In re Primary Ballots

33 Nev. 125
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1910
DocketNo. 1829
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 33 Nev. 125 (In re Primary Ballots) 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
In re Primary Ballots, 33 Nev. 125 (Neb. 1910).

Opinions

By the Court,

Norcross, C. J.:

Leonard B. Fowler, deputy attorney-general and a qualified elector of Ormsby County, State of Nevada, has filed with each of the justices of the supreme court an affidavit authorized by and made in pursuance of the provisions of section 29 of the act in relation to primary elections (Stats. 1909, pp. 273-291), praying for an order directing E. O. Patterson, county clerk of Ormsby County, forthwith to desist from certain alleged wrongful acts committed, or about to be committed, and to correct certain alleged errors in the printing of the sample and official ballots for the primary election to be held on the 6th day of September, 1910.

Affiant has attached as exhibits, and made a part of his affidavit, sample ballots prepared by the county clerk of Ormsby County and, under his authority and direction, printed for use in said county, for the Demooratic and Socialist parties. He also alleges a defect existing in the sample ballot printed for the use of the .Republican party.

The affidavit further alleges that affiant "is a member of and affiliates with the Democratic party; that at said primary election your affiant desires to vote for some qualified persons to fill the following offices and to be candidates of the Democratic party for said offices: Justice of the supreme court, superintendent of public instruction, district attorney, justice of the peace, and regent of the university, short term. That for said [126]*126various offices no Democrat has filed a petition which would entitle his name to be printed upon the Democratic ballot. That your affiant desires to write in a blank space his choice for his party nominee for the various offices heretofore set forth. * * * That on said primary election ballot (sample, Democratic party) the following officers are omitted therefrom: Justice of the supreme court, superintendent of public instruction, district attorney, justice of the peace, and regent of the state university, short term. * * *

"That your affiant also alleges that he has a copy of the sample primary election ballot of the Socialist party, Ormsby County, Nevada, and that there is printed thereon the names of the candidates for the following offices: Choice for U. S. senator, representative in Congress, governor, lieutenant-governor, regent of state university, long term, and that the names of all other officers to be filled at the election in November of this year are omitted therefrom. * * *
"That affiant alleges that the same facts of omission that apply in regard to the primary election ballot of the Democratic party also apply in regard to the Republican party in the case of the office of district judge and that unless this error is corrected on the Republican official ballot the Republican voters of Ormsby County will be deprived of the privilege of expressing their choice of a nominee for judge of the district court of the first judicial district. ”

The affidavit further recites that the office of attorney-general has heretofore, upon request of an opinion from the district attorney of Nye County, rendered the following opinion in reference to primary ballots:

" Primary act says that to vote for a person whose name appears on the ballot stamp a cross (X) at right of name. Inference is that there exists the privilege of in some way voting for persons whose names are not on the ballot. I therefore advise that blank spaces be printed on the ballot for all officers where there are no printed names and under each group of names as provided in the act.”

[127]*127Upon the hearing our attention has been called to what purports to be sample ballots for the various parties printed for use in other counties in the state, under the direction of the clerk thereof, from which it would appear that there is not, upon the part of the various county clerks, a uniform construction of the law in relation to sample ballots.

The following excerpts from various sections of the primary act will aid in a determination of the questions presented:

"Section 1. * * ■* This statute shall be liberally construed, so that the real will of the electors shall not be defeated by any informality or failure to comply with all provisions of law in respect to either the giving of any notice or the conducting, of the primary election or certifying the results thereof. ”
"Sec. 4. 1. At least sixty days before the time for holding such September primary election * * * the secretary of state shall prepare and transmit to each county clerk, * * * a notice in writing designating the offices for which candidates are to be nominated at such primary election. * * *
"3. In the case of the September primary elections for the nomination of candidates for city and county offices * * * the city clerk * * * shall cause the publication of notice of such primary election, together with a complete statement of the offices for which candidates are to be nominated. * * *”
"Sec. 5. The name of no candidate shall be printed on an official ballot used at any primary election unless * * * a nomination paper shall have been filed in his behalf as hereinafter provided by this act. * * *”
"Sec. 10. At least twenty-five days before any September primary election * * * the secretary of state shall transmit to each county clerk of any county a certified list containing the names * * * of each person for whom nomination papers have been filed in the office of secretary of state and who is entitled to be voted for in such county at such primary election, together with a [128]*128designation of the office for which such person is a candidate and of the party or principle he represents.
"Such county clerk shall forthwith, upon receipt thereof, publish under the proper party designation the title of each office, the names and addresses of all persons for whom nomination papers have been filed, the date of the primary election. * * * ”
" Sec. 12. 1. All voting at the primary elections within the meaning of this act shall be by ballot. * * * It shall be the duty of the county clerk of each county to provide such printed official ballots to be used at any September primary election for the nomination of candidates to be voted for * * * at the ensuing November election. * * * The names of all candidates for the respective offices for whom the prescribed nomination papers have been duly filed shall be printed thereon. ”
"2. Official primary election ballots * * * shall be * * * as long as herein-prescribed captions, heading, party designations, directions to voters and lists of names of candidates, properly subdivided according to the several offices to be nominated for, may require; * * *.”
"4. At least three-eighths of an inch below the voting precinct designation and the date of the primary election shall be printed' * * * the following instructions to voters: 'To vote for a person whose name appears on the ballot, stamp a cross (X) in the square at the right of the names of the person for whom you desire to vote. ’
"5. The instructions to voters shall be separated from the lists of candidates and the designations of the several offices to be nominated for.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Nev. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-primary-ballots-nev-1910.