Kulp v. Railey

89 S.W. 957, 99 Tex. 310, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 198
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1905
DocketNo. 1474.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 89 S.W. 957 (Kulp v. Railey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kulp v. Railey, 89 S.W. 957, 99 Tex. 310, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 198 (Tex. 1905).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

This case is before us upon certificate from the Court of Civil Appeals for the First District, as follows-:

“A. L. .Kulp brought this proceeding under Chapter 7, Title 36, of the Revised Statutes of Texas, to contest the election of Thomas L. Railey to the office of constable of precinct No. 1 of Harris County.

“The case made in substance by Kulp was that he had been nominated by the Republican party at a delegate convention held on July 16, 1904, for the purpose of nominating candidates for county and precinct offices for that county. That the Democratic party had nominated candidates for all county and precinct offices at a primary convention duly held on Saturday, July 9, 1904, for that purpose, at which time one W. W. Glass was nominated as the candidate of the Democracy for the office in question.

“Glass died on the 24th' day of October, 1904, and on the 28th of October, 1904, the members of the Democratic Executive Committee for Harris County representing those voting precincts situated in justice precinct No. 1, met and undertook to nominate a candidate to fill the vacancy on the Democratic ticket occasioned by the death of Glass. Such members of the committee selected Railey as a candidate for the position. His name was duly certified to the county clerk for a place on the official ballot as such nominee and was so placed thereon by the county clerk.

“At the general election held on November 8, thereafter, Kulp received 1221 votes and Railey received 2697 votes. Most of the ballots cast for each were upon the printed official ballot on which the names of each appeared in print as candidates for their respective parties for constable of precinct No. 1. Some ballots were cast for each, however, on which the voters wrote the name of the person voted for. Of these Kulp received a clear majority and the validity of the votes thus cast is in no way assailed.

“Kulp claimed that Railey had not been nominated according to law, that his name had no place on the official ballot as a party candidate, and that therefore all official ballots cast for him were unlawful and should not have been counted.

“He further claimed that should it be conceded that he also had been irregularly nominated, still he was entitled to the office because he had received a majority of the written ballots.

*315 “The trial court after hearing the facts as stated above gave judgment for Bailey.

“Kulp appealed and this court affirmed the judgment. No opinion was written, but we affirmed it on the ground that under the Act of 1903, General Laws, Chapter 101, by a timely proceeding, the name of any one could be excluded from the official ballot as a party candidate who had not been nominated according to the forms of law, but that as no such proceeding had been had and as no fraud was alleged and the voters had in good faith cast a majority of the ballots in favor of Bailey, Kulp could not now be heard to question the regularity of. the official ballot.

“The cause is now pending before this court on motion for rehearing. We respectfully certify for your decision the question:

“Did we err in affirming the judgment upon the ground stated ?”

The case has been argued in this court upon the assumption that the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals was based wholly upon the failure of appellant to make objection to the official ballot before the election was held. We do not so understand the certificate. That- fact is mentioned as only one of those which influenced the conclusion that appellant can not now be heard to question the regularity of the official ballot; the other facts being that an election has been held in which there was no fraud and in which the voters, in good faith, cast a majority of ballots in favor of appellee. All of these facts must be considered in answering the question whether or not the court erred “in affirming the judgment upon the ground stated.” In our opinion, the fact that the appellant made no complaint before the election is not essential to the correctness of the decision. If the statutes referred to contained provisions requiring or permitting persons, such as he, to take steps before the election for the correction of such irregularity as that of which he now complains, this, of itself, would be a strong indication of the intent of the legislature that the validity of the ballots should not be questioned after the election upon such a ground. The statute makes no provision for such a proceeding, and, while it is true that it confers rights upon some persons and imposes duties upon others which doubtless may be enforced in the courts before the election is held, it is not at all clear that the right is given tó a nominee of one party to object to the placing upon the official ticket of the opposing party the name of a person, as its candidate, upon the sole ground that such person has not regularly received the nomination of that party. Nor is it clear that appellant, if he had the right, had also the opportunity, in this instance, to avail himself of it. These are considerations which need not be elaborated, as we are of the opinion that they do not control the disposition of the question certified.

The decision must necessarily turn upon the question whether or not the law makes void, or forbids the counting of such votes as those upon which appellee’s election depends. Admitting that no provision is made for candidates of one party to inquire, before election, into the regularity of nominations of candidates of an opposing party whose names are placed upon the official ballot, it by no means follows that irregularity in such nominations may be urged after -the election as *316 grounds for invalidating ballots based upon. them. After being defeated at a free and fair election by the votes of the opposing party appellant’s only complaint is that the candidate for whom those votes were cast was not regularly nominated by that party before the election. It would seem that the election itself ought to be a sufficient answer to this position. Certainly success in maintaining it would be a curious result of an effort on the part of the legislature to promote fairer elections. To justify a court in thus rejecting the ballots of voters invested by the constitution with the elective franchise who voted fairly and in good faith to fill an office which the constitution required to be filled at that time and by such voters, nothing will suffice short of a clear legislative command. This is the principle uniformly applied in determining such questions. Nothing of the kind is found in the statute of 1903. This statute provides for official ballots, one for each party, containing the names of its nominees, and these ballots are, by specified officers, to be prepared and put in the hands of voters, officially stamped as the ones authorized by law, and through them and no others, except in certain contingencies unimportant here, the voters are to exercise their right to vote. In order that the will of the people composing the parties may find full and fair expression in the nomination of candidates, the primaries and conventions for that purpose are to be held on specified days and are regulated by the statute in such way as to throw around them protection similar to that given to general elections.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W. 957, 99 Tex. 310, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kulp-v-railey-tex-1905.