Kommers v. Palagi

108 P.2d 208, 111 Mont. 293, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 35
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1940
DocketNo. 8,051.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 108 P.2d 208 (Kommers v. Palagi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kommers v. Palagi, 108 P.2d 208, 111 Mont. 293, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 35 (Mo. 1940).

Opinion

Opinion:

PER CURIAM.

This appeal is from the judgment of the district court for Cascade county adjudging contestee guilty of violating the Cor *296 rupt Practices Act, and declaring his election to the office of sheriff of Cascade county void, and declaring the office of sheriff vacant, and awarding the contestants their costs and attorney’s fees.

Contestee was a candidate for election to the office in question in the 1938 election. In the primary election he secured the Republican nomination, and the official canvass after the November election showed that he had a majority of the votes cast for that office. This action was brought by the contestants— duly qualified electors and residents of Cascade county.

Briefly stated, the petition alleges in substance that the contestee violated the Corrupt Practices Act in various ways, including treating of voters, the distribution of things of value, and by exceeding the limitation placed upon the expenditures of the candidate as provided by law. The general and special demurrers were overruled. Contestee answered denying the most of the allegations and affirmatively answering that certain of the items distributed were not articles of value within the statute, but merely advertising materials. As a separate defense contestee set up his election and qualification as sheriff in 1938, and that as sheriff he had a right to hold over until his successor had been elected and qualified. The facts will be discussed more fully later in this opinion.

In entering upon a study of this ease the attitude of this court is expressed in the following statement from the case of State ex rel. La Follette v. Kohler, 200 Wis. 518, 228 N. W. 895, 905, 69 A. L. R. 348, 349: “At this point it is not improper for us to say that we realize the importance which attaches to the decision in this case, whatever it may be. A correct solution of the questions presented is of far greater importance than the personal or political fortunes of any candidate, incumbent, group, faction or party. We are dealing here with laws which operate in the political field — a field from which courts are inclined to hold aloof — a field with respect to which the power of the legislature is primary and is limited only by the Constitution itself. It has been said so many times it scarcely needs to be said again, that the realization of the democratic ideal *297 of self-government rests upon an intelligent, informed, honest and vigilant electorate. It is because of this that a large percentage of the public revenues is devoted to the education of our youth in order that they may not only be informed, but have their consciences awakened to their duties as citizens. All efforts to educate and awaken the electorate amount to nothing if corrupt appeals made to its prejudices or its cupidity, lead it to cast a ballot otherwise than in accordance with its convictions, uninfluenced by anything save considerations of public policy. A democratic state must therefore have the power to protect itself against the consequences of ignorance, indifference and venality and prevent all those practices which tend to subvert the electorate and substitute for a government of the people, by the people and for the people, a government guided in the interest of those who seek to pervert it. That self-government by the people is threatened to-day wherever it exists throughout the world is recognized by every thoughtful person. The threat arises from the inaction and indifference of those qualified to exercise primary political power, the electorate, and from the influence of sinister and subversive forces set in motion by those who would prompt governmental action favorable to their private interests without regard to its effect upon the public interest. ’ ’

Not only, as was said in the quotation above, is the Corrupt Practices Act intended to guarantee the purity of elections and to assure a free exercise of the franchise by the voter uninfluenced by any appeals to its prejudice or cupidity, but it is also designed to protect candidates for public office; and by limiting expenditures and forbidding certain practices, afford an equality of opportunity to the candidates and protect them from the pressure applied by salesmen and others whose purpose it is to increase their sales, or to secure personal benefit at the expense of the candidate. Without any limitation of expenditures and the prohibition against the distribution of articles of value and of treating, the campaign resolves itself - into a battle, the result of which is determined by the ability of the various candidates to meet the pecuniary demands of various conflicting groups for personal gain.

*298 The specifications of error are many. Most of them are directed to the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the court’s findings. Others concern the admission of certain exhibits, and the court’s findings as to expenditures allowed a candidate by law. Constitutional questions are also raised concerning the right of the people to enact the type of legislation here in question, and particularly the question of the contestee’s right to hold over in the event the election of 1938 is declared void, as was done here.

Contention is made that the petition is insufficient. We do not deem it necessary to discuss this long petition at length. We have examined it in the light of the statutes and of the decisions of this court, particularly that in the case of Tipton v. Sands, 103 Mont. 1, 60 Pac. (2d) 662, 106 A. L. R. 474, and we find that it is sufficient within the statute. It specifically charges the contestee with various violations of the Corrupt Practices Act and the court properly overruled the demurrers and denied the motion for judgment on the pleadings.

The constitutional questions presented on this appeal are the same as those presented heretofore in an original proceeding before this court. (State ex rel. Kommers v. District Court, 109 Mont. 287, 96 Pac. (2d) 271.) Nothing was presented in the oral argument or the briefs of contestee and amici curiae, in the instant cause, to persuade us that the prior decision in this matter did not consider the questions fully or that it is not correct and controlling here.

In considering the specifications which deal with the sufficiency of the evidence, we enter into such consideration bearing in mind the often-repeated rule to the effect that in such examination the appellate court indulges in the presumption that the findings of the trial court are prima facie correct and restricts its inquiry to a determination of whether there is substantial evidence to support its findings. The rule is too familiar to require the citation of authorities.

The court found in finding No. 18 that Cascade county, during the time in question, was a county of the third class; that the salary and compensation of the sheriff within the provisions of the Corrupt Practices Act was $3,500 per year, and that “no *299 sums of money could be paid and no expenses authorized or incurred by contestee or on his behalf, by any political agent in campaigning for the position of sheriff of said county in excess of $350.”

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Bluebook (online)
108 P.2d 208, 111 Mont. 293, 1940 Mont. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kommers-v-palagi-mont-1940.