In Re State Question No. 137, Etc.

1926 OK 222, 244 P. 806, 114 Okla. 132, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 956
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 9, 1926
Docket16704
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1926 OK 222 (In Re State Question No. 137, Etc.) 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 State Question No. 137, Etc., 1926 OK 222, 244 P. 806, 114 Okla. 132, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 956 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

The Ninth or 1923 Legislature of Oklahoma enacted House ¡Bill JNo. 197, known as the Free Text-Book Law, which appears as chapter 175 of the Session Laws of 1923. The Tenth or 1925 Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 54, repealing the Free Text-Book Law, which act was approved by the Governor on March 31, 1925, and appears as chapter 10 of,the Session Laws of 1925. On April 17, 1925, there was filed in the office of Secretary of State a copy of a referendum petition designated Referendum Petition No. 49, State Question No. 137, the purpose of which was to refer to a vote of the people the question as to *133 whether the Free TexNBook Law should remain in force and effect or be repealed by Senate Bill No. 54, as passed by said Tenth Legislature. Within the time provided by law those sponsoring the referendum petition caused to be circulated, signed, and filed with the Secretary of State petitions containing the names of approximately 28,-500 signers, purporting to be qualified electors, and constituting more than five per eeut. of the highest number of votes cast for any office at the last general election. Protest was filed with the Secretary of State challenging the sufficiency of the petition, and after hearing, the Secretary of State found that the signatures of 1,341 petitioners were not in conformity to law and ordered them stricken from the list, and found that the petition was otherwise in substantial compliance with the Constitution and statutes of Oklahoma and overruled the protest, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted.

Section 6631, Comp. Stats. 1921, which was intended to amplify and provide the procedure for putting into force and effect the initiative and referendum provisions of our Constitution, provides that:

“When a citizen or citizens desire to circulate a petition * * * for the purpose of invoking a referendum upon legislative enactments, such citizen or citizens shall, when such petition is prepared, and before the same is circulated or signed by electors, file a true and exact copy of same in the office of Secretary of State.”

The record discloses that when the copy of the petition in question was filed with the Secretaory of State it was accompanied by a letter reading as follows:

“Secretary of State, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Dear Sir: I hand you herewith copy of Referendum Petition No. 49, State Question No. 137. same being referendum on Senate Bill No. 54, together with proposed ballot title therefor. John A. Simpson, Z. H. Lawter, by Campbell Russell.”

And the document bore the following in-, dorsement:

“Submitted by John A. Simpson and Z. H. Lawter. Oil Exchange Building, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.”

And the Secretary of State issued his receipt therefor, which read:

“Received of Mr. Campbell Russell Referendum Petition No. 49, State Question No. 137, for John A. Simpson and Z. PI. Lawter, Received, at 4:16 p. m., April 17, A. D. 1925.”

It developed at the hearing of the protest before the Secretary of State that John A. Simpson was president and Z. H. Law-ter secretary of the Farmers Union of the state of Oklahoma, and that after the copy of the referendum petition was fiLed with the Secretary of State t-he petitions were sent to the various local organizations of the Farmers Union over the state and by them circulated among their members to obtain signatures to the petition, and that the expense of circulating the petitions was borne largely by that organization. And the first objection to the petition urged in the brief of protestante is that it—

“Clearly shows that this petition was not only fostered and circulated by the Farmers Union, but was paid for out of the funds of the organization”

—and that being the case, it is claimed that the petition does not substantially conform to the provisions of section 6631, Comp. Stats. 1921, prescribing the duties of a citizen or citizens desiring to circulate such petition. In our judgment this contention is without merit. Substantially the same question was before this court in the very recent case of In re State Question No. 138, Initiative Petition No. 89, Milburn v. State Taxpayers Association, decided Jan. 12, 1926, 114 Okla. -. 244 Pac. 801, and it was there held that the petition was not invalid because prepared and filed und*r the direction of the State Taxpayers Association, and as the subject was somewhat exhaustively discussed in that case, we deem it unnecessary to repeat it in detail here.

Section 2 of article 5 of the Constitution provides that:

“The ratio and per centum of legal voters hereinbefore stated shall be based upon the total number of votes cast at the. last general election fok' the state office receiving the highest number of votes at such election.”

And over the objection of1 petitioners, the Secretary of State took as a basis for determining the number of signers necessary the vote cast at the last general election for presidential electors, finding that the highest total number of votes cast for presidential electors was 528,440, and that on such basis the petitions must contain five per centum of such number, making a total of ■26,420 signatures of legal voters necessary to refer the measure in question. At the hearing and in their briefs, petitioners complain that the Secretary of • State erred in taking the vote on the presidential electors for such basis contending that they are not state officers within the contemplation of the Constitution, but, since t-he record discloses that a greater number o.f votes were cast for presidential electors than for any other office voted for at the last general election, *134 it is our opinion that the, Secretary of State properly designated the office of presidential elector as state office, and used the vote cast therefor as the basis upon which to determine the number of signatures necessary.

Plaintiffs in error further complain that there were 560 petitioners whose names were written upon the petition by someone other than the person whose names appeared therecn, and that in pamphlets containing 180 names the circulator’s name was omitted therefrom, but we observe that in each instance the Secretary of State properly struck these names from the list and they were not included in the number found to' be legal petitioners.

They further complain that in many instances the post office address of the petitioner was written in the petition by some person other than the one whose signature appeared thereon, and insist that all suen names should be stricken from the list. This court has several times held, and it is the well-settled law of this state, that the signer of an initiative or referendum, petition must personally affix his signature to the petition, but we find no statute that directs and mo adjudicated cases that hold that the post office address of the signer must in all cases be written by his own hand.

Section 6624, Comp. Stats. 1921, sets out the form of a referendum petition, in which the signer is required to certify that he personally signed! the petition and that his post office address was correctly -written, and section 6629, Oomp. Stats.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 222, 244 P. 806, 114 Okla. 132, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-state-question-no-137-etc-okla-1926.