J. Morley, Jr. v. L Farnese, Jr., K. Greenberg

178 A.3d 910
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 24, 2018
Docket1405 C.D. 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 178 A.3d 910 (J. Morley, Jr. v. L Farnese, Jr., K. Greenberg) 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
J. Morley, Jr. v. L Farnese, Jr., K. Greenberg, 178 A.3d 910 (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

OPINIÓN BY

SENIOR JUDGE COLINS

This matter is an appeal filed by John H. Morley, Jr. (Plaintiff), pro se, from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County (common pleas court) that sustained preliminary objections and dismissed with prejudice his civil action against Lawrence M. Farnese, Jr.' (Far-nese), Kevin Michael Greenberg and George J. Farrell (Attorney Defendants), and Gaetano PiccMlli, Michael Weiss and Karen Greenberg (Objector Defendants) (collectively, Defendants). Plaintiffs action asserted a claim for wrongful use of civil proceedings, claims under attorney fees and costs statutes, and claims for abuse of process, conspiracy and concert of action arising out of Defendants’ ballot challenge to Plaintiffs 2016 candidacy for the Pennsylvania State Senate. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

On February 16, 2016, Plaintiff timely filed a nomination petition to place his name on the April 26, 2016 Primary Election ballot as a Democratic candidate for Senator in the General Assembly from the 1st Senatorial District. (Second Amended Complaint ¶¶ 1, 15, 23, Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 13a, 15a, 16a; In re Morley (Morley II), 636 Pa. 230, 141 A3d 1275, 1276 (2016). 1 ) The only other candidate to file for the Democratic primary for that office-was defendant Farnese, the. incumbent State Senator for the district. (Second 'Amended Complaint ¶¶ 2, 10, R.R. at 13a-14a.)-

Únder the Pennsylvania Election Code (Election Code), 2 a nomination petition' to place a candidate for State Senator on the primary ballot must contain at least 500 yalid signatures of voters who are eligible tó vote in that primary. Section 912.1(13) of the Election Code, 25 P.S. § 2872.1(13). 3 The Election Code also requires that each page of a nomination petition have an affidavit of a circulator who was present when the voters signed the page; if the individual who signed the circulator affidavit was not présent when the signatures were gathered, those signatures are not valid. Section 909 of the Election Code, 25 P.S. § 2869; In re Nomination Petition of Farnese (Farnese I), 609 Pa. 573, 17 A.3d 375, 377 (2011); In re Nomination Petition of Flaherty, 564 Pa. 671, 770 A.2d 327, 336-38 (2001), overruled on other issue by In re Nomination Petition of Vodvarka (Vodvarka III), 636 Pa. 16, 140 A.3d 639 (2016); In re Petition to Set Aside Nomination of Fitzpatrick, 822 A.2d 867, 869 n.2 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003).

Plaintiffs nomination petition contained 1,047 signatures. (Second Amended Complaint ¶ 24, R.R. at 17a; Morley II, 141 A.3d at 1276.) Each of the 37 pages of the nomination petition was attested to by Plaintiff as circulator. (Second Amended Complaint ¶¶ 24, 33, R.R. at 17a-18a; Morley II, 141 A.3d at 1276.) On February 23, 2016, Objector Defendants, represented by Attorney Defendants, timely filed a petition to set aside Plaintiffs nomination petition, asserting' that Plaintiff did not have 500 valid signatures because the cir-culator affidavits for pages that he did not circulate were invalid and because, even if the circulator affidavits were valid, 646 individual signature lines were invalid. (Second Amended Complaint ¶¶ 25, 45 & Ex. A, R.R. at 17a, 19a, 41a-46a.)

This Court held four days of argument and testimonial hearings on the petition to set aside. (In re Morley (Morley I), (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 102 M.D. 2016, filed March 31, 2016), slip op. at 3.) Plaintiff represented himself pro se in. all hearings and proceedings on the petition to set aside. (Morley I Docket Entries, R.R. at 2a.) Based on Plaintiffs testimony at the hearings on the petition to set aside, the Court found that four pages of the nomination petition, containing 120 signatures, were not circulated by Plaintiff or in his presence and that 11 signatures on a fifth page were gathered outside of Plaintiffs presence. (Morley I, slip op. at 5-6.) The Court, accordingly, held that Plaintiffs circulator affidavits were invalid as to those signatures and struck those 131 signatures. (Id., slip op. at 4-9,11.) Plaintiff and Objector Defendants agreed that 428 of the remaining signatures on the nomination petition were valid and that 355 other signatures were invalid, leaving 133 signature line challenges as to which the parties did not agree. (Id., slip op. at 11-13.) Twenty-seven of those were signatures of registered Democratic voters in the senatorial district, challenged on the ground that their address on their registration did not match the address that they wrote on the nomination petition (commonly referred to as “not-registered-at-address” or “NRA” challenges). (Id., slip op. at 19.) The other 106 lines were challenged on various non-NRA grounds, including incomplete signature line, inconsistency with the voter’s signature on the registration and registration outside the senatorial district. (Id., slip op. at 13-19.) The Court rejected 69 of the non-NRA challenges, bringing Plaintiffs number of valid signatures to 497, and struck 37 disputed signatures as invalid on non-NRA grounds. (Id., slip op. at 12-19.)

The NRA challenges turned on the legal issue of whether a non-matching address invalidates an otherwise valid voter signature on a ballot petition. In 2001, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court held in Flaherty that, absent extraordinary circumstances, a person who moved from the address where he was registered to vote and had not filed a change of address was no longer a valid registered voter, and that signatures with non-matching addresses must therefore be stricken. 770 A.2d at 333-34. Although there was conflicting, non-binding .case law in this Court as to whether Flaherty remained good law on this issue under current Pennsylvania voter registration laws, compare, e.g., In re Nomination Petition of Vodvarka (Vodvarka I), 994 A.2d 25 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010) (single-judge opinion) with In re Nomination Petition of Brown, 846 A.2d 783 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (single-judge opinion), the Supreme Court had not overruled Flaherty at the time that the petition to set aside was filed and litigated in this Court. On March 31, 2016, this Court held en banc in In re Nomination Petition of Vodvarka (Vodvarka II), 135 A.3d 246 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2016), that Flaherty remained good law and that signatures with non-matching addresses are invalid.

Because the 27 signatures on Plaintiffs nomination petition challenged on NRA grounds were invalid under the Supreme Court’s Flaherty decision and this Court’s en banc Vodvarka II decision and Plaintiff therefore had only 497 valid signatures under the existing law, the Court on March 31, 2016 granted Objector Defendants’ petition to set aside Plaintiffs nomination petition. (Morley I, slip op. at 19-21.) Plaintiff appealed this Court’s decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 A.3d 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-morley-jr-v-l-farnese-jr-k-greenberg-pacommwct-2018.