Hampton v. Priddy

168 P.2d 100, 50 N.M. 23
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 1946
DocketNo. 4892.
StatusPublished

This text of 168 P.2d 100 (Hampton v. Priddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hampton v. Priddy, 168 P.2d 100, 50 N.M. 23 (N.M. 1946).

Opinion

LUJAN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in separate contest proceedings initiated in the district court of Quay County by the appellants, T. W. Hampton and Clarence Massey, as contestants, involving the offices of Mayor and Councilman of the City of Tucumcari, following the municipal election held on the 4th day of April, 1944. Hampton was nominated for Mayor and Massey for Councilman from the 2nd^y/ard on the Democratic ticket. The cóntestees in the contest, initiated as aforesaid, were appellee, Henry R. Priddy, nominated for the office of Mayor and Clarence E. Gamble, nominated for Councilman from the 2nd Ward, on the “Greater Tucumcari Ticket.” The result of the election according to the initial canvass was as follows:

Mayor Councilman

Hampton ..... 721 Massey....... 685

Priddy ....... 724 Gamble....... 701

Certificates of election were duly issued to Priddy for Mayor and Gamble for Councilman based on the foregoing canvass. A subsequent recount as to these offices resulted in no substantial, certainly no material, change in the result. It showed:

Mayor ■ Councilman

Hampton ..... 718 Massey....... 680

Priddy ....... 723 Gamble....... 700

The results of the recount come into the case before us solely as an admission of opposing counsel and not by reason of any evidence introduced at the trial. The contests were consolidated for trial below and after hearing the court awarded judgment in favor of the appellee Priddy for the office of Mayor and in favor of the appellee Gamble for the office of Councilman from the 2nd Ward, both nominees on the “Greater Tucumcari Ticket.” These awards were contained in a single judgment. The appellants, who were the contestants below, prosecute this appeal, each complaining of the judgment so entered against him and they pray for a reversal thereof. While some thirteen separate errors are assigned, they are grouped for purposes of argument under two points, viz., (1) that the so called “Greater Tucumcari Party” was not a political party within the meaning of the governing statute and, hence, appellees’ names, as its nominees, were not entitled to be printed on the ballot, nor should any votes cast for them have been counted, canvassed or returned, and (2) that at the date of said election, the appellee Clarence E. Gamble was not a resident of, but resided outside, the City of Tucumcari and, hence, was ineligible to be nominated and elected or to receive a certificate of election to the office of Councilman from the 2nd Ward in said City and that for the same reason the votes cast by him and his wife and three other named persons, all for contestees, were illegal and should- not have been cast, counted or canvassed.

The ruling of the trial court on appellants’ first point was made in acting on certain proposed findings of fact, one of which, at least, partakes more of the nature of a conclusion of law than a finding of fact. The proposals first made a declaration that “The Greater Tucumcari Party” was not a political party receiving more than fifteen per cent, of the total number of votes cast for the candidates for Governor in the last preceding election. Then appeared a proposed finding in substance that the appellees were not nominated at or by a legally called and held political convention, and that the “Greater Tucumcari Political Party” had never filed in the office of the County Clerk of Quay County the rules governing the organization of said party, particularly with reference to the method of selecting nominees as candidates for public office.

Counsel for appellants first call to our attention 1941 Comp. Sec. 14-1303, L. 1884, c. 39, Sec. 55, the material portion of which reads:

“ * * * And all elections for municipal officers shall in all respects be held and conducted in the manner prescribed by law in cases of county elections.”

Attention is then directed to 1941 Comp. Sec. 56-720, L. 1927, c. 41, Sec. 720, the election code of 1927, which, while expressly excepting certain elections, including municipal, from the act, provides, nevertheless, that in all municipal elections, the duties specified in said act as devolving upon the county clerk shall devolve upon the clerk of the municipality unless otherwise specifically provided. Finally, under this point, the method of nominating candidates by convention system as set out in Article 9 of Chapter 56, New Mexico Statutes Annotated (1941) — Sections 56-901 to 56-908 of 1941 Compilation — is pointed out as the method which should have been pursued by the “Greater Tucumcari Party” in order to get the names of its candidates on the ballot, since it was not a political party whose candidates received as many as fifteen per centum of the total number of votes cast for the candidates for Governor in the last general election by all political parties, whose nomination is provided for by the primary election laws of this state. See 1941 Comp. Sec. 56-908. The several omissions to comply with the provisions of this article, such as failure to file with the county clerk the rules governing the organization of the party as required by 1941 Comp. Sec. 56-903,-and in other respects, are pointed out by appellants (contestants) and it is argued the names of appellees were wrongfully on the ballot and, hence, no ballots cast for them were entitled to be counted or canvassed.

The appellees argue with a vigor equal-ling that of appellants that the statute invoked is obviously inapplicable to municipal elections, reminding us that the provisions of 1941 Comp. Sec. 14-1303 rendering applicable to municipal elections the general election laws of the state, speaks of the manner of “holding and conducting elections,” not the manner of nominating candidates. They mention arguendo, also, the fact that if counsel for appellants be correct in their contentions in this behalf — nominations by political parties — then throughout the years there have been few officers, other than de facto, in many municipalities in the state, since in most of them non-partisan rather than party tickets have been the rule and not an exception to the rule.

We are disposed to hold with appellees that the provisions of 1941 Comp. Secs. 56-901 to 56-908, L.1935, c. 58, are without application to a non-partisan ticket offered to the electors in a municipal election. Obviously as its whole context connotes, the act was never intended to discourage or apply to the long existing and salutary practice of offering nonpartisan tickets in city, town and village elections. If in doubt about the matter, the heavy penally imposed for non-compliance with its provisions would incline us to resolve the doubt against an application of the act which would discourage, if not prohibit, local non-partisan tickets. Section 6 of the Act, 1941 Comp. Sec. 56-906, reads:

“Any ballot containing the name or names of any candidate or candidates of any political party which has failed to comply with the provisions of this act shall not be cast, counted, canvassed or returned. (Laws 1935, ch. 58, § 6, p. 107.) ”

This is contrary to the effect almost universally applied in such circumstances, 18 Am.Jur. 263, Sec. 131, under “Elections” and case note in 7 Ann.Cas. 839.

The legislature in enacting L.1935, c.

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168 P.2d 100, 50 N.M. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hampton-v-priddy-nm-1946.