappell) 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
Crews v. Cappell, 277 So. 2d 150 (La. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

Alleging a number of irregularities in the procedures leading up to it, plaintiffs filed this suit to have a “Local Option Stock Law Election” held in Ward 11 of Rapides Parish, Louisiana, nullified and set aside, and for injunctive relief. Although defendants filed an exception of no cause of action the record shows no ruling thereon. A Stipulation of Facts was entered into by and among the parties and the matter was tried on the merits at the hearing on the rule for a preliminary injunction. The district judge then rendered judgment dismissing plaintiffs’ suit at their cost and they perfected an appeal to this court.

The relevant statutory law is to be found in LSA-R.S. 3:3001-3014, and more particularly in LSA-R.S. 3:3008-3010. Those three statutes read as follows:

§ 3008. Petition for elections; notice of election
Upon the petition of twenty-five per cent of the qualified electors or one hundred qualified electors, whichever is less, in any ward of any parish of the state the governing authority of the parish in which the ward is situated shall, within sixty days of date of filing said petition, order and set the date for an election which said election shall be held not more than sixty days from the date on which same is ordered. Notice of said election shall be published in the official journal of the parish in which the ward is located, at least once a week for four consecutive weeks, the first publication of which shall be not less than thirty days prior to the date of said election. All elections provided for in this Part shall be at the expense of the parish in which the ward calling the election is situated.
§ 3009. Contents and requisites of petition
A. The petition for a referendum election shall be addressed to the governing authority of the parish in which the ward is situated and shall state in essence that the signers thereof request that an election be called to submit to the qualified electors of the ward the proposition of prohibiting any or all of the species of livestock enumerated in R.S. 3:3001 from roaming at large on the public highways of said ward.
B. The petition shall be signed by twenty-five per cent of the electors or one hundred qualified electors, whichever is less, of the ward qualified to vote on the date on which the first signature is attached to the petition and shall state the date of signing and the address of each signing elector.
[152]*152C. Said petition shall also state the species of livestock which it is proposed to prohibit from roaming' at large on the public highways of the ward in which the election is to be held.
§ 3010. Filing of petition with registrar of voters
The petition for such local option election shall be filed with the registrar of voters of the parish in which the ward is situated within sixty days of the date of the first signature affixed thereto and when so filed shall become a permanent public record.

Plaintiffs argue that the stipulated facts and exhibits in the record demonstrate that the petition which initiated the electoral process herein involved was not in compliance with the above quoted statutes. Based on that premise it is essentially their position that the election must' fall because it was based on a jurisdictionally invalid petition.

Initially they attack the petition on the ground that its wording differed from that of the statute of controlling it, LSA-R.S. 3:3009. The petition read thusly:

PETITION
TO: RAPIDES PARISH POLICE JURY
We, the undersigned citizens and residents of Ward 11, Rapides Parish, Louisiana, do hereby request that the Rapides Parish Police Jury call a local option election giving the people of Ward 11 the opportunity to vote either for or against a law prohibiting the running at large of all livestock within the confines of Ward 11.

We note that the statute in question merely requires that the petition “state in essence” that which is desired. Thus we cannot accede to plaintiffs’ argument that because the petition referred simply to “ . . . all livestock within the confines of Ward 11.” it was not in substantial compliance with the law. It is our opinion that the petition fairly appraised the signatories thereto of its meaning and the police jury of their request.

Likewise we see no merit in plaintiffs’ allegation that the petition was defective because the proposition posed was written only on the first page thereof, as there is no requirement in the law governing local option stock law elections that such petitions contain the proposition on each and every page that bears signatures.

We might add in reference to the two points treated above that the ballot which was eventually voted on followed the wording of the statutes in punctitious de- • tail. As we said in Hollan v. Police Jury of Webster Parish (La.App. 2nd Cir., 1961) 134 So.2d 132:

It may be expected that some irregularities will appear in connection with any election, yet the rule of law is that an election will not be invalidated unless the irregularity is of a substantial nature.

Turning now to the more serious contentions of plaintiffs we treat first the fact that less than one hundred of the signatories to the petition wrote thereon the date on which they signed. The petition contains a total of one hundred eighty-three names of which one hundred twenty-nine were certified by the Registrar of Voters. Of the one hundred twenty-nine who were certified eighty-five wrote in the date of their signature, thus in the case of fifteen of the required one hundred names there was not a strict adherence to the terms of the statute. We do not, however, find this to be a fatal defect. The relatively small number of certified signatories who did not write in the date of their signature did include their address, and additionally it is clearly evident from an examination of the petition that all of the names were affixed thereto in chronological order. The statute (R.S. 3:3009) does not require that each signatory personally [153]*153write in the date on which he signed, but merely directs that the petition “ . state the date of signing and the address of each signing elector.” Eighty-five percent of the required number of petitioners wrote in the dates on which they signed. Those dates are found at the beginning, at the end, and intermingled throughout the petition, showing the chronological sequence of signing and therefore affording an excellent indication of when the few who failed to affix the date, placed their signatures thereon. We are not inclined to seize upon such a technicality to invalidate an election and defeat the wishes of the majority of the people, nor does the jurisprudence, as will be shown infra, indicate that we should.

Finally, plaintiffs complain that the petition was not filed with the Registrar of Voters within sixty days of the date of the first signature and argue that it was therefore invalid under the provisions of LSA-R.S. 3:3010.

The first signature on the petition is dated May 30, 1972, and the stipulation of facts states that the petition was presented to the Secretary-Treasurer of the Rapides Parish Police Jury on or after August 9, 1972.

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Related

Rachal v. Natchitoches Parish Police Jury
370 So. 2d 183 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1979)
Crews v. Cappel
279 So. 2d 695 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
277 So. 2d 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crews-v-cappell-lactapp-1973.