Durell v. Brown

279 N.E.2d 624, 29 Ohio App. 2d 133, 58 Ohio Op. 2d 200, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 413
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 19, 1971
Docket71-140
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 279 N.E.2d 624 (Durell v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durell v. Brown, 279 N.E.2d 624, 29 Ohio App. 2d 133, 58 Ohio Op. 2d 200, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 413 (Ohio Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Strausbaugh, J.

This appeal is from an order of the Common Pleas Court wherein plaintiff was denied a request for a permanent injunction. The action involves an initiative petition which was filed under Section lb, Article IT of the Constitution by a group of individuals known as the Tax Reform Action Committee (hereinafter called Committee). The initiative petition was tendered to the Secretary of State and consisted of a number of part-petitions which proposed substantial state tax reform for consideration by the General Assembly of Ohio.

The plaintiff filed his complaint in an attempt to prohibit the Secretary of State from further processing the initiative petition, and prayed for a temporary and permanent injunction as well as a declaratory judgment. The *134 Committee was permitted to intervene as a party defendant. The judgment is modified and affirmed.

Certain facts have been stipulated orally and in writing. The parties agree, by oral stipulation, that the minimum number of signatures necessary (equaling three percent of the electors) to a consideration of the petition is 95,526.

Pertinent parts of the written stipulation include the following:

1. That the plaintiff, Britton Durell, is a resident, citizen, taxpayer and qualified elector in and of the county of Franklin and the State of Ohio;

2. That on December 24:, 1970, an initiative petition was tendered to the Secretary of State of Ohio for filing and such was composed of numerous part-petitions;

3. That of the purported signatures which were received by and included within the count of purported signatures by the Secretary of State, a total of 2100 signatures appeared on part-petitions bearing the signatures of electors of more than one county, from which total 91 signatures were by electors of a county other than the one from which a greater number appeared on a given part-petition;

4. That of the purported signatures which were received by and included within the count of purported signatures by the Secretary of State, 1592 signatures appeared on part-petitions where the consideration clause was not filled out before signatures of purported electors were affixed thereto;

5. That of the purported signatures which were received by and included within the count of purported signatures by the Secretary of State, 310 signatures appeared on part-petitions where no portion of the affidavit form was filled out and which contained no other affidavit;

6. That of the purported signatures which were received by and included within the count of purported signatures by the Secretary of State, 289 signatures appeared on part-petitions where, with respect to the verification, the date line alone, at most, was filled out;

7. That of the purported signatures which were re *135 ceived by and included within the count of purported signatures by the Secretary of State, there were at least 5000 signatures appearing on part-petitions from which the “Committee for Petitioners” struck the signatures of at least 500 electors who were not residents of the county in which the respective part-petitions of the initiative petition were circulated, and which were stricken by said Committee without direction of any elector whose signature was stricken, or of the solicitors of the part-petitions from which the electors’ signatures were so stricken.

It was also an undisputed fact that, of the purported signatures which were received and counted by the Secretory of State, 539 signatures appeared on part-petitions issued by the Secretary of State to a specified solicitor, but returned with the name in the affidavit of someone other than the named solicitor.

Further, it was not disputed that at the time the part-petitions were tendered, the Committee presented to the Secretary of State a tally sheet setting forth the total number of claimed signatures appearing on the part-petitions, the counties in which those signatures were solicited and separate totals for each county. That total number of claimed signatures was 97,732. After receiving the part-petitions which the Committee had tendered, the Secretary of State, through his election section, proceeded to determine the purported number of signatures which were felt, in fact, to have been tendered. After making certain deductions of numbers of signatures for part-petitions listed but not tendered, making deductions for certain invalid part-petitions, adding more numbers of signatures where there was a determination that there were more names on the part-petition than were listed on the tally sheet, and making adjustments for mathematical errors, the Secretary of State concluded that approximately 96,652 signatures had been tendered to him by the Committee. No deduction was made for those signatures referred to in the written stipulation. Thereupon, the Secretary of State transmitted most of the several thousand part-petitions to the respective boards of elections for analysis, retain *136 ing some part-petitions wherein it was determined that the circulator, or affiant, was not the person to whom the petition was registered or issued.

Certain other part-petitions had been reissued by the Secretary of State to affiants whose signatures appeared on the part-petitions, but who were not the solicitors initially registered with the Secretary of State. Whether these part-petitions were transmitted to the appropriate boards of elections for analysis is not clear from the record.

Finally, an additional 2545 signatures appearing on part-petitions were determined by the Secretary of State to be invalid for “one reason or another,” and these part-petitions were not forwarded to the respective county boards of elections, but were included within the total of 96,652 signatures computed by the Secretary of State to be that number tendered by the Committee.

The trial judge in the court below summarized his findings as follows:

“1. Required Signatures — 3% of the votes cast for Governor at the last election therefor (oral stipulation) 95,526
“2. Total number of signatures ‘claimed’ by committee at time of presenting part-petitions 97,732
“3. Total number of signatures counted by Secretary of State 96,652
“4. Signatures with no affidavit 599
“5. Signatures ‘crossed-out’ (at least 500) 500
“6. Solicited by other than listed solicitor — subject to later proof of insufficiency 539
“7. More than one county — subject to later proof of insufficiency 91
“8. No consideration clause — subject to later proof of insufficiency 1592 -
Deductions 1,099 1,099
‘ ‘ Signatures presumed to be sufficient 95,553
“Excess over Required Signatures 27”

*137 The plaintiff makes three assignments of error:

1.

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

Related

City of Warrensville Hts. v. Wason
361 N.E.2d 546 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 N.E.2d 624, 29 Ohio App. 2d 133, 58 Ohio Op. 2d 200, 1971 Ohio App. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durell-v-brown-ohioctapp-1971.