In re Nomination Petition of Bunk

548 A.2d 1287, 120 Pa. Commw. 495, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 839
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 2, 1988
DocketOriginal Jurisdiction No. 1924 C.D. 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 548 A.2d 1287 (In re Nomination Petition of Bunk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Nomination Petition of Bunk, 548 A.2d 1287, 120 Pa. Commw. 495, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 839 (Pa. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion by

Judge Doyle,

This opinion is written in support of the order of this Court filed on August 26, 1988.

Before us in our original jurisdiction1 is a Petition to Set Aside the Nomination Papers of Mike Bunk (Bunk), an independent candidate for member of the General Assembly from the 180th District in the City and County of Philadelphia. Petitioner in this Court is Thomas Malkowski, the Republican candidate for the same office.

There are several issues presented for our determination. At the outset we recognize that a number of challenges to Bunks nomination papers were in the nature of challenges to individual signatures on various grounds. As to these individual line challenges the parties, with the cooperation of the Philadelphia County Board of Elections, were able to review the relevant registration binders and agree as to the validity or invalidity of all but sixteen signatures. Those sixteen signatures over which disagreement continues are the ones pled in paragraph 3B of the Petition and pertain only to invalid dating or failure to date the signature lines in question. As to those signatures the parties agreed that testimony would not be necessary and that [497]*497the Court could decide the propriety of each signature by examining merely the nomination papers themselves. We are, therefore, left with the following stipulations keyed to the paragraphs of the petition:

3-A. Two hundred signatures were challenged on the basis that the signatures were not qualified electors of the 180th District.
Stipulated: 67 — Valid 133 — Invalid
3-B. Sixteen names challenged on the basis that signatures were not dated or were invalidly dated.
No agreement to any of these signatures.
3-C. One-hundred-eighty four signatures whose genuiness [sic] is challenged (fraudulent). Stipulated: 79 — Valid 105 — Invalid
3-D. Thirteen signatures challenged because they appear on other petitions.
Stipulated: 10 — Valid 3 — Invalid
3-E. Four names challenged as having signed twice.
Stipulated: 2 — Valid 2 — Invalid
3-F. Six signatures challenged as not genuine and duplicative.
Stipulated: 1 — Valid 5 — Invalid
3-G. One-hundred-thirty-eight signatures challenged as being of persons who reside outside the District.
Stipulated: 26 — Valid 105 — Invalid2

Assuming for the moment that the sixteen signatures challenged on the basis of dates are all invalid, the total of single signatures challenged which is invalid is 369. It has been stipulated that Bunk obtained 1,007 signatures on his nomination papers and that he needs 300 to [498]*498qualify.3 When 369 is subtracted from 1,007 it can be seen that Bunk still has 638 signatures, 338 more than he needs. Thus, the signatures challenged on the basis of dates will not affect the outcome here.4

There are, however, three challenges which involved multiple signatures. We shall discuss each one separately. The first such challenge is pled in paragraph 3-1 as follows:

Said Nomination Petition [sic] was not circulated
by the affiant as required.
Page 2, Line(s) 68, 97, 97 [sic].
Page 11, Line(s) 40, 92 and 93.
Page 4, Line(s) 35 and 36.

At the outset Bunk raised a preliminary matter which demands resolution. Bunk asserts that this pleading challenges only the eight individual signature lines listed, not the entire three pages. Petitioner contends that his attack is upon three complete pages of the nomination papers and that the above designated lines were mentioned only to indicate possible witnesses on this issue.5 Each of the three pages in question contains 100 signatures so the manner in which we interpret this [499]*499pleading is crucial. We do not believe that in reading the pleadings as Petitioner intended we are permitting a new cause of action or an amendment. Rather, we agree with Petitioner that the first line of paragraph 3-1 indicates that the circulation by the affiant is what is challenged and the manner of circulation pertains to each entire page not just those lines specifically denominated. Accordingly, we ruled from the bench at the hearing on August 25, 1988 that Petitioner had pled a challenge to the circulation of all three pages of the nomination papers and the 300 signatures contained therein. We declined, however, to permit Petitioner to present evidence on the chronology in which Bunk (who signed as circulator of the three pages) completed the candidate information on page 1 of each page. We cannot in good conscience read paragraph 3-1 as launching such a challenge and, hence, believe that to permit such evidence at the hearing would have been a denial of due process to Bunk on the basis of a lack of notice.

Having thus determined that the petition does challenge whether Bunk circulated the three pages as required we now consider the testimony presented on that issue. Bunk took the stand and testified. We found his demeanor to be sincere and his testimony to be candid. We resolve credibility determinations in his favor and, accordingly, find that he did, in feet, circulate the papers and that he had sufficient personal knowledge as required by the circulators affidavit as to the events surrounding the circulation and signing of the three pages. Bunk admitted that he did not personally obtain each and every signature,6 but was assisted by his son and nephew both of whom also credibly testified in a manner consistent with Bunks evidence. Bunk ex[500]*500plained that he was at most a few houses away at any given time and reviewed each signature obtained by his two assistants. We believe that his “presence” was sufficient so as to enable him to comply with the level of knowledge required in the circulators affidavit. Further, we do not find Bunks credibility impeached by his insistence that he was present when signatures were obtained although there was testimony to the contrary that he was not actually present. We find he was present in the vicinity at all times if not in the actual presence of each signer when his or her signature was obtained.

We have also considered closely the testimony of Mr. Erb which was somewhat uncertain because this witness was upstairs when certain discussions over signatures between Bunk and Erbs mother transpired downstairs. We, therefore, resolve credibility questions in favor of Bunk. Finally, we have considered the testimony of Bryan Malkowski, Petitioners brother, who stated that at the time when his (Bryans) wife signed Bunks petition he did not see Bunk in the vicinity. He also admitted, however, that he did not expressly look for him. We, therefore, do not believe his testimony impeaches that of Bunk.7

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Related

In Re Nomination Petitions of McIntyre
778 A.2d 746 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)
In Re Nomination of Flaherty
770 A.2d 327 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2001)

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548 A.2d 1287, 120 Pa. Commw. 495, 1988 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-nomination-petition-of-bunk-pacommwct-1988.