In Re Referendum Petition No. 35, State Question No. 101

1920 OK 7, 186 P. 485, 78 Okla. 47, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 292
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 6, 1920
Docket10998
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1920 OK 7 (In Re Referendum Petition No. 35, State Question No. 101) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Referendum Petition No. 35, State Question No. 101, 1920 OK 7, 186 P. 485, 78 Okla. 47, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 292 (Okla. 1920).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

On June 27, 1919, there was filed in the office of the Secretary of State pamphlet petitions purporting to be signed by 10,618 voters of the state of Oklahoma, asking for a referendum on House Bill 609, which bill had been regularly passed by the Seventh Legislature of Oklahoma. Within ten days thereafter Henry Wood filed in the office of the Secretary of State a protest against the referendum petition, and for grounds of protest and objection stated :

First. That the petition does not bear the number of signatures required by law, and the signatures were not procured and certified in the manner provided by law.

*48 Second. That the purported petition and alleged signatures are not authenticated and verified as required by law.

Third. That the purported petition is not in form as required by chapter 37, Rev. Laws 1910.

On August 14, 1919, the petitioners filed a motion to dismiss the protest, alleging that the protest had been abandoned. This was overruled, and the protest came on for hearing before the Secretary of State on October 1, 1919. On the trial of the case before the Secretary of State, the different petitions were all introduced in evidence, and the protestant and petitioners both offered oral evidence. After the introduction of evidence by both sides, on the 8th day of October, 1919, the Secretary of State made an order overruling the protest and sustaining the referendum petitions. On October 17, the protestant filed with the Secretary of State a written notice of appeal, and said cause was transmitted to this court, and was submitted to this court on the record and evidence taken before the Secretary of State and the briefs of the protestant and petitioner.

It is agreed between the parties, or at least the allegation is made and not contested in the brief, that the petitions, as filed, contain 10,618 names, and in order to refer said enactment of the Legislature it is necessary that the petitions should contain the signatures of 9,722 qualified signers, and the face of the petitions discloses that there are 896 more names thereon than are necessary to make the same a valid referendum petition.

We will take up the objections to the validity of the petition in the order they are briefed by protestant. The protestant first assails the petition by setting out in his brief 1,1 names which appear in different petitions that are not the names of individuals, but are the names of firms or corporations. Section 3392, Rev. Laws 1910, provides that the referendum petition may be signed by every person who is a qualified elector of the state of Oklahoma. There is no law that authorizes or permits a firm or corporation to sign as a firm or corporation. The petitions were introduced in evidence, and they disclose the fact that these 11 firms or corporations have signed in their firm or corporate names. It follows that said names should not be counted as qualified signatures on the petitions, and must be deducted from the total number of signatures appearing upon the petitions.

The second objection to the petitions is that 62 names are duplicated — that is, 52 persons have signed the petitions more than once. In support of this contention, there was evidence introduced that in Carter county ten names appear upon different petitions twice, and the protestant in support of his contention set out in his brief 42 additional names which show that the same are duplicated, one name appearing three times. The first name set out in the brief as a duplication appears as follows:

Petition No. Name No
2-82 8
Duplicated 5-56 - 10
Name Address
M. M. Tate 2915 Classen
M. M. Tate 2915 Classen

The other names are set out identically as the one above. It must be considered prima facie evidence that M. M. Tate, 2915 Classen, appearing on two different petitions, is one and the same person. The petitioners do not attempt in their brief to answer this question, or to controvert the fact alleged by the protestant. The petitions upon their face disclose prima facie evidence that the 52 names are duplicated. There being nothing to rebut said fact, it follows that said names must be considered duplicated, and the 52 names must be deducted from the number of names signed to said petition.

The protestant next assails seven petitions which contain ,140 names for the reason the said petitions are not verified as required by law. Petitions Nos. 3-32, 3-35, 3-37, 4-35, 4-99, and 5-66 are objected to for the reason •that same are not signed by¡ the circulator, or, if so signed, are not signed by any notary public. Petition No. 4-51 is also objected to for the reason same is signed and acknowledged by T. D. Irving by Joe Dow. These petitions do not comply with section 3373, Rev. Laws 1910, and must be disregarded, and the 140 names appearing upon these seven petitions must be deducted from the total number.

The protestant next assails Petitions Nos. 3-17, 3-81, and 2-53 for the reason that the same were not signed by the various persons whose names appear thereon, but were all signed by one person; and protestant in support of his contention introduced the witness J. T. Thompson, who testified, as an expert on handwriting, that all the names appearing upon these petitions had been signed by one person — that is, one person signed the names of the alleged persons to Petition No. 3-17, and a different person signed all the names to Petition No. 3-81, and still a different person signed all the names to Petition No. 2-53. Objection is also made to Petition No. 1-95 for the reason the names were signed with a typewriter, and not by the person who purported to sign the petition, and upon these four petitions there are eighty names that should be disregarded. *49 The petitioners did not contest this fact in their brief. These four petitions were not signed as provided by section 33&2, Rev. Laws 1910, therefore must be disregarded and the 80 names deducted from the total number of names appearing on the petition.

The protestant next assails the petitions for the reason it appears upon the face of the petitions that there are 306 signers who omit altogether to give any address. These names are set out in the brief of protestant, disclosing on what petition their names are signed and the number of the line on which the name appears on the petition. Section 3368 gives the form of referendum petition, and provides, that each signer acknowledge the following fact:

“I have personally signed this petition, am a legal voter of the state of Oklahoma. My residence and post office are correctly written after my name.”

This court, in passing upon a very similar question, in the case of In re Referendum Petition No. 31, Muskogee Free Fair Bill, 68 Oklahoma, 172 Pac. 639, states as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
1920 OK 7, 186 P. 485, 78 Okla. 47, 1920 Okla. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-referendum-petition-no-35-state-question-no-101-okla-1920.