Fiannaca v. Gill

372 P.2d 683, 78 Nev. 337, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 134
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1962
Docket4522; 4523; 4524
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 372 P.2d 683 (Fiannaca v. Gill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fiannaca v. Gill, 372 P.2d 683, 78 Nev. 337, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 134 (Neb. 1962).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

McNamee, J.:

Three separate proceedings were filed herein, each seeking a writ of mandate to require the Reno city clerk to call a special election for the recall of city councilmen George Carr and John Marshall, and city mayor Bud *339 Baker. Said councilmen and mayor were permitted to intervene.

The pleadings are identical except as hereinafter noted. It appears therefrom that on March 12, 1962 the petitioners for recall were residents of and registered voters in Reno, Nevada, and as to the councilmen, the petitioner in each case was a qualified voter in the particular ward from which the councilman was elected. On March 12, 1962, there were filed with respondent city clerk at his office three petitions, each demanding the recall of one of said intervenors. The said petitions for recall consisted of numerous copies or series of copies bound together, each printed copy containing a verification of a person who was a registered voter and elector of the city of Reno. The Baker petition for recall consisted of 185 printed forms containing 6,451 signatures, of which 5,466 compared favorably with the signatures on file in the city of Reno Official Register of Voters. The Carr petition for recall consisted of 35 printed forms containing 1,082 signatures, 880 of which compared favorably with those on file in Ward 1 of the city of Reno. The Marshall petition for recall consisted of 51 printed forms containing 1,467 signatures, of which 1,122 compared favorably with those on file in Ward 6 of the city of Reno. 1 Some of the verifications on the various sections above referred to were not made by an individual who had signed that particular section or copy of the recall petition, but each verifier had signed the petition for recall with the exception that one copy of the Marshall petition was not verified by a person who had signed that petition for recall.

The form of the verification attached to each copy of the petitions for recall were identical and state: “____________ ____________________________________________, being first duly sworn, deposes and says: That the undersigned is one of the signers of the attached petition; that said petition was exhibited to each of the signers prior to the signature being affixed *340 thereto; that each signature to the paper appended is a genuine signature of the person whose name it purports to be; and swears that the statements therein made are true to the best of the undersigned’s knowledge and belief.”

None of the petitions for recall alleges the number of signatures required under the constitution or statutes for a petition for recall.

Nev. Const., art 2, sec. 9, provides in part as follows:

“Every public officer in the State of Nevada is subject, as herein provided, to recall from office by the qualified electors of the state, or of the county, district, or municipality, from which he was elected. For this purpose not less than twenty-five per cent (25%) of the qualified electors who vote in the state or in the county, district, or municipality electing said officer, at the preceding election, for justice of the supreme court, shall file their petition, in the manner herein provided, demanding his recall by the people. * * * If he shall not resign within five (5) days after the petition is filed, a special election shall be ordered to be held within twenty (20) days after the issuance of the call therefor, in the state, or county, district, or municipality electing said officer, to determine whether the people will recall such officer. * * * Such additional legislation as may aid the operation of this section shall be provided by law.”

Pursuant to said constitutional provision, NRS 306.020 and 306.030 were enacted. The former provides:

“1. For the purpose of recalling any public officer, there may be filed with the office with whom the petition for nomination to such office is required by law to be filed a petition signed by electors who voted in the state, or in the county, district or municipality electing such officer, equal in number to 25 percent of the votes cast in the state, or in the county, district or municipality, for the office of justice of the supreme court at the last preceding election.
“2. The petition shall also contain the residence addresses of the signers * *

NRS 306.030 provides:

*341 “The petition shall consist of any number of copies thereof, identical in form with the original, except for the signatures and residence addresses of the signers. Every copy shall be verified by at least one of the signers thereof, who shall swear or affirm, before an officer authorized by law to administer oaths, that the statements and signatures contained in the petition are true.”

The respondent and the intervenors have raised the following objections to the granting of the writs of mandate:

1. Petitions containing the required number of signatures were not verified by at least one of the signers thereof.

2. The verifications of the petitions were made on “knowledge and belief,” a form not prescribed by said statutes.

3. The certificate by county clerk Brown is a nullity because (a) it is executed by a person other than the city clerk, (b) it does not purport to authenticate the genuineness of the signatures on the recall petitions, but merely states that they “compared favorably” with the signatures on the original affidavits of registration, and (c) it cannot be determined therefrom whether the signatures are those of persons who voted in the district or municipality electing the particular officer who is the subject of the recall petition or whether the signatures in part are those of persons who registered subsequent to the preceding election wherein said officers were elected.

4. The sponsors of the recall movement have created a situation which prevents the respondent clerk from determining the validity of the signatures on the recall petitions, because in December 1961, there was initiated in the Second Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Washoe, a proceeding wherein that court entered its order directing the city clerk of the city of Keno to deliver the returns including the names of those who voted in the primary and general elections of 1959 to the county clerk, and that pursuant to said order all of said records were removed from the *342 city clerk’s office and deposited with the county clerk; that on February 7, 1962, a second proceeding was initiated in said court wherein declaratory relief was sought regarding the proper procedure for recall. In this latter proceeding, various copies of the recall petitions were deposited with the county clerk for comparison by the county clerk with the signatures of the registered voters on file in his office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
372 P.2d 683, 78 Nev. 337, 1962 Nev. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fiannaca-v-gill-nev-1962.