In Re State Question No. 236, Referendum Petition No. 73

1938 OK 457, 82 P.2d 1017, 183 Okla. 355, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 1938
DocketNo. 28215.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1938 OK 457 (In Re State Question No. 236, Referendum Petition No. 73) 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. 236, Referendum Petition No. 73, 1938 OK 457, 82 P.2d 1017, 183 Okla. 355, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 278 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

HURST, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the Secretary of State holding Referendum Petition No. 73, State Question No. 236, sufficient to call for a vote of the people. The Sixteenth Legislature passed an act removing a tax of ten cents per pound on oleomargarine containing certain ingredients, which tax had theretofore been imposed by the Session Laws of 1931. Before the act went into effect, proponents filed with the Secretary of State the referendum petition in question to place the measure before the voters. Protestants filed objections to the sufficiency of this petition. Pamphlets were filed purporting to bear the signatures of 56,775 qualified electors. The number of such signatures required for submission is 37,482. Protestants therefore must show that 19,264 signatures are invalid in order to defeat the petition. The Secretary of State held the .petition sufficient, and protestants have appealed to this court. The matter has been referred to a referee of the court for the purpose of taking the testimony, and he has reported findings of fact to the court, which will be hereafter referred to in so far as is necessary to a -consideration of protestants’ contentions. The burden of proof was upon the protestants in the hearing before the Secretary of State, and since the trial here is de novo, the burden of proof is also upon them here. The protests contain many contentions, but we will consider only those presented in the briefs.

Protestants’ first contention is that *356 about 75 per cent, of the • signatures are invalid because the affidavits of the circula-tors of the pamphlets containing such signatures were sworn to before J. O. Patterson and J. W. Moore, notaries public, who were disqualified from acting by reason of their interest in the proceeding. They rely upon the proposition and cite cases to show that officers who are otherwise qualified to take affidavits are rendered incompetent by reason of a financial or beneficial interest in the cause.

Two facts are relied upon to bring this case within the foregoing rule: (1) That: the referee found that “J. O Patterson and J. W. Moore supervised and directed the circulation and filing of said pamphlets, and are directly interested and connected with the circulation of said petition”; (2)-that the record shows that J. 0. Patterson was employed as manager of the Pearsall Butter Company as supervisor of agents distributing oleomargarine in Oklahoma.

As to the first fact set out above, suffice it to say that when directing the circulation of the pamphlets, the notaries were acting in the same capacity as the circu-lators, and in speaking of this latter group this court, in the case of In re Initiative Petition No. 23, State Question No. 38 (1912) 35 Okla. 49, 127 P. 862, said:

“They are members of the largest legislative- body in the state, and, where so acting, do so in a public or at least a quasi public capacity, and when so acting the law presumes the validity and legality of their acts, and even though it should be claimed that they were acting simply in a private capacity, until overcome by proof, their acts, involving the performance of ministerial' or administrative duties, such as those performed in the circulation and signing of these petitions, are presumed to be legal and not fraudulent.”

It is the second fact set out above, that is, the connection of Patterson with the Butter company; which is relied upon to overcome the presumption that the acts of the notaries in question in directing the circulation1 of the petition were legal. This second fact is also relied upon to show pecuniary interest in J. O. ■ Patterson such as to disqualify him to act as a notary public. We cannot agree that the evidence of his business connection alone is sufficient in itself to show either that his acts as director of circulation were fraudulent or that he was directly financially or beneficially interested in the referendum petition. There is' no evidence in the' record showing how Patterson would be So interested in this cause nor can we make any such -presumption as would disqualify him from notarizing the signatures of the circulators. The assertions that J. W. Moore is interested are not supported by the record.

But protestants also contend that the petition is invalid because the circulators of numerous pamphlets, containing signatures which are more than sufficient to defeat the petition if eliminated, did not perform any corporeal act in the administration of the oath before the notaries above referred to whereby they consciously took upon themselves the obligations of an oath. Protestants introduced the testimony of twelve circulators in this connection. It appears from this evidence that the notaries did not require the circulators to hold up their hand to be sworn, nor did they orally administer any formal oath. However, with the exception of circulators Mildred Cowan and Albert Baxter, all appeared at one time or another before the notaries and signed or acknowledged their signatures on the pamphlets. Circulators Cowan and Baxter testified that they sent in some signed pamphlets by mail, but they did not identify the particular pamphlets so mailed nor did the# state in particular how many were mailed. Por this reason this evidence is not sufficient to invalidate the petition if otherwise sufficient. In any event, the number of signatures on the pamphlets submitted by these two circu-lators would not be sufficient to affect the result if they are excluded. The notaries admitted that they employed no general procedure in taking the verifications and that they did not require the circulators to hold up their hands and swear that they were telling the truth, but that they told the circulators that they were notaries and asked if they had read the oath. The evidence discloses, and it is conceded in the brief of protestants, that the circulators “intended” to swear to the petitions. In keeping with the progress of the present-day custom and practice prevailing in the transaction of business where an oath is required, it is held that to .constitute a valid oath it is not necessary that the affiant hold up his hand and receive a formal oral statement from the officer. It is sufficient if the affiant’s attention is called to the fact that his statement is not a mere assertion, but must be sworn to, and that both the affiant and the officer believe that they have done all that was necessary to complete the oath, and that affiant intends to swear to the facts set out in the affidavit. Atwood v. State (1927, Miss.) 111 So. 865. Under this rule, we *357 think the verifications on the petitions were sufficient.

The Oklahoma cases relied on by .protestants in support of this contention do not conflict with this view. In Foster v. Young (1931) 149 Okla. 19, 299 P. 162, It appears that the affidavits there involved were held insufficient because the form and context of the affidavit required by statute was materially changed. The question of the sufficiency of the oath was not before the court and was not considered. Neither is protestants’ reference to -the case of In re Initiative Petition No. 142, State Question No. 205 (1936) 176 Okla. 155, 55 P.2d 455, wherein it is held that “the fact of nonappearance of the affiant destroys the verification,” in point here. As above staged, there is no proof of nonappearance of the' affiant as to any particular petition, and under the state of the record we cannot determine which, if any, petitions are thereby destroyed.

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1938 OK 457, 82 P.2d 1017, 183 Okla. 355, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-state-question-no-236-referendum-petition-no-73-okla-1938.