Donovan v. Dougherty

174 P. 701, 31 Idaho 622, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 80
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1918
StatusPublished

This text of 174 P. 701 (Donovan v. Dougherty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donovan v. Dougherty, 174 P. 701, 31 Idaho 622, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 80 (Idaho 1918).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

These causes are consolidated for the purposes of this opinion because they all grow out of the same state of facts and seek the same relief in substance, and the court feels that it has not the necessary time, owing to the public necessity for an early determination of them, to formulate a separate opinion in each.

The first action is in this court upon appeal from the third judicial district, and was brought for the purpose of obtaining a writ of injunction restraining the Secretary of State from certifying the names of certain candidates to the various county auditors of the state for printing upon the official primary ballot of the Democratic party for the primary election to be held on the third day of September next.

The second action is an original proceeding in this court for a writ of mandate directing the Secretary of State to refrain from certifying the name of one H. F. Samuels as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for Governor, in his certificate of names of candidates to the various auditors; and the third action is also an original proceeding in this court for a writ of mandate against the Secretary of State, directing him to refrain from certifying the names of certain other candidates for Democratic nominations for various state officers, in his certificate of nominations to the said auditors.

In ike first action the trial court sustained a demurrer to the complaint for injunction, and upon refusal of plaintiff to plead further ordered the action dismissed, from which order plaintiff appeals.

The pleadings in these various proceedings allege that a certain organization, calling itself the Nonpartisan League, is a political organization which has appeared in Idaho since the election of 1916, but that it has no standing as a political [625]*625party as defined by our statutes; that in June last this organization selected delegates from various sections of the state and held a convention thereof at Boise on the third and fourth days of July, at which time and place it indorsed certain candidates for United States senators and representatives in Congress, and also certain other candidates for the various state officers of this state; that the said convention further determined that it would not place any ticket in the field as a separate and distinct political organization, but that it would enlist its members as members of the Democratic party, have its candidates named as candidates seeking the Democratic nomination for such various offices, direct its members to vote the Democratic primary ballot and seek to have them named as candidates of the Democratic party, and thus secure control of the Democratic party and its organization. It is further alleged that the delegates and others in control of the said Nonpartisan League convention and of the said Nonpartisan League organization conspired together to secure the nomination of its candidates as candidates of the Democratic party and to obtain control of its organization in fraud of the rights of the Democratic party and its organization and of those honestly professing themselves to be members thereof and affiliating therewith. It is alleged also in the complaint for injunction in the district court, but not in the original proceedings in this court, that the said delegates and others in control of the Nonpartisan League are now seeking and will seek to induce the membership thereof to commit perjury in ease their votes shall be challenged at the primary election by swearing that they are members of the Democratic party, when in truth and in fact they are not, but are members of another and distinct political organization. It is then alleged that in furtherance of this conspiracy and design the candidates so indorsed at the Nonpartisan League convention have caused their names respectively to be placed in nomination with the Secretary of State as candidates seeking the nomination of the Democratic party at the said primary election. In addition it is alleged that the said H. F. Samuels was, until a [626]*626recent date, chairman of the Republican County Central Committee of Bonner County, and that he has not been and is not now a Democrat, and that one L. I. Purcell, candidate for Congress of the Nonpartisan League, was a member of the Republican Platform Convention held in Boise the latter part of June of this year, and that he has not been and is not now a Democrat.

The relief sought is to prevent the Secretary of State from certifying these Nonpartisan League candidates down as candidates seeking the Democratic nominations for the respective offices for which they have been placed in nomination.

Demurrer was interposed in the injunction proceeding attacking the jurisdiction of the court, the legal capacity of the plaintiff to sue and the sufficiency of the complaint to state a cause of action. In the original proceedings in this court, H. F. Samuels, in the one, was permitted to intervene and filed his demurrer and answer, and the other candidates were permitted to intervene and filed their demurrer and answer in the other proceeding. The demurrers in these proceedings attack the jurisdiction of the court, the legal capacity of plaintiff to sue, allege that there is another action pending, that there is a defect of parties plaintiff, and that the complaint does not state facts sufficient. The Secretary of State appeared in each of the eases and demurred to the jurisdiction and sufficiency of the complaint. As all of the proceedings are determined upon these demurrers, it becomes unnecessary to devote any attention to the answers filed in the original proceedings.

The demurrer to the complaint for injunction was correctly sustained by the lower court on the ground that it did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action. There were no property rights involved and courts of equity will not intervene to restrain a public officer from the performance of -a purely ministerial act where no property rights |are in controversy. (14 R. C. L., p. 365, sec. 66; p. 373, sec. 76.)

Passing now to the original proceedings in this court, the first ground of demurrer, that the court has no juris[627]*627diction of the subject of the action, is overruled. With reference to the second ground of demurrer, that the plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue, without passing upon the merits of this ground, this court is of the opinion that the objection is largely technical and of such a nature that it could be corrected by amendment, instanter, if the court were inclined to sustain it. It probably would have been better practice to have instituted the proceedings in the name of the state by the plaintiff as relator, and no one would have been injured by allowing an amendment to that effect at the hearing. With respect to the third ground of demurrer, that there is another action pending, this fact if it is a fact, does not appear upon the face of the complaint, or affidavit, and that document is not, therefore, subject to demurrer upon that ground. The fourth ground of demurrer is largely technical, for the reason that the court is here treating the matter as though brought in the name of the state with the plaintiff herein as relator, and it, too, is overruled.

The remaining question is as to the sufficiency or insufficiency of the complaints, or affidavits.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P. 701, 31 Idaho 622, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donovan-v-dougherty-idaho-1918.